Read Woe to Live On: A Novel Online
Authors: Daniel Woodrell
Tags: #Fiction / Historical, #Fiction / Literary
You wrote for quite a few years before garnering any recognition.
I wrote for ten years for nothing. And I wrote almost every day. I kept going because I liked doing it. If you really don’t like doing it, it’ll show up pretty soon. I filled up boxes of stuff that didn’t go anywhere. But I needed to do that. And I don’t think of myself as an incredibly fast learner. I learned at the pace that I learned at. But I’m told that ten years is about right. I had to emotionally develop. It’s an emotional thing as well as a technical thing. And I had technique before I had the other. The emotional honesty is what really takes you further and further. It’s an evolving thing.
You’ve always been a writer. You’ve never been employed in a regular job, not even as a teacher.
I was not equipped for the conventional world of employment and I didn’t want to be—which has a lot to do with why I wasn’t equipped. I just didn’t want to do that. I would rather live under a fucking bridge and write on old grocery sacks if it comes to that. I remember once I was at a library and it was a place where all the homeless guys would come in and lay around all day and a guy from the university
leaned over and said to me, “Dan, they all wanted to be writers once, too.”
People make a lot about how you write about hillbillies, but most of your characters are not hillbillies, per se.
Nope, they’re not. Most are just proletariat prone toward criminal activity. This house over here, nobody in that house has had a job in like three generations.
Did it take you some time to find your writing voice? Did it evolve or was there a moment when you felt like you achieved it?
At Iowa, a friend of mine and writer, Leigh Allison Wilson, was sitting around with Katie one day, laughing at a story I was telling them, and Leigh said, “How come you never do that in your fiction? Your fiction is cold and hard and stone-faced and chiseled. That isn’t even who you are in your private life, you’re so different from that.” And Katie said, “You know what, that’s true.” That’s a comment from a friend that ended up being very influential. I don’t even think she knows how influential that ended up being.
The full, unedited version of this interview was originally published in June 2011 on the website of
The Oxford American
magazine (www.oxfordamerican.org), and is still available there. Reprinted with permission.
Under the Bright Lights
Muscle for the Wing
The Ones You Do
The Bayou Trilogy
(omnibus edition)
Give Us a Kiss
Tomato Red
The Death of Sweet Mister
Winter’s Bone
The Outlaw Album
“Woodrell joins Douglas C. Jones and the few others whose novels of western history are mainstream literature…. The violence is fast and understated and bawdy humor relieves the story’s intensity.”
—
Kansas City Star
“A renegade Western… that celebrates the genre while bushwhacking its most cherished traditions….Jake Roedel recites his tale of woe in an improbably rustic idiom, with a malignant humor and a hip sensibility that are wise beyond his years and way ahead of his times.”
—
Chicago Tribune
“Woodrell is on the cutting edge of mean… a born writer. His style is both brutal and touched with poetry. And it’s very much his own. Don’t miss it.”
—
Philadelphia Inquirer
“Woodrell pins it down just right… speaks to the universal cruelty of civil war.”
—
St. Louis Post-Dispatch
“A fine novel….Daniel Woodrell has captured the devastation of war and, more importantly, the twisting of men’s minds.”
—
United Press International
“An absolutely brilliant performance.”
—David Martin, author of
The Crying Heart Tattoo
“Like William Kennedy’s, Woodrell’s prose has a lyrical quality that effectively evokes a sense of place.”
—
San Francisco Examiner
“Woodrell’s novel is at once intensely literary and wonderfully cinematic…
Woe to Live On
is in some ways a celebration of the intertwining of American writing and American speech, of the way, since
Huckleberry Finn
especially (written by Woodrell’s fellow Missourian Mark Twain, né Samuel Clemens), American literary prose hears itself in dialogue with transcribed, unschooled, spoken vernacular. But, ironically, when you pull that speech off the written page and throw it up on the screen, the results can be oddly ‘literary’—a quality we carefully embraced in the screenplay.”
—James Schamus, screenwriter,
Ride with the Devil
A Conversation with the Author of
Woe to Live On
Questions and Topics for Discussion
Praise for Daniel Woodrell’s
Woe to Live On
The characters and events in this book are fictitious. Any similarity to real persons, living or dead, is coincidental and not intended by the author.
Copyright © 1987 by Daniel Woodrell
Foreword copyright © 2012 by Ron Rash
Reading group guide copyright © 2012 by Daniel Woodrell and Little, Brown and Company
Cover design by Ploy Siripant; cover photograph courtesy of Universal Studios Licensing LLC
Cover copyright © 2012 by Hachette Book Group, Inc.
All rights reserved. In accordance with the U.S. Copyright Act of 1976, the scanning, uploading, and electronic sharing of any part of this book without the permission of the publisher constitute unlawful piracy and theft of the author’s intellectual property. If you would like to use material from the book (other than for review purposes), prior written permission must be obtained by contacting the publisher at [email protected]. Thank you for your support of the author’s rights.
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First e-book edition: June 2012
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ISBN 978-0-316-20618-1