Here is a secret, though it’s not very important. I read the essays last.
Every
month, on the first, I click a button on the Ascent website and open the
submissions manager. A short while
later—sometimes a few days, sometimes as much as two weeks—the manuscript
counter reaches 200 and I click that button again to turn the submissions off. There is no magic to the number 200 other
than my own time and reading speed. When
I was in graduate school, I sent a story to a good literary quarterly and they
accepted it—a year after I submitted it. It then took them two years to print it.
I was elated. And I was angry.
Because I am a writer, and because I am old enough to
remember the fear and desire and anticipation and loathing hovering every day
around my empty US Postal Service mailbox, I make sure the writers who send to
Ascent get word, some word, within one month.
So I begin with the poetry.
Poetry brings me back each month to reading like an editor, questioning
with every new submission my response to language, to concision, to form and to
depth. Reading the poetry first is a way
to open the heart and the head to the blood-jet. Poetry is also the least forgiving of
faults. Return or short-list is often an
easy first choice.
I read the fiction next.
I suspect I wince every time I read a new story that begins with some
down on his luck somebody, who happens to be in a run-down bar, half drunk,
gazing at some impossibly good-looking hope, but otherwise the stories that
come to Ascent are good. They have size
and weight and they are complicated not like detective novels but in the way of
showing how love and confusion are necessary companions. Again when I was in graduate school, the
writing world was filled with the imitators of Donald Barthelme and Ray
Carver—both ends of the scale.
Pyrotechnics and urgent whispers. These days, we seem to have learned the techniques, and the best writers
use them all, sparingly or not, to tell a real story, a deep story, a fiction
that’s true.
And then I read the essays.
Essays are what I write. I expect
the most from them, too. For me, the
rewards of the essay are larger, deeper and more profound than any poem or
fiction. They carry the weight of
humanity just as fully as poetry and fiction, and they carry the weight of news
as well. The essay is intellectual and
moral and personal journalism.
The world is not a simple place. The essays I most love are those that take
the act of explanation, the act of articulating wonder or hope or anger or just
curiosity and hunger, as their reason for being. I am sent a thousand essays that tell me a
story—the time the author broke an arm, got fired, fell in love, wrecked a car,
went hiking/rafting/climbing/spelunking, got a disease, remembered something
from childhood—and every one of them will go back to the author if the essay
does not also wonder what it all means.
Here is a phrase I often use with students: The Essay is the
Witnessed Development of an Idea. In
other words, here is an idea, developed with examples and details and with deep
care for the craft, given as a gift to some reader. The gift is not the sharing of the
event. The gift is the sharing of an
idea the event provokes. And the quality
of the gift is in the exactness and precision of the words. Yes, I am aware this quality should describe
the best in every genre. But it seems to
me the stakes are higher for the essay.
A poem and a story achieve metaphor.
The poem and the story are True.
The essay achieves metaphor, and does so without disbelief. The essay is both True and true.
Here is another way to think about it. I have no real interest in the history of the
torque-wrench. But even if it’s 3:00 a.m. and I am for some reason awake and
channel surfing, if I come across Modern Marvels and they are talking about the
history of the torque-wrench, I know my next half hour will be happily learning
about wrenches. There is a patience to
the developing context. There is a
connection made from the wrench in my garage to some paleo-wrench I did not
know existed. When the show is over, my
wrench is a lot more complicated and a lot more exact. When the best essays are over, my own life—my
history and community and family and sense of ethics—is a lot more complicated
and a lot more exact. Life is
larger. The universe is more filled with
wonder.
There are no rules at Ascent. Because we are an online journal now, there
is no need to fill or limit pages. And
we publish just as soon as we accept, so there are no publishing
deadlines. An issue is never early or
late. If we publish five essays tomorrow
and then not another one for six months, it makes no difference at all.
I would love to say we have an editorial preference. Reviewing the last few essays on the site,
you could think we have a particular interest in homes. Turn back just a bit farther, though, and
there are no homes at all. There is a
bit of dentistry. There is a war-zone. There is a trip in Appalachia . There is the Peace Corps. There is a dog. There is an office wrestling match. There is a bit of food. There is an execution
and there is a birthday. There are a
couple hikes in the mountains. There is
a piece about language.
I should admit to one bias.
More often than not, when a cover letter says “attached is a lyric
essay” I do not smile. Too often,
“lyric” has come to mean slight. The
author is sending a scene, an anecdote, a memory or experience without context
or development. Too often “lyric” has
become code for “here’s something interesting and I don’t know what it’s about
and I’ve not really done the work to figure it out, but the words are pretty.” In truth, I love the lyric essay. I love the micro-essay and the novella-length
memoir. What I cannot stand is anecdote
without context, without idea, without wonder how it all fits together.
As a reader, I do not think in categories. Ascent will read anything at any time. All I want is to be in the presence of a
written voice that is on a journey, to be a member of the corps of discovery,
to be so fully captivated by the unfolding connections that I’m late for
something else.
We read a love poem, or a love story, and if it’s any good
we say: yes, exactly—even though we never thought of love that way, in those
words, before. We say, I didn’t know I
knew that. We say, me too.
When I read an essay, a really good essay, it’s like a long
broad curve on a highway. We’re moving
fast, the scenery is thrilling, the road in front of us promises a destination,
though it’s around the corner and we are not quite there yet. As long as the tires are good, I’ll be damned
if I’m going to slow down.
W. Scott Olsen is a professor of English at Concordia College
in Moorhead , Minnesota , and the editor of the literary
magazine Ascent. His most recent book is
Prairie Sky: Reflections on Flying and the Grace of Altitude.
This is so helpful. I'll be sharing it with my students tonight!
ReplyDelete