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Author: Steve Himmer

  • A Conversation With Jaye Viner

    Photo by Heidi SellJaye Viner and I used to pass each other in the eighty-year-old corridors of Arts and Sciences Hall at the university where I taught and she was earning her second graduate degree. That was five years ago, and while we said hello to each other, we never crossed paths in an actual…

  • An interview with Michelle Ross

    I’ve loved Michelle Ross’ writing since I first encountered her stories during our MFA fiction workshops at Indiana University. Since then, Ross has published There’s So Much They Haven’t Told You, winner of the Moon City Short Fiction Award, and her second collection Shapeshifting, winner of the Stillhouse Press Short Story Award, was published in…

  • A Conversation Between Sadie Hoagland and Maria Kuznetsova

    Sadie Hoagland and Maria Kuznetsova first met in 2008, when they were studying fiction writing at UC Davis under Yiyun Li, Lucy Corin, Lynn Freed, and Pam Houston. Each has a second book out this spring — Kuznetsova’s second novel, Something Unbelievable, from Random House, and Hoagland’s debut novel, Strange Children, from Red Hen Press…

  • An interview with Erin McGraw

    Erin McGraw’s seventh and most recent book Joy (Counterpoint, 2019) is a collection of flash fiction or “short-shorts.” Despite its cheerful title, Erin McGraw’s Joy is about anything but. In fifty-three pieces of sudden fiction, characters find joy hard to come by. A fifteen-year-old girl hears a news report of a local rape and knows…

  • An interview with Jeffrey Condran

    In his new story collection, Claire, Wading Into the Danube By Night, Jeffrey Condran’s fiction once again shines a light on places where the personal meets the political in the age of anxiety, and where characters who feel battered by life have no choice but to look for hope in the small intimacies that sometimes…

  • An interview with Steven Wingate

    Steve Wingate is a Colorado man. His first novel, Of Fathers and Fire (2019), was set there, and his second, The Leave-Takers (2021), was supposed to be, too. But when Wingate moved to South Dakota — not the usual order of operations; my home state is a place people generally leave — he said the…

  • An interview with Chloe N. Clark

    Chloe N. Clark tells Rachel Mans McKenny about her new story collection Collective Gravities (Word West Press, July 2020), her craft, her editing habits, and the apocalypse. This interview was shortened and edited for clarity. + The short stories in Collective Gravities take place in either Midwestern cities and landscapes or space. What was your…

  • Sarah Carson, 'The Space Explorer Ponders His Break Up from the Outer Reaches of the Galaxy'

    You want him to say all of the obvious things, how here among the stars, the Earth shrinking like a lost balloon beneath him, it’s hard to believe what we all take so seriously: Instagram and the NFL playoffs, the neighbor’s overgrown hornbeam, text messages in the dark. You want him to tell you the…

  • An Interview With Michael Nye

    Michael Nye discusses his novel All The Castles Burned (Turner Publishing) and his editorship of STORY with Kathy Bates. + Kathy Bates: It’s exciting to hear the about the relaunch of STORY whose origins date back to 1941. As the new editor-in-chief, what are your plans for the literary magazine, and what should readers and…

  • An Interview With Melanie Hatter

    Photo © Carolina CabanillasIn Melanie Hatter’s Malawi’s Sisters, winner of the inaugural Kimbilio National Fiction Prize (Four Way Books), three sisters from a well-to-do Washington DC family follow separate paths in life. The oldest, Kenya, follows in her parents’ footsteps, first becoming a successful attorney like her father and then a homemaker like her mother.…

  • An Interview With David H. Lynn

    David H. Lynn discusses his new short story collection Children of God (Braddock Avenue Books, May 2019) and his editorship of the Kenyon Review with Grayson Treat. + Grayson Treat: Children of God is a collection of stories old and new. It’s easy to see the recurring theme in the newer stories, all featuring characters…

  • The World as Something Recognizable: Interviews with Cary Holladay and Charles Dodd White

    Two storytellers inspired by landscape — and, as it happens, both fans of the movie, Days of Heaven — Cary Holladay and Charles Dodd White recently read each other’s new books, swapped questions and answers, and found common ground in dangerous characters, moments of weirdness, and “thoughts that would shame hell.” + First, Cary Holladay…