verbatim

Name: Michael Parker


Hometown: Greensboro, North Carolina


Day job: Teaching in the creative writing program at University of North Carolina-Greensboro


Latest book: Towns Without Rivers


Plot summary: Continuation to my first novel (Hello Down There). It follows two characters from that novel, as they leave the town where that novel took place. It's about a brother and sister who get separated and spend the rest of the novel trying to find each other.


First inspiration: My first novel came from a story that my dad told me. He used to work in a drug store and would deliver medicine to this decrepit house. He would knock on the door and a window would open and a hand would come out and snatch the bag out of his hand. The guy was a morphine addict. So I wrote the novel trying to figure out who that man was and why he was holed up in that house.


Book that's changed your life: Madame Bovary is a book I've read over and over. I've learned a tremendous amount from reading that book.


Best advice: I took courses in creative writing so I had lots of people telling me do this, don't do that, but you find your own way. You become the kind of writer that you want to be.


Writer whose career you admire: Cormac McCarthy. I think he has an incredible amount of integrity and I admire how he's handled his fame in recent years. Just the way that his work has grown over the years from his earliest novels to his latest.


Work habits: I get up really early in the morning and write for a couple of hours when I'm teaching and I pretty much write four to five hours in the summer. When I first began to write fiction full-time I worked in a warehouse and drove a forklift, so I had to get up early because I went to work at 7 o'clock. So it just got ingrained that that was the best time for me to work, in the morning.


Like most about touring: I like going different places and meeting people who might have read your early work.


Like least: Sometimes you go to a place and there's two people there, and that's kind of disconcerting because you feel like you could be home doing something else. It doesn't bother me though; I've read for two people, both of whom worked at the bookstore.


Favorite bookstore: McIntyre's Books in Chapel Hill. I love Powell's in Portland, Oregon. Also Elliott Bay in Seattle.


Career high: I feel the best about my work when I'm actually writing it. The reviews, like the New York Times review of the first book, was a real high for me because other people said, ëWow, this is an amazing thing.' But I feel the best in the morning when I'm sitting in my room by myself, and I write something that seems really true and honest and that takes the book in a different way.


Career low: Scribner buying a book and it not coming out.


Ultimate ambition: It's really simple -- to write a book that I really love and that I'm totally pleased with.

On tour with Michael Parker

Interview by Stephanie Swilley

It's been eight years since Michael Parker introduced himself with his debut novel, Hello Down There. The book received widespread acclaim and was described by the New York Times as "a serious, memorable novel that begins a very serious career."

Now Parker's follow-up, a book that was "never supposed to be my second novel," continues the story of the residents of fictional Trent, North Carolina. Filled with melancholy prose and slow Southern charm, Towns Without Rivers, like Parker's other books, takes readers on a journey to escape family and find identity. A girl from the wrong side of the tracks, Reka (short for Eureka) has just been released from jail after serving time for administering a fatal overdose to her morphine-addicted boyfriend.

"[Reka] makes some awful decisions in this novel," Parker says. "But that's what we do; we make questionable decisions in our lives and learn the hard way." BookPage caught up with the boyish-looking author on the fourth stop of his 14-city book tour. In the middle of an intense thunderstorm that had the lights flickering, Parker revealed what it means to be a Southern writer and discussed the ups and downs of crossing the country to promote a book.

"This is more organized than my first tour. I have a better publicist," he says in his lilting Southern accent, "and that makes all the difference in the world."

Why did you come back to these characters?

I ended [Hello Down There] on a real ambiguous note and a lot of people would ask me what happened afterwards. I never would say, and it was really because I didn't know. It wasn't because I was being coy; I just didn't know. So I really wrote the book to find out what happened to them afterwards. Also, I was really interested in the challenge of writing about characters over time and writing about them after other things have happened to them that I didn't actually write. That part of it intrigued me.

You've been called a Southern writer. Do you accept that label?

Yeah, proudly. I do, and then I have problems with it at the same time, because I feel that it limits my work. I had a review last week for this book, and the guy took me to task for not reinventing Southern literature, which is not at all what I set out to do.

There's a great tradition there, which I'm happy to be a part of, but I don't really feel like I am trying to carry on the mantle of [William] Faulkner and [Flannery] O'Conner.

But you're often compared to them. How do you feel about that?

Well that's nice, they're all good writers. I admire their work, all of their work. It's a wonderful compliment, but I'm not trying to be just that. I know there are people in other parts of the country that say, ëI don't really care about the South, I just like your good stories.'

How would you describe your Southern writing style?

I think my characters have a relationship to place that people assume is real Southern because they love where they come from or they hate where they come from, but they are never indifferent towards it. You know what I mean? And that's something that people think is intrinsically Southern.

Also, most of my characters love language and delight in language. They're subtly indirect and very alive. And I think Southerners excel at that kind of irony.

It almost seems like you're fascinated with words themselves.

Yeah, that's what Hello Down There was really about -- about language and how you define yourself by what you say. There's a great discrepancy between the words you use to say something and the way you really feel, so that's something I'm interested in writing about. Writing is like thatóyou're trying to nail it, you're trying to say what happens to these people, but there's always this other story that's not getting told and trying to get on the page somehow.

I like the title of your new book and I was just wondering if you could explain the significance of Towns Without Rivers.

No, I can't. (laughs) Yes I can, I will try. I had several different titles for this one. The way I go about titling is that I have titles that I like and I try to make them work for the book instead of it coming up organically, which is pretty stupid really. Don't tell anybody. This one I just liked the idea; I've thought a lot about how rivers can change towns and how the presence of the river means something to the people that are there, and how landlocked towns are different from towns that are on water. It just has to do with the way people are being defined by place and where they are.

You teach creative writing. How has that affected your writing?

That has definitely changed it. There's two parts to it. You're reading other people's work and trying to teach them how to edit, so it can make you a better editor of your own work because you're constantly preaching [it]. The other thing is, I'm constantly teaching by example so I'm always teaching books, novels, classics. When you're constantly reading the good stuff, you have to measure up to it.

Have your students read your work?

Some of them have.

Any feedback?

They're shy about talking about it to me. But some of them aren't. They say, 'I read your book and I thought it stank.' That's fine with me; at least they read it.


Towns Without Rivers
By Michael Parker
Morrow, $25
ISBN 0380978601

Buy or borrow this book!

Support your local independent bookseller

Find it in a WorldCat library

Compare prices at major online bookstores

Where to next:

Friday, July 13th
7:00 p.m.
Cook Inlet Bookstore
415 West Fifth
Anchorage, AK 99501

Saturday, July 21st
2:00 p.m.
Bristol Books
1908 Eastwood Road
Wilmington, NC 28403

Tuesday, July 24th
7:00 p.m.
Barnes & Noble
3102 Northline Avenue
Greensboro, NC 27408

Saturday, July 28th
11:00 a.m.
McIntyres
2000 Ferrington Village
Pittsboro, NC 27312



© 2001 ProMotion, inc.
www@bookpage.com