As far as why Sather prefers writing short stories, she says that the limited space of short stories allows her more creativity, with each sentence conveying much more meaning. Additionally, the smaller space also feels less overwhelming to fill than the immensity of a novel. “In the book business, everyone wants to hear about novels… for me at the time, I couldn’t hold a novel. I just didn’t know how to hold that much space. It felt too big and almost vacant in a way and a short story had this, the size of it, felt manageable and I could do it in short pieces, which is sort of the time that I had then, and then the other part of it was I was really fascinated with how much you could do in a small space and the demands in a way of the form.” When creating her stories, Sather says that her ideas often materialize when she feels a conflict between two people. “Some of the stories are adjacent to experiences I’ve had. They aren’t exactly experiences but they’re sort of like a glimpse or a moment where I think, ‘oh, what if it went this way?’ and I follow a darker thread and I don’t really know where the story is going to go. I mean, I have a sense of the mood and so I think in ways the mood shapes what’s possible to happen for these characters, but I’m very much discovering them as I’m writing… I try and write for my first draft, not fast, but just keep moving and not worry necessarily about whether this is good enough or whether I picked the right word because I just want the momentum of the possibility of what could happen next.”
Sometimes having a limitation is a spark for creativity. I was always thinking, ‘Ok, what can a sentence do? Like how can a sentence do more than just say one thing?'”
Fame is a series of misunderstanding surrounding a name.”
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