Interview of Lonita Cook by Xánath Caraza
The
Chronicles of Cyn: Awaken the Sleeper by Lonita Cook fills the
reader with aromas, polychromatic images, sounds while traveling from the
psychological inner world of Cyn to the physical landscape of her journey as a
Goddess vampire through time. With “dark
skin as a starless night”, this female vampire longs for what will not return
and for what is lost forever. Her
internal and external journey pushes her to reflect on universal questions such
as love, art, the concept of beauty, nature, and God. With an exquisite writing style, Cook invites
the reader to travel along with Cyn who at the present time is somewhere in the
Midwest, hungry and thirsty for liquid carmine love.
—Xánath Caraza
Who is Lonita Cook?
I am
a mother, dutiful daughter, writer of fiction and for performance, and I am an
arts activist. The stories that explore the fantastic and magical have always
been the stories that resonate most with me, so that’s what I like to bring to
my work. Trying to explore an Afrikan and/or Black gaze is also central to my
creativity. I am an Afro-optimist.
The
weird part is I am largely influenced by one 1980’s movie: David Lynch’s Dune
(adaptation from the Frank Herbert series). It is my all-time favorite movie.
So, exploring themes like faith, loss, salvation, and power against
non-traditional backdrops is something that excites me.
As a child, who first introduced you to
reading?
My
mother was my first and best teacher. She taught me to read before I was two.
It was a passion for her, both reading and teaching. I don’t remember the
process of learning, but I do remember sharing words and concepts and new
worlds and imagination. That was my favorite. It taught me that those moments
are worth bonding over.
How did you first become a writer?
Writing
wasn’t what I did first. I am a trained actor. I studied at a New York
conservatory. It was there that I realized that acting was just a hobby, not
the adventure I’d want to commit my flesh, heart, mind and soul to. So, it took
me a few years to even ask the question: what is it that I am passionate about?
“They”
say, the things we do for free, would do even if we never got paid, are
probably closest to our passion. I had always been writing. I will always
write. Though I was never good at it. I like to communicate. I like to listen.
I like to hear.
Theater
was my sanctuary back then. I love the theater. Naturally, I thought if I’m
going to write, I must write for actors and honor all my friends, contribute to
their needs, which I understood well.
In
college, I was the president of the University Theater Association and
co-founded an on-campus group, The Conjure Theater Troupe. I had written a play
and submitted it to our student advisor. He read it. His only note was: I could
give you notes, but I’ll say this instead. I couldn’t put it down. I read it in
one sitting. But, it’s not really appropriate for the stage. Have you ever
considered writing a book?
I
was so mad at him. I was young. I wanted to be August Wilson, Susan Lori Parks,
Moliere. I read plays. I admired playwrights. Outside of class, it had been a
long while since I’d read any books!
Years
drifted by. I believed I was a playwright. I was a playwright who was supposed
to be writing novels? So, I wrote nothing.
Right
before I turned thirty I became inspired by a particular hardship to explore
writing a novel. I wrote fifteen pages and asked a few people to take a look.
ALL of them said about the same thing: I don’t know who these people are, I
don’t know where they are, and I have no clue why they’re doing what they’re
doing. I’m not even sure I know what they’re doing.
The
oddest thing happened... Someone recommended “Fountainhead”. I had never even
heard of Ayn Rand. But I read it. It was exactly the example I needed of how to
write description and detail and how to personalize it, make it character. That
is why you’ll find my book what current readers might call overwritten.
Toni
Morrison followed, then Dan Brown and a revisit to James Baldwin. But I was
still missing the important part. Genre. I was writing about vampires and
relationships and powers. People started handing me all manner of romance and
erotica. Ah. That was an education.
And
Twilight. Oh, ho, ho. Twilight happened.
While
I was dragging my feet, the industry changed. Self-publishing became a real and
viable thing. Everything was new. People were pissed. Some were scrambling to
define and drive this new vehicle forward.
I
was in a writers group trying to learn how to write and fewer and fewer of our
members wanted to be traditionally published. Like the rest of the world, I had
to open to a new approach, a fresh set of rules. All this writing business for
me has boiled down to exploration. I kind of want to see what will, what can
happen. It’s scary out here, but it’s fun.
Do you have any favorite movie or book?
It’s
strange, but I have favorite movies. Not so much favorite books. My all-time
favorite book is one for which I remember few details. I don’t remember the
title or the names of characters. But when I was in the second grade I read it
over and over and over and over again. I remember the way it made me feel. Like
I wish I could rescue the little girl protagonist. In that way, I learned to
understand literature. I never would be able to rescue her. No matter how many
times I read it, her story was always the same. I learned then that books are
about the reader: How did I change?
What
is a day of creative writing like for you?
I
wish I could say that I have a routine. All the professionals do. They say they
do. But, before I’m a writer, I’m a mother and a daughter who is responsible
for the full-time care for my mother. They come first.
Pros
say that if we really want it, we will carve out some time each and every day
to do it.
Maybe
that’s why it took ten years to complete this novel. That, and I had a lot to
learn just to get to this basic stage.
But
when I do write, I like to be both inside and outside, so I write in my car.
Not always, but, that’s my favorite place.
When
I first started, I’d write by hand and then edit as I typed. But, I’ve
streamlined my process. I do outlines, write paragraphs here and there,
dialogue they must say, images I must reveal, rough drafts. Usually, once I get
that through-line I just sit down and write.
Currently,
I write at least six times a week for at least 3-5 hours at a time. My children
are older and they prefer I leave them alone mostly, so...hello more writing
time.
When do you know when a poem is ready to
be read?
I
never know. Gosh, I’m not sure any writer does. I think the writer has to
listen to instinct and friends. Our readers, fellow writers, editors, etc tell
us when it’s time. The writer can tinker forever. Instinct will say enough, but
it never says it’s done.
Could you describe your activities as
writer/journalist?
They
say don’t develop vices as you write. I used to smoke cigarettes and drink
coffee. It’s almost like I needed a buffer to get me through to that world,
that one that’s made up almost entirely of energy, the one we use to shape the
life of our stories. It’s a strange place to be. But, I’ve since quit smoking
and I do a little workout before I sit down to write-- some yoga or something
and then a little mental activity... I am love, I am capable, I am ready.
I’m
actually much stronger in the imagination this way. It doesn’t deplete me; it
doesn’t best me.
Could you comment on your life as a
cultural activist?
It
took a long time to understand that no matter my circumstance I have something
to give. Starting first with my children is important to me. I give them art.
Music, singing, painting, drawing, writing. I give that to them. My hope is to
teach them how to give it to others. To serve through art. Or, just to serve in
their best way.
Volunteering
is also important to how I serve the community. I gift a lot of my time to the
Kansas City film industry and when I tithe, I do it to social organizations,
not just congregations.
Compassion,
loving-kindness and generosity are the cornerstone on which I build my arts
activism. Service is for everyone.
But,
I care about Black people and the ways we see ourselves, the cultural esteem we
have. I’m interested in Black people being the standard for themselves.
Resurrection first, liberation after. I have a heart for all people, but I am
an Afro-optimist. If we let go of all the politics, all the modern history
especially as defined by colonialization, all the categorizing, what do we look
like? What is our flesh, what is our perspective, what is our contribution? These
types of questions genuinely interest me and I try to explore it in my work.
What projects are you working on at the
moment?
I
serve the board of Kansas International Film Festival. This work is important
to me because it’s one of those rare opportunities where the benefit is
balanced between myself, the community and the organization. There is so much
to give and so many demographics I get to serve from this position. And I’m
learning so much. I’m also a mentor with the Kansas City Women in Film &
Television mentorship program. As I learn, I try to share.
What advice do you have for other writers?
Faith
is key. Faith is biblical and we know what it says. But, we must also know that
faith is an agreement. An agreement.
With
All That Is.
Knowing
what you want and what you are willing to give in exchange is important (the
terms of the agreement). Putting your name on it through prayer, meditation,
envisioning, and ACTION is signing a contract with the Divine Ever Presence. I
call it God. You can call it as you will.
You
will enter into many contracts over the course of your life. This one here,
this agreement you make with God, is the greatest contract you will ever make.
It
is an agreement. And faith is key.
Believe
that you live in a world where you can have anything, anything you want.
If
you want to write. Write. If you want to publish. Publish.
What
do you want?
Put
your name on it.
What else would you like to share?
Love.
Hope. Adventure.
ReplyDeleteonline certification courses
I wanted to set aside some opportunity to express my gratefulness towards this brilliant site and you! Minding it!