Interview of Donna Miscolta by Xánath
Caraza
Donna Miscolta |
Xánath Caraza (XC): Who is Donna Miscolta?
Donna Miscolta(DM): I grew up in
National City, CA, previously named Rancho de la Nación by Mexico and before
that called El Rancho del Rey by the Spanish, each name reflecting the “owner”
of the land. Prior to all that, it was part of the Kumeyaay's ancestral
territory. I knew none of this while I was growing up. For one thing, such
information was not taught in schools, and even if it had been, my parents were
intent on our being American, whatever the origin of the city we lived in. My
father was an immigrant from the Philippines. He arrived as a steward in the
U.S. Navy after World War II. My mother was born and grew up in San Diego, CA.
Her mother was from Mexico, her father from the Philippines.
Freeway Sign by Raymond Yu |
I
occupy multiple spaces because of my mixed heritage. “Occupy” is a rather
assertive term for what I did while growing up, which was more like hovering at
the fringes or idling on the sidelines, never really claiming a space or taking
a seat or standing my ground. For a long time, I felt like I didn’t belong.
It’s this desire to claim space that infiltrates a lot of my fiction.
Part
of being a writer is trying to understand who you are and your place in the
world, which can be a slow and bewildering process. Though I’ve lived in
Seattle since moving here in my early twenties, most of my stories are set in a
fictional stand-in for the place where I grew up.
I
was very shy as a child and I spent a lot of time observing rather than doing.
I needed to translate those observations into something but didn’t know what
that something was, so I saved things up, stacked them up inside me until I
decided to write them down.
James
Baldwin said, “The responsibility of a writer is to excavate the experience of
the people who produced him.” I think that’s what I’ve tried to do both with my
first book, the novel When the de la Cruz Family Danced, and my story
collection Hola and Goodbye.
XC: As a child, who first introduced you
to reading?
DM: I don’t remember being read to as a
child. My parents were too busy. I don’t remember an abundance of books in our lives
until I was ten when my parents bought a house and we stopped moving from
rental to rental. Before that, I do remember we had stacks of comic books when
I was in kindergarten. They were probably my introduction to words and stories,
but I never developed a lasting love for comics. I also remember the Dick and
Jane books in second grade, when my reading ability was surely impeded by the phonics
lessons imposed on us and which completely baffled me. I don’t remember loving
books until the third grade. My teacher read to us The Wind in the Willows and Charlotte’s
Web. I developed into a fast reader on my own and it became a game to see how
many books I could read compared to my older sister. We went to the public
library every Saturday after catechism and checked out an armful of books and
read until our eyes ached. I think I have to credit my sister for my reading
habit. Part of it was competition, but part of it was a shared activity, when
we would each sprawl on our beds and read the afternoon away. She read
everything. I read mostly fiction.
HOLA AND GOOD BYE BY DONNA MISCOLTA |
XC: How did you first become a writer?
DM: I remember writing and illustrating
a story about a cat when I was in fourth grade. I was very pleased with this
story and also with the drawing. I was pretty good at drawing and thought for a
very brief time that I might be an artist when I grew up. But what pleased me
about the story was that I had created a mood, an action, and what I thought
was a surprise ending, though it’s very likely that it was a cliché. But then I
didn’t write another story until I took a fiction writing class when I was
thirty. I wrote a self-conscious, plotless yawner that strained for the
lyrical. It was almost ten years before I tried again when, inspired by the
publication of Kathleen Alcalá’s story collection Mrs.Vargas and the Dead
Naturalist, I enrolled in a series of writing classes in the University of
Washington extension program in 1992. This was the beginning of my writing
habit. My first story was published in the Raven Chronicles in Seattle in 1994.
It was quite short, but at the time it said what I knew how to say. Many years
later, I developed it into a longer story and it won the Lascaux Award for
Short Fiction in 2014. It appears in my story collection Hola and
Goodbye. Having that first story published made me believe that more of
my stories might also eventually be published.
XC: Do you have any favorite short story
by other authors? Could you share some
lines along with your reflection of what drew you toward that short story?
DM: There are a number of stories that I love
for their intelligently drawn and deeply nuanced characters and sharply focused
scenes. Among them are Antonya Nelson’s “Three Wishes,” which also uses humor
to heart-rending effect; Mia Alvar’s “In the Country,” whose temporal structure
heightens the sense of collapse of both a political regime and a marriage; and Luis
Urrea’s “Welcome to the Water Museum,” which shows the multiple levels of tragedy
wrought by environmental disaster.
In
Urrea’s story, a small town has suffered a drought for so long that the
children have had no experience of rain, humidity, mist, or bodies of water.
They visit a water museum to learn about this virtually extinct resource. On
the bus ride over, young Billy daydreams about his classmate Samantha, an
object of desire seemingly as remote as an abundance of water.
“Billy
rested his head against the glass and felt his mind fly out all the windows and
doors. Felt himself move in and out of the alleyways. Like a great sideways
yo-yo in a dream. Like he could walk into a thousand life stories. Like he
could think up a whole new world. Like he could go out of himself and keep
going and find a house on a beach with ten million miles of ocean in front and
sweet cold fog and afternoon rainstorms and Sammy there beside him. This
thought both comforted and stung him and made him happy and made him want to
cry. How did Pops ever tell Mom he wanted to be her boyfriend? How did you do
that? And – second base! Bras? How could a guy ever get up the guts to ask? How
did a kiss happen, anyway?”
Later,
after Billy and the others have been dazed and terrified by the museum displays
of rain – its sound, its various strengths and velocities, the accompanying
thunder – Billy asks his mother in the car on the way home, “How do you ask a
girl for a kiss?”
His
mother answers that you just know when the time is right. “How do you know?”
Billy persists. His mother answers, “It’s like the rain. You just know when
it’s coming.”
A
mother who has known both a first kiss and rain, in her nostalgia unthinkingly gives
her son no hope for the future. It’s a marvelous story of innocence, hope, and
doom.
XC: What is a day of creative writing like
for you?
DM: I work full-time for a local
government agency. I will often scribble notes on a piece of writing I’m
working on during my lunch hour. Sometimes, I’ll do the same on the bus ride
home. But I always go to my desk every evening after dinner and write
something. I’m a slow, easily distracted writer and I’m tired in the evening so
the words come slowly. Taking time off from my job for a writing residency is
necessary for me to make good progress on a manuscript. When I’m in residency
somewhere, the daily routine is much different, of course. I usually start the
day with a run, then breakfast while reading a book, then writing until lunch,
more writing with a break in the late afternoon for a walk, dinner and then
more writing, and then reading before bed. I don’t necessarily write faster at
a residency, but long stretches at the laptop allow the words to accumulate. I
owe the completion of a draft of a new novel to three different residencies in
the last year, starting with Ragdale. I drafted the first third of the novel
there in a beautiful room in a historic house with a bewitching prairie in its
backyard. That place felt like magic and I have high hopes for this novel that
had it start there.
Ragdale Room |
XC: When do you know when a text is ready
to be read?
DM: I try to take a story or chapter to the
point where I don’t know what else to do with it. Sometimes that can be an
early draft, but more often it’s a more developed one. I give it to my writing
group. I rely on them to find the holes, the missteps, the murky. Their feedback
usually sparks new ways for me to look at the material. In the editing stages
with my publisher of Hola and Goodbye,
one of the stories just wasn’t working, so I asked my writing group for an
emergency review of the story. Always insightful, their comments helped me find
my way to a fix.
XC: Could you comment on your life as a
cultural activist?
DM: I’ve spent my non-writing career in
a county government agency where I have often been the lone person of color in
a meeting, on a work team, or at a conference session. In the last year it’s
been energizing and inspiring to work on a project wholly apart from my regular
work program of environmental education. The county, recognizing the importance
of equity and social justice as part of its work both internally and in its
services to the public, funded a number of employee-proposed projects – among
them the literary project submitted by the team I’m on. Our proposal was to
bring writers of color into the workplace to present their work as a catalyst
for discussion about race and racism. We put out a call for artists, selected
eight, and organized four events. Though I’ve organized other events, the
events at work were especially gratifying because it brought together several
things that fill my daily life – writing and writers, equity and social
justice, and my job as a project manager.
XC: What project/s are you working on at
the moment?
DM: I’ve competed the draft of a new
novel about a character named Angie Rubio. Two of the chapters have been
published, one in The Adirondack Review and one in Crate. The novel traces the
knowledge a young Mexican-American girl acquires as she progresses through
school. It’s meant to show that what we learn, how we learn and, consequently,
how we behave is shaped by where the power lies within a relationship or situation.
As Angie searches for her place both within and outside the family, she learns
to claim her own power.
I’m
also working on the first draft of a novel based on my short story “Strong
Girls,” which appears in Hola and Goodbye,
and earlier appeared first in Calyx and then in the anthology Memories Flow In Our Veins: Forty Years of
Women’s Writing from CALYX. My novel will take the reader through the
travails of two young women who, in a world of eating disorders, plastic
surgeries, and gender and racial stereotypes, struggle for and achieve a sense
of self, affirm their ties to each other and family, and define their place in
the world.
XC: What advice do you have for other writers?
DM: Here are the things that have
helped me:
A
writing group – Mine has made me a better writer.
Conferences,
workshops, and classes –They’ve helped me build both my craft and my community.
Residencies
– They’re important to me for the opportunity to focus on writing and get a lot
of words down that would otherwise take months to amass.
Writing
schedule – I like the habit of sitting at my desk at a given time each day.
Reading
– I’m always reading something. I read for story, but I think at some level my
brain is processing craft.
XC: What else would you like to share?
DM: I’d like to give a shout-out to
small presses. They’re the reason my books are out in the world. My novel When the de la Cruz Family Danced was
published by Signal 8 Press in 2011, and Hola
and Goodbye is published by Carolina Wren Press. I encourage readers to choose
a book or two from these publishers’ lists to read. Here’s a start: Mulberry by
Paulette Boudreaux and A Falling Star by Chantel Acevedo. And here are a couple
from other small presses: Fire Girl: Essays on India, America, and the
In-Between by Sayantani Dasgupta from Two Sylvias Press and Swarm Theory by
Christine Rice from University of Hell Press. Really, there are so many out
there to choose from.
Donna Miscolta |
Donna Miscolta’s short story
collection Hola and Goodbye
was selected by Randall Kenan for the Doris Bakwin Award for Writing by a Woman
and publication by Carolina Wren Press in 2016.
She is also the author of the novel When
the de la Cruz Family Danced (Signal 8 Press, 2011). Her stories and essays
have appeared in a variety of journals, including the anthology Memories Flow in Our Veins: Forty Years of
Women’s Writing from Calyx. Excerpts from her novel-in-progress The Education of Angie Rubio appear in The
Adirondack Review and Crate (now the Santa Ana Review). Find her at donnamiscolta.com.
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