{"id":15,"date":"2022-06-04T09:45:40","date_gmt":"2022-06-04T09:45:40","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/wordpress.etypegoogle10.com\/?p=15"},"modified":"2022-06-04T09:45:40","modified_gmt":"2022-06-04T09:45:40","slug":"128","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/wordpress.etypegoogle10.com\/?p=15","title":{"rendered":"Lone Star Listens: Thomas McNeely"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"articleHeader\"><em><span id=\"u2256-5\">LSLL corresponded with Texas native <\/span><span id=\"u2256-6\">Thomas H. McNeely,<\/span><span id=\"u2256-7\"> now living and teaching at Emerson College, by email on a day when Boston was nearly immobilized by snow and Lubbock had an eighty-degree January afternoon. We didn\u2019t envy him.<\/span><\/em><\/div>\n<div id=\"u2476\">\n<div id=\"u2258\">\n<div id=\"u2256-253\">\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p id=\"u2256-14\"><strong>LSLL: First, kudos on <span id=\"u2256-12\"><em>Ghost Horse<\/em>,<\/span> and a lifetime of impressive literary and professional experiences. How do you think the time frame defines each of these experiences for you?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p id=\"u2256-19\">Thank you, Kay, for having me on <span id=\"u2256-17\">Lone Star Literary Life.<\/span> I am honored by this invitation&nbsp;and grateful that you are providing this service to the Texas literary community.<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p id=\"u2256-26\">I grew up in Houston, which is where <span id=\"u2256-22\">Ghost Horse,<\/span> my debut novel, is set. I have been a Dobie Paisano fellow, a Wallace Stegner fellow at Stanford, a defense investigator of capital murder cases, and a staffer at the <span id=\"u2256-24\">Daily Texan<\/span>.<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p id=\"u2256-35\">When I was growing up in Houston, I wanted to be a writer. This came to me, I think, from my grandmother, Alice Cochran, who won the Intercollegiate Cup for Elocution in 1918. She could recite poetry well into her eighties and continues to be an inspiration to me. Writing on deadline for the Texan was my first exposure to what it would mean to be a professional writer\u2014I was very lucky to work with some amazingly talented writers and editors, and also to have wonderful writing teachers at UT\u2014<span id=\"u2256-29\">James Magnuson,<\/span> <span id=\"u2256-31\">Elizabeth Harris,<\/span> and <span id=\"u2256-33\">Thomas Whitbread.<\/span> The lessons I learned in those classes are ones I still call upon in my writing and teaching.<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p id=\"u2256-44\">After college, I worked for the Texas Resource Center, a law firm that defended death row inmates in their appeals. I got to work with a brilliant, committed group of people. I also got to see human strength and tragedy on a grand scale\u2014in the work of those lawyers, the families of defendants and victims, law enforcement, and the police. Those experiences shaped me as a writer, and years later, became the basis for my first published story, <span><a href=\"http:\/\/www.theatlantic.com\/magazine\/archive\/1999\/06\/sheep\/377645\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><span id=\"u2256-38\">\u201cSheep,\u201d<\/span><\/a><\/span> in the <em><span id=\"u2256-42\">Atlantic Monthly<\/span>.<\/em><\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p id=\"u2256-54\">I wrote \u201cSheep\u201d while I was working on my MFA at Emerson College, where again I was lucky to have some amazing teachers: <span id=\"u2256-47\">Pamela Painter,<\/span><span id=\"u2256-49\">Margot Livesey,<\/span> and <span id=\"u2256-51\">James Carroll<\/span> It was there that I really began to take myself seriously as a writer, which in itself was a struggle. Most of what I wrote from that time is an embarrassment to me, but I worked constantly, holed up in a closet in my studio apartment on Beacon Street.<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p id=\"u2256-69\">In 2000, the Dobie Paisano Program generously gave me a fellowship. I wrote the first draft of <span id=\"u2256-57\">Ghost Horse<\/span> on the Paisano Ranch\u2014it is a special place and program for Texas writers, which I hope will be preserved by the University. [Editor&#8217;s note: the <em><span id=\"u2256-59\">Austin Chronicle<\/span>&#8216;s<\/em> 2013 <span><a href=\"http:\/\/www.austinchronicle.com\/news\/2013-06-21\/range-war-at-the-dobie-ranch\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">&#8220;Range War at the Dobie Ranch&#8221;<\/a><\/span> described this ongoing issue early on; more on the <span><a href=\"http:\/\/www.utexas.edu\/ogs\/Paisano\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">Dobie Ranch and fellowship program<\/a><\/span> is found on the University of Texas website.]<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p id=\"u2256-85\">In 2001, I received a Stegner Fellowship at Stanford, which was both a wonderful and humbling experience. I was surrounded by immensely talented writers\u2014<span id=\"u2256-72\">Adam Johnson,<\/span><span id=\"u2256-74\">Kaui Hart Hemmings,<\/span><span id=\"u2256-76\">ZZ Packer,<\/span><span id=\"u2256-78\">Julie Orringer<\/span>\u2014and again very lucky to have amazing teachers, like <span id=\"u2256-80\">Tobias Wolff,<\/span><span id=\"u2256-82\">Elizabeth Tallent,<\/span> and <span id=\"u2256-84\">John L\u2019Heureux.<\/span><\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p id=\"u2256-92\">During the time I was teaching at Stanford, my father took his own life, an event that nearly ended my work on <span id=\"u2256-88\">Ghost Horse.<\/span> That loss is buried deep inside this book. I\u2019ve also been writing short stories and pieces of a memoir, a section of which will be published in<em> <span id=\"u2256-90\">Texas Monthly<\/span><\/em> this spring.<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p id=\"u2256-98\"><strong>LSLL: I couldn&#8217;t help but be struck by the similarities between <em>Ghost Horse<\/em> and Richard Linklater&#8217;s celebrated film <span id=\"u2256-96\"><em>Boyhood<\/em>.<\/span> Have others mentioned this?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p id=\"u2256-107\">Wow. I am so flattered by that comparison. I have heard that before, and am not sure what to do with it. The human and artistic vision of <span>Boyhood<\/span> is epic, extending from childhood through the departure of the main character, Mason, for college. In <span id=\"u2256-103\"><em>Ghost Horse<\/em>,<\/span> I was trying to focus on a more discrete moment for my hero, Buddy, when he transitions from the private world of childhood to the larger social world, a transition complicated by the disintegration of his family and the race and class tensions in Houston at that time. I was very interested, in writing <span id=\"u2256-105\"><em>Ghost Horse<\/em>,<\/span> in focusing on that moment, unfortunately familiar to many Anglo Texans of my generation, when friendships with people of other races were discouraged, and how this shapes our identities.<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p id=\"u2256-120\">That said, I think <em><span id=\"u2256-110\">Ghost Horse<\/span><\/em> shares a lot of affinities with <span id=\"u2256-112\">Boyhood,<\/span> not only in its evocation of a Houston childhood, and the ways in which children are always watching and learning from adults, but in other ways that I find harder to define. I have tremendous respect for both Linklater\u2019s and <span>Wes Anderson<\/span>\u2019s films, and I like to think that <em><span id=\"u2256-116\">Ghost Horse<\/span><\/em> shares something with both of them\u2014the tension between past and present in Linklater, the use of art and imagination\u2014in <span id=\"u2256-118\"><em>Ghost Horse<\/em>,<\/span> an animated movie two boys are making\u2014as in Anderson.<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p id=\"u2256-124\"><strong>LSLL: As a child of the \u201970s, I find that that decade has gotten lost in the shuffle of the cultural limelight of the turbulent \u201960s and the greedy \u201980s. What was particularly distinctive about Houston in the \u201970s?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p id=\"u2256-127\">If I had to boil it down to a couple of words, it was a sense of danger, and also a sense of community that still existed at that time, as a protection against that danger.<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p id=\"u2256-130\">I grew up south of downtown Houston, a few blocks from Hughes Tool, in a working-class, mostly Latino neighborhood. One of my earliest visions of the larger city came through the Dean Corll serial murder case, in part because his accomplice\u2019s confession was captured live on the TV news, and in part because our neighbors\u2019 daughter knew one of the boys who\u2019d disappeared. Houston was still a small enough place, then, for such connections to be made.<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p id=\"u2256-133\">All of this was mixed in with my perceptions of race\u2014it was made clear to me, in a variety of different ways, that as an Anglo kid, I was safer.<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p id=\"u2256-136\">So, it was dangerous, and the racial politics were ugly, but there was also a sense of coherence that seems to me to be missing now, though perhaps this is only because I am not raising children there. This might also be nostalgia clouding my memories. But I do remember parents and kids from different backgrounds mixing together, a sense of shared responsibility and concern, perhaps in the face of that danger.<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p id=\"u2256-142\"><strong>LSLL seeks to celebrate the uniqueness of Texas voices while recognizing that our state is a melting pot of rural and urban sensibilities. How is <span id=\"u2256-140\">Ghost Horse<\/span> a uniquely Texas book? Do you consider yourself to be a distinctively Texas author?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p id=\"u2256-146\"><em><span id=\"u2256-144\">Ghost Horse<\/span><\/em> is Texan, specifically Houstonian, through and through. My aim in the book, which I meant only half-jokingly, was to preserve in amber Houston at a certain moment in time, a task which I think will inform whatever books I will be lucky enough to write. Houston, not to mention Texas, is inexhaustible in its complexity and diversity, and I feel urgency in capturing all I can about it, especially Houston, which changes so rapidly.<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p id=\"u2256-200\">I do feel an affinity with many Texan authors. <em><span id=\"u2256-149\">Ghost Horse<\/span><\/em> was influenced by Southern coming-of-age books, especially <span id=\"u2256-151\">Flannery O\u2019Connor<\/span> great, overlooked novel, <span><em>The Violent Bear It Away<\/em>.<\/span> Closer to home, I count <span id=\"u2256-156\">C. W. Smith<\/span> <span><em>Thin Men of Haddam<\/em>,<\/span> <span id=\"u2256-161\">William Goyen<\/span> <span><em>House of Breath<\/em>,<\/span> and <span id=\"u2256-166\">J. Frank Dobie<\/span> and <span id=\"u2256-169\">Frederick Barthelme<\/span> wonderful stories\u2014also <span id=\"u2256-172\">Carolyn Osborn<\/span> <em><span>Uncertain Ground<\/span><\/em> and <span id=\"u2256-177\">Elizabeth Harris<\/span> <span><em>The Ant Generator<\/em>,<\/span> which was a revelation to me. I\u2019ve admired <span id=\"u2256-182\">Merritt Tierce<\/span> <span><em>Love Me Back<\/em>,<\/span> <span id=\"u2256-187\">Mary Helen Specht<\/span> <span><em>Migratory Animals<\/em>,<\/span> and <span>Joe Milazzo\u2019s<\/span> amazing <span><em>Crepuscule w\/Nellie<\/em>.<\/span> <span>Thomas Derr\u2019s<\/span> <em><span>Telephone Road<\/span><\/em> is a wonderful collection of stories about growing up in Houston.<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p id=\"u2256-213\">All of this is a lame attempt to answer your question, which I can\u2019t really answer. What it means to be a Texan author is changing rapidly (I didn\u2019t even mention my expat friend <span>Doug Dorst,<\/span> and the redoubtable <span>Clyde Edgerton,<\/span> who are central to the Austin literary scene). To me, Frederick Barthelme is as Texan as <span>Larry McMurtry.<\/span> I think the challenge for Texas authors is to communicate the uniqueness of this culture without getting lost either in provincialism or the placelessness of the larger culture\u2014Specht\u2019s <span id=\"u2256-209\">Migratory Animals<\/span> is one answer to that problem, I think. <span id=\"u2256-211\"><em>Ghost Horse<\/em>,<\/span> in its work of recording Houston at a particular time, is another.<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p id=\"u2256-217\"><strong>LSLL: What observations would you offer on the rapidly changing world of publishing?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p id=\"u2256-222\">When I graduated from Emerson College, my closest friend, <span id=\"u2256-220\">Andrea Dupree,<\/span> went out to Denver, Colorado, to start a writing workshop, Lighthouse Writers Workshops. Everyone, Andrea included, doubted whether she would succeed. Twenty years later, Lighthouse Writers is a force in Denver literary and civic life, as is Grub Street Writers, started at exactly the same time, in Boston. I don\u2019t think anyone could have predicted the explosion of writing programs, or the confluence of printing and Internet technologies which have made publishing so accessible, or the desire for people to connect through sharing their stories, talking about literature, and engaging together in the discipline of self-reflection which writing and thinking about literature requires.<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p id=\"u2256-225\">I\u2019ve been incredibly lucky to have entered the writing and teaching profession when I did. Along with my work in the Emerson College Honors Program, I teach in the Stanford Online Writing Studio, which would obviously not have been possible before the Internet. My students have changed over the years in that they are much more sophisticated in their reading, writing, and knowledge of the publishing business, even as that business has become much more complex. We have a lot of fun and do a lot of good work in those classes.<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p id=\"u2256-228\">As far as the business of publishing goes, I don\u2019t think anyone, least of all the big five houses, know what will come next. It\u2019s the Wild West. But the consistent theme in all of this\u2014whether through telling their own stories, participating in reading groups, chatting on Goodreads or book blogs, attending readings at local bookstores\u2014is people\u2019s desire to connect. All of the new technology is just a means to that one end, and without it, none of this incredible growth would have happened.<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p id=\"u2256-232\"><strong>LSLL: What are the three most valuable sources of information you use as a writer?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p id=\"u2256-237\"><span id=\"u2256-234\"><em>Poets &amp; Writers<\/em>, <em>The Writer\u2019s Chronicle<\/em>,<\/span> and now, <span id=\"u2256-236\"><em>Lone Star Literary Life<\/em>.<\/span><\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p id=\"u2256-241\"><strong>LSLL: Well said. Now, the most important question: Define the quintessential Texas meal for you.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p id=\"u2256-244\">How do I choose? Barbecue at Snow\u2019s or Kreuz Market? Tex-Mex at El Real or banh mi at Mai\u2019s in Houston? The amazing tofu banh mi I had at a food truck?<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p id=\"u2256-247\">All of this is tempting, but I have to confess, my Houston roots win out . . . Gulf blue crab boiled with new potatoes and corn on the cob and Zatarain\u2019s, cracked open on newspapers.<\/p>\n<div id=\"pu2257-91\">\n<div id=\"u2257-91\">\n<h1 id=\"u2257-4\">&nbsp;<\/h1>\n<p>=====<\/p>\n<p id=\"u2259-33\">Children of 1970s divorce, your book is here &#8230; In \u201cGhost Horse,\u201d his lucid debut novel, Cambridge author Thomas H. McNeely has captured something harrowing about an era of chaos and unease.<\/p>\n<p id=\"u2259-36\">\u2014Laura Collins-Hughes,&nbsp; <span id=\"u2259-35\">Boston Globe<\/span><\/p>\n<p id=\"u2259-39\">The writing is sensitive, beautiful, and ominous throughout\u2014 as if Cormac McCarthy and Denis Johnson teamed up to write a 1970s Texas YA novel that went off the rails somewhere\u2014in a very, very good way.<\/p>\n<p id=\"u2259-42\">\u2014Lisa Peet, <span id=\"u2259-41\">Library Journal<\/span><\/p>\n<p id=\"u2259-46\"><span id=\"u2259-44\">McNeely beautifully portrays the confusion of a boy doing his best to deal with matters that are beyond his understanding but fully capable of doing him harm&#8230;. A dark, deeply stirring novel about the quiet tragedy of growing up in a broken family.<\/span> \u2014Kirkus Reviews<\/p>\n<p id=\"u2259-49\">[T]his former Dobie Paisano fellow\u2019s haunting debut novel &#8230; never allows its pop culture references or beautifully rendered sentences to soften the violence that life&#8230;visits upon its sensitive protagonist.<\/p>\n<p id=\"u2259-52\">\u2014Jeff Salamon, <span id=\"u2259-51\">Texas Monthly<\/span><\/p>\n<p id=\"u2259-55\">Houston native Thomas H. McNeely explores the heartbreak and confusion of adolescence through the eyes of an 11-year-old boy &#8230;. It\u2019s a shattering portrait, not only in the ways that divorce can unhinge a boy\u2019s life, but also in the ways that wayward adults can corrupt childhood innocence.<\/p>\n<p id=\"u2259-58\">\u2014Charles Ealy, <span id=\"u2259-57\">Austin American-Statesman<\/span><\/p>\n<p id=\"u2259-63\">McNeely writes with eerie precision the feelings of a child &#8230;. If you believe that a book should push you off balance and take you somewhere new, then <span id=\"u2259-61\">Ghost Horse <\/span>will deliver.<\/p>\n<p id=\"u2259-66\">\u2014Ada Fetters, <span id=\"u2259-65\">Commonline Journal<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Interview with Texas native Thomas H. 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