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![]() Click for words events Anshavian Meet Chicago's "new" master of the word. Introducing Carol Anshaw.
Editor's Note: The following profile was published in
Newcity's Lit supplement on June 17, 1993. After "Aquamarine," Carol
Anshaw published "Seven Moves" in 1996. Her new novel, "Lucky in
the
Corner," publishes today, May 22. Things have changed a fair bit since
this interview was published: Lincoln Square has transformed from time
capsule to trendy, and Anshaw's mother recently passed away. In the
last
decade, Carol reconciled with her aging parents, and regularly visited
them in retirement. Carol herself looks better than ever; her
flourishing fiction career has clearly been good to her. She now
teaches
in the MFA in Writing Program at the School of the Art Institute of
Chicago.
The first thing Carol Anshaw tells me when I arrive at her office for a
visit is that she's just found out she's been awarded the Carl
Sandburg Award for fiction. Her barely contained enthusiasm is modest,
though. The texture of our conversation quickly signals that it's not
as much the honor, it's the money--$1,000--a meaningful windfall for a
writer who's stuck to the struggle for so long.
Her novel "Aquamarine," published last year by Houghton Mifflin, is an
extraordinary accomplishment. It explores three versions of the same
life, each starting at the same defining moment and diverging down
separate paths. Such a heavy structure could easily overwhelm the
narrative; it's a testimony to this novel's facility that it enhances
it. The Tribune's veteran book critic, Joseph Coates, called it "the
most original American novel I've read in years."
It's a book that's changed Anshaw's life, with all the new attention
she's received. (In addition to the Sandburg prize, she won the Midland
Authors Award and was nominated for the Lambda Literary Award). But
change is part of life for Anshaw, in a way that no political slogan
could portend. And changes, and the multivariate consequences of the
decisions leading up to change, is really what "Aquamarine" is all
about.
"Aquamarine" is a book largely without or outside of politics. Yet ask
Anshaw if she's a political person and she nonchalantly describes
herself as a "leftist." Then, realizing that such an answer is not
typically floated so easily these days, she elaborates. "Actually,
I've stayed in the same place for 20 years. And whereas I used to be
considered a left-liberal, everything's shifted to the right underneath
me."
It's probably the only spot Anshaw's stayed in over the last 20 years.
Her life--taken in rapid riffs, reads like a made-for-TV take on the
birth of a novelist: left Michigan home because she never fit in with
parents or peers--came to Chicago the very week of the '68 Democratic
Convention--took her first job, writing catalog copy, in a modern
Dickensian sweatshop where someone was fired every day--moved 10 months
later into a "great job" as associate features editor at Advertising
Age--started backing up Roger Ebert at the Sun-Times as a movie
critic--married and divorced somewhere along the line--shifted from
heterosexual to lesbian--started writing novels--and so on.
Anshaw's physical presence--somewhat intentionally frumpy, shy but
friendly--belies the enormous mental and verbal energy inside. She's
the quiet girl in high school that nobody ever got to know. Affable and
eloquent, her conversation, once invested with enough time to build
familiarity, is frequently punctured by a razor wit. Her tired eyes
signal an earned visage, a struggle waged to do the only thing she's
ever wanted to do.
The daughter of a now-retired builder and his wife, Anshaw was raised in
Grosse Pointe, Michigan, what she calls "a schnitzy suburb outside
Detroit; a terrible place." Although she remains close to her only
sibling, a younger brother, she barely speaks to her parents. "They're
terrible, they've been mad at me for years. I'm not on their program.
They're racist Republicans and they just hate everything I am." Like
all good incubating novelists, she always wanted to write, even from the
age of six when her muse exceeded her vocabulary. But hers was not a
world that encouraged the development of a writer; she never understood
"that a novelist was a person, that a novelist was somebody you could
be." Without guidance, without mentors, she followed an unconventional
path to writing. She received terrible grades in high school and
terrible grades at Michigan State, where she majored in communications
arts. (She started out in English, but dropped out after a few classes
where they discussed symbolism in Eudora Welty. She was afraid they were
going to "ruin books for me.")
Thankfully, they didn't. By the time she had established herself as a
fill-in critic at the Sun-Times, she knew she was ready to write books.
First a novel, then a memoir of her high-school years. Her second novel,
"They Do It All With Mirrors" (written under her then-married name,
Carol White), was published in 1978 by Coward, McCann & Geoghegan, an
imprint of Putnam. "It got me kind of nowhere." It's a work that
seems to embarrass Anshaw: a rougher, younger voice that she finds so
foreign that she'd almost rather not call her own. And read after
"Aquamarine," it does speak volumes about her growth and maturing as a
writer.
"Mirrors" is a sassy first-person tale of twentysomething urban angst,
relentlessly witty yet lacking the depth and control of her new work.
It's as packed with attitude as much of the brat pack/generation x
fiction of today, a body of work that it fits into both aesthetically
and qualitatively. That being said, it's far from a bad book. It's
just so far from where she is today, the work of a young writer still
learning how to write, as she says. It's like going back and reading
your high-school term paper, except her book is in the library for
anyone who wants it. Anshaw describes her younger self as someone "I
really wouldn't like to know."
Fortunately, Anshaw's agent turned her onto something that would
sustain through those lean, discouraging years: she's written 20
paperback novels for teens under her maiden name, Carol Stanley, or
under series names (many best-selling series authors are in fact "brand
names" that stand for various writers contracted to add a volume to the
series), the adolescent melodramas that get devoured by young girls. She
says it's been some of the best money she's made as a writer and
doesn't seem to mind doing it--that much.
Although she had given up reviewing to focus her creative energies on
fiction, she later decided she wanted to review books for the Village
Voice. She's been so successful that she won the 1990 National Book
Critics Circle citation for excellence in reviewing. The attention
garnered her reviewing assignments from all over: the Tribune and
Sun-Times, LA Times, the Washington Post and NY Newsday, although she's
since winnowed it back down to the Voice and the Tribune. Recent Voice
pieces include an essay on Albert Einstein and a look at gender
blending. Although she seems content with her role as a book critic,
reviewing "shapes her life," it forces "dead time" where you have to
do the reading--she reads at least 50 books a year in this capacity--and
sometimes she'd rather be thinking about "Ulysses or Jane Austen than
Mark Leyner and Tama Janowitz."
Anshaw describes herself as an autodidact, a self-description that
yields much about her persona. She's extremely articulate and
well-read, yet equally unpretentious. And her development and influences
are somewhat unconventional. She speaks with uncontrolled enthusiasm
about her literary idol, Shirley Hazzard, who is "one of the writers
who made me want to write." Not long ago they met: "She had me for
tea, I probably overwhelmed her." Hazzard even contributed a
promotional book-jacket blurb to "Aquamarine."
Each parallel story is tightly rendered and independent of the others;
yet taken together they weave into each other with a rewarding
cleverness. Throughout, Anshaw displays an extraordinary mastery of the
language; whole characters leap fully developed out of a single sentence
or two: "Earl and Thelma Thompson roar by on their Harley, which is
nearly as large as a car and painted candy apple red and blaring out
from its radio one of those songs from the Christian station which sound
like bland love songs, then turn out, a ways in, to be about Jesus. Too
much friendliness with Earl and Thelma is an invitation to get
proselytized, and so Dell just nods at them and Jesse waves, both in
minimal ways." But even more, she has that enviable ability to combine
simple words in such a way to unleash a rush of tone and wit far more
rewarding than any other combination of those same words
could.
Similarly, there is a pervasive lesbian theme of varying proportions
that runs throughout "Aquamarine," but it doesn't assault the reader.
It's simply there, a characteristic of the protagonist Jesse and
nothing more. Anshaw describes it, and its seeming ambiguity, as just
part of the "mechanism" she set up, although it represents an
interesting manifestation of her view of human sexuality: "I think it
is more like a spectrum than a big dividing line. Of course, it's not a
free spectrum in that there's a lot of societal pressure to be on the
straight side of it."
While Anshaw takes certain pride in adding a story to the dearth of
"our stories," and while her next novel, which has just been
contracted to Houghton Mifflin, includes a lesbian protagonist
throughout, she insists that she is working toward the opposite of the
ghettoization that still plagues so much lesbian and gay literature,
where books are channeled to the gay press and to gay bookstores and
pretty much remain unknown to the rest of the world. "My entire life
I've noticed that what I feel are reasonable hopes for the culture
aren't borne out. But what I hope is that literature is wide enough to
accommodate books that have gay characters or gay themes in them in the
way that they accommodate so much else. That it doesn't have to be a
ghettoized, specialty kind of literature. I went with Washington Square
[who just published her book in paper] because they really saw the book
in its widest and its broadest terms rather than its narrowest. That's
how I see my little mission--of course I'm hoping that I reach gay
readership--but I'm also hoping that I can push the walls a little
further out in terms of what amount of gay theme or characters the
larger literature can easily accommodate."
Anshaw's mission has finally brought her to a place that many aspiring
writers would envy. She recently took an MFA at Vermont College--"one
of the best experiences of my life"--through their low-residency
program. It's something of a highbrow correspondence program geared to
writers who are "in the middle of a life" and can't afford to pack up
and go to Iowa for two years. She spent 10-11 day residencies in the
summer and winter, and worked with her advisor through the mail the rest
of the time. It helped her develop a network of mentors and peers she
can draw upon in the future. It reduced her isolation. She had finished
"Aquamarine" and sent it to her agent; her revisions on the novel
after Houghton Mifflin bought it constituted her thesis project.
In addition to her reviewing and writing, she teaches at Chicago's
Columbia College and at Ragdale. "I suppose what I try to do is offer
criticism that enables the writer to do something with it. One time I
showed my ex-husband something I was working on and he said it lacked
deeper resonance. This is the kind of criticism I try not to offer.
Because the writer then is just feeling bad and they can't go anywhere
with it. Where are they going to put that deeper resonance, on page
16?" She enjoys teaching, but harbors the same type of superstitions
that knocked her out of an English major back when she was in college. A
highly evolved stylist, she rightfully believes that she is pretty good
with images. For a writer's conference this summer where she's been
invited to teach, she considered and decided against lecturing about
imagery because she "didn't want to mess with it."
Yes, at the age of 47, Anshaw epitomizes the successful writer. Her book
won awards, has been published in paperback ($10, 197pp), has been
optioned to the movies, has been selected by the Quality Paperback Club.
Except financially she still struggles. It's a sad irony that she's
quite conscious of: "Poor as I am, and I am just so beleaguered by
debt, according to National Writers Union statistics, I am incredibly
successful at what I do. But I'm not anywhere close to being able to
make a living at serious fiction yet."
Literature is a solitary art. Books are written in isolation; books are
read in isolation. "This woman with purple hair came up to me in New
York after my reading and she said 'I've read your book twice.' And I
was on the plane coming back to Chicago and I said there's a woman in
New York with purple hair who has read my book twice. And it wasn't at
all who I had in mind. I was glad to know she was out there."
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