Interview with Liza
Monroy
Interview
by Susan Johnston
Liza Monroy has had personal essays published
in the New York Times, Jane, Newsweek,
and more, as well as teaching a MediaBistro course on the topic. Here she shares
her insight into writing winning essays and juggling fiction and non-fiction
projects.
What do you think goes
into an essay that editors what to publish? Is it the writer's voice? The
content? Or something else?
I think it depends on a combination of elements all
coming together and falling into place. A successful personal essay makes a
universal point, yet still relies entirely on details, scenes, and a uniquely
compelling voice. I once received some advice from Nick Flynn, one of my
all-time favorite writers and a tremendous inspiration, that I think captures
the essence of the memoir form: "question every assumption, make wild claims,
trust the reader to figure out what it all means."
I like to reveal as though no one were going to ever see what I wrote-- it's
freeing, and when the material is making me a little bit uncomfortable and
giving me a little of that squirming in my seat feeling, I finally feel that
perhaps it's getting somewhere. Beware the "nice" essay.
If you've had an experience that's been nagging at you to write about it, odds
are it wants to come out-- whether it's funny or deep, light or dark-- and the
personal essay is a fantastic form in which to write about the eccentricities of
life. As long as you find the universal, human element and draw it gently out,
without hitting the reader over the head, you can channel the story in a
publishable way-- personal essay columns always need fresh voices. I also think
developing a good, solid arc helps. And I've been told simple and chronological
works better in short pieces than attempting to play with more complex
structures. Conflict, tension, and vivid details, along with an interesting
story and voice, are the basic ingredients to toss into the pot. From there,
it's all about following your own homemade recipe and improvising.
Any tips on juggling multiple projects? How do you
manage your time?
By not managing it! For awhile, I tried putting my
happily scattered self on a schedule: awake at 8, coffee, gym from 9-10, writing
from 10:30-7, then free time for husband, socializing, TV or whatnot. It was a
nice routine, but like all routine and me, it didn't last. I'm a night owl and I
feel more creative during the witching hours. I also realized-- didn't I quit
having full-time jobs in order to *avoid* having a strict, set schedule? So I
turned to the wisdom of the Tao: "Can you deal with the most vital matters/ by
letting events take their course?"
Right now I'm immersed in the first draft of my second book, a memoir that might
be titled Reinventing the Ring or
Inviting Earthquakes or
There's Been a Slight Change of Plans, or something entirely
different. (Votes welcome!) I also have a couple of freelance magazine
assignments. I juggle them based on how I'm feeling-- if I am on a roll with one
project, I'll stay on, if I'm not feeling it that day, I'll move to something
else. It's all very intuitive and I find that letting go and allowing myself NOT
to manage, I am more productive and more at peace.
This, however, all changes at tax time. At tax time, my discipline with the
organizing of receipts is unstoppable.
Could you tell us about your newest project and
the writer's residency?
I'm the
writer-in-residence at the
Kerouac Project of Orlando this summer. It is an amazing experience
that I'd recommend to writers everywhere. You spend three whole months with time
and space in the glorious Orlando home where Jack Kerouac lived when On the
Road was published in 1957. He also wrote
Dharma Bums in the back
bedroom-- my current writing office! It's a hauntingly beautiful place and I'm
getting more done than I ever have-- the productivity that comes with solitude
and an inspiring environment. I'm also co-teaching a creative writing class
through Valencia Community College and have met some wonderful people, so it's
not all typing in solitude-- though those hours are the core component of my
time here.
I'm working on the memoir I mentioned, which I won't say too, too much about at
this time. It's set over a period of five years, in L.A. and New York, in which
I was married twice by the age of twenty-five. It's about being in your
twenties, dealing with first jobs and muddled relationships, and trying to get
over a fear of ending up divorced by entering a situation in which you surely
will, but in which it won't be a bad thing. I am examining what happens to a
child of divorce once she hits her twenties and starts wanting a family of her
own without having had any roadmap or template for how these sorts of things are
supposed to go. And as a person who moved around constantly growing up-- was I
unable to ever settle down and find a meaning for the abstract concept of home?
I spent a lot of time running. But it also deals with the laughable attempt at
getting a foot up a rung of the Hollywood ladder, life with my gay best friend,
dating (way) older men, and failed attempts at road trips. An essay centered
around part of it will appear in the September issue of PSYCHOLOGY TODAY
magazine, that gives a general idea of the book's nature.
Susan Johnston
is a freelance writer whose work has appeared in numerous websites, newspapers
and magazines, including Young Money magazine, BostonNOW, 100 Hats, and
others. Learn more at
www.susan-johnston.com.