« Women's History Month Profile: Jane Luu | Main | The Hyphenite's Social Calendar: Lao & Khmer New Year, Film Fests Galore »

March 31, 2009
The WRITE Questions with Thaddeus Rutkowski
Thaddeus Rutkowski's novel Roughhouse (Kaya Press)
has been described as "in-your-face punk realism with touches
of the surreal and subversive black humor."
thaddeus_rutowski.jpgHis second novel, Tetched, takes the experimental form of "fractals" --
or chapters composed of several paragraph-sized vignettes.
We asked the New York-based writer to subject himself to
our set of literary questions. [See Rutkowski read at Eastwind Books of  Berkeley, Saturday April 4th at 7 p.m.]





1. What was the last book you read? What are you reading now?

I actually don't read much for my own pleasure. I'm the fiction editor for a literary magazine, Many Mountains Moving (based in Denver), and I teach a fiction writing workshop for adults at a YMCA in Manhattan, so reading those manuscripts keeps me busy.

But I recently read The Romanian, by Bruce Benderson, and American Born Chinese, by Gene Luen Yang. The setting of The Romanian (much of it takes place in Budapest) interested me because I gave some readings in Budapest in the fall. Also, the book is the story of a difficult, almost unimaginable relationship, between an American who is perceived as wealthy and a young, straight Romanian man working the streets for money. You read to see how it all plays out. I liked American Born Chinese because I like graphic novels in general, and this book does a good job of combining a personal story of immigration with timeless stories from Chinese myth. Surprisingly, the parts add up for powerful effect.

I'm now reading Prague, by Arthur Phillips. Again, much of it takes place in Budapest, but the characters want to leave Budapest and go to Prague. I've never been to Prague. What's up there? I'm also reading Evanescent Isles, by Xu Xi, about the author's birthplace, Hong Kong. I was in Hong Kong a couple of weeks ago for a literary festival, and the book is helping me understand the city.

2. Do you identify as an Asian American writer?  Why or why not?.

I do identify myself as an Asian American writer, though I grew up with a confused sense of who I was. I was a kid with a Chinese mother in middle America, so my culture was U.S. television, and my background was almost a dream, heard secondhand from a parent who was learning a new language. Still, in my adult life, the Asian part has overshadowed the Polish part (my father was born in the U.S. and didn't speak Polish). I've tried identifying as Polish -- don't get me wrong -- but I'm still waiting for that to kick in.

3. Do you have a blog? If yes, how does it affect your own writing. If not, why not?

I'm afraid I can't say much about blogs. (I know that's not good, considering these answers are for a blog.) I don't have a blog. I have a website, which I invite everyone to visit. And I have a small notebook, which isn't for sharing. However, if I had a blog, I'm sure the text on it would inform my own writing, probably in significant ways. My experience is the basis for my creative work, and I'm coming to realize that my approach is more autobiographical than many authors'.

4. What websites do you frequent?

I use Web sites mostly for research, as opposed to news or commentary. That is, I use them in my work as a copy editor (that's my day job). But for fun, yesterday I looked at Ed Lin's blog. I really like the energetic voice on that site, plus I appreciate Ed's knowledge of punk rock, Korean food and, of course, contemporary literature. I have read a number of record reviews on Pitchfork, and I've read some good poetry on a blog by a poet friend, Stan Marcus. Of course, I check on the site for the magazine I volunteer for, Many Mountains Moving. It has some original content, like the winning story from the latest flash fiction contest. I guess I have some catching up to do in the tech world.

Posted by Neela at March 31, 2009 4:27 PM


Trackback Pings

TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.hyphenmagazine.com/cgi-bin/blog/mt-tb.cgi/1582

Leave a comment

Categories

Activism (16)
Art (37)
Asianspotting (57)
Books (42)
Business (15)
Culture (76)
Diaspora (4)
Dollar Store Finds (8)
Events (175)
Fashion (21)
Film (153)
Food (10)
Gender (29)
Gift Guide (9)
Health (5)
Historical (3)
History (12)
Hyphen Events (40)
Hyphen Updates (28)
Idealize This! (4)
Immigration (1)
Media (80)
Mr. Hyphen (58)
Music (56)
News (124)
Parenthood (14)
Performance (36)
Photography (2)
Politics (113)
Race (145)
Reviews (10)
SFIAAFF (52)
Science (3)
Sex (2)
Sports (27)
TV (65)
Takeout (5)

RESOURCES

subscribe to hyphen
Hyphen is a nonprofit mag with an all-volunteer staff that does it all for the love. Support us by subscribing!
subscribe to hyphen