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Meditative Rose, 
Salvador Dali



The Slow Trains Ten

writers on the creative life -- answering ten questions on inspiration, travel, music, and vice


Eduardo Santiago

I teach creative writing to men who were down and out and are now on their way back. I love working with those guys, I'm awed by their optimism. And their stories are spectacular.




Kate Braverman

I have divested myself of most of the conventional world. I don’t shop or cook anymore. I never did the domestic things to begin with. I find it oppressive. I want to make bumper stickers that say JUST SAY NO TO SOCCER.




Kim Addonizio

I'm obsessed with blues harmonica and have been a student of it for about five years. Being a student of something helps remind me how my own students must feel, awkwardly struggling to find their voice.



Joy Harjo

Perhaps everything on this earth leads to or from sex and death. I also see poems as paths to the unseen, unknowable...




Uche Nduka

Since I left Nigeria, my home country, in October 1994, my life has more or less been improvisatory. Many close friends have enriched and still enrich my peripatetic existence. I have learnt to choose my battles better; my battles against injustice, racism, provincialism, aggressive secularism, pomposity, victim-ology, political myopia, cynicism, anti-intellectualism, artistic timidity, selfishness, fashionable joylessness, militant patriotism.


Christine Allen-Yazzie

I’m crazy about a narrative that shows great compassion and insight about a given population, yet resists the urge to teach the reader a lesson or stereotype the people right out of humanity.





Thaisa Frank

Meditative Rose, Salvador Dali But in a sense writing is music for me. When I read, I read with my ears -- I can hear that something is wrong with something I’ve written long before I can explain why. I’m sure this is true for a lot of writers. Writing is like composing.



Mary Anne Mohanraj

Most of my stories come out of problems, trying to figure out how people deal with the messes they get themselves into, often with the best of intentions.



Susanna Laaksonen

Meditative Rose, Salvador Dali My dad does some graphic design, and as a teenager I'd spend hours immersed in his font books. I love letters. I love writing. They are the keys to the door to a secret world. I don't understand what the big deal is about virtual reality. We have had books for a long time.



Claire Tristram

Meditative Rose, Salvador Dali About once every hundred pages I will go to the nicest hotel in my hometown of San Jose, the St. Frances, and order a martini at their piano bar. The martinis there come in a convenient 3-gallon size...I love the way the experience totally dampens my inner critic.



Pasquale Capocasa

Meditative Rose, Salvador Dali I started Poems Niederngasse because I was very unhappy with the submission process of the paper magazines. It took so long to get a response, and of all the submissions I sent I never received a personal message, even the acceptance notes were impersonal. So up jumped Niederngasse. And what a plus!


Joe Flower

Meditative Rose, Salvador Dali
I’m trying to imagine what would be an interesting vice that would influence one’s writing. Writing is work. Writing is a martial art.




Michael Gruber

Meditative Rose, Salvador Dali As of a result of this education, I was put off writing any fiction at all for twenty-five or so years, and I am still somewhat embarrassed that I don't get the whole modernist deal. The novel is dead, as we all know, but I still feel compelled to write enjoyable corpses.



Scott Poole

Meditative Rose, Salvador Dali
What influences my writing more than anything are my old Steve Martin albums. The timing of his delivery is pure genius. He holds the audience on every word. That's what a true poet does. Every time I listen to those albums I get inspired.



Jennie Orvino

Meditative Rose, Salvador Dali I think that anything is worth writing about if it is filtered through an aware consciousness. I learned this from reading Billy Collins; I learned this from hearing the work of our former local poet laureate who is ageless and energetic in his eighties. He wrote a most amazing poem from observing life around him while waiting in line at a copy shop.



Greg Wharton

Meditative Rose, Salvador Dali A story about a peach can be fantastic if you know what it smells and tastes like from the narrator’s point of view, which can be very different from you the reader’s, and know that every time he smells a peach he thinks of a past love that broke his heart, or perhaps, remembers how he met his first true love who is still by his side.


Robert Gibbons

Meditative Rose, Salvador Dali Writing is the first thing I think about in the morning, last at night. Everything goes toward the work. Even a conscious relaxation is a conscious relaxation toward starting up again, an interim attempt not to burn out. First thought: any useful dream material? Last thought: pay attention to the dreams, listen, too.



David Gans

Meditative Rose, Salvador Dali I tend to keep the lyrics in my head for a long time, occasionally pushing them around on paper, until I have a pretty solid idea of what it's supposed to sound like. Then I pick up the guitar and start to make it into music. I actually have a good reason for this: the more I can conceive of the music before I pick up the guitar, the less I am bound to the habits and conventions of the guitar.


Susannah Indigo

Meditative Rose, Salvador Dali When I was quite young, I was in love with The Paris Review -- The New Yorker was my weekly romance, but TPR went the distance. Pop music & working at Burger Chef & secretly reading The Paris Review, that sums up my schizophrenic teenage years in the lost-culture land of middle-america.


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