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A Interview With Indie Favorite David Wroblewski, Author of The Story of Edgar Sawtelle
July 09, 2008

David Wroblewski
Photo: Marion Ettlinger
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David
Wroblewski's first novel, The
Story of Edgar Sawtelle (Ecco), won independent booksellers'
high praise right out of the March White Box. The wide-ranging novel
about a mute boy and his dogs on a Wisconsin farm, having garnered early, widespread,
and enthusiastic support from indie booksellers, debuted this month as the top selection
of the inaugural Indie Next List.
Bookseller Bill Cusumano of Nicola's Books in Ann Arbor, Michigan, had this
to say about Edgar Sawtelle. "This story of a modern-day Hamlet,
set in the northern woods of Wisconsin, reaches depths of emotion rare in any
novel, much less a debut. Driven by powerful characters, particularly the mute
Edgar and the amazing dog Almondine, this story of a family's destruction will
resonate with readers long after completion."
Wroblewski, a computer software engineer who's been working on the novel since the mid
1990s and while obtaining his MFA at the Warren Wilson Program for Writers,
took some time out of his West Coast tour schedule to talk with BTW about
the process of writing The Story of Edgar Sawtelle. He outlines his experience growing up on a farm in Pewaukee, Wisconsin, his lifelong
love and study of dogs, as well as his ongoing fascination with the Bard.
BTW: The Story of Edgar Sawtelle, an expansive, intricate coming-of-age
novel, seems like it might be a daunting prospect for a debut. How did it come
to be? And what drew you to take on the themes of a modern Hamlet?
David Wroblewski: I can't imagine any first novel not being daunting
for the writer. You don't know what you are getting into, or how large or small
it will turn out to be. You get an idea, it gets you in front of the keyboard
clicking away. But, soon enough, it becomes its own thing, and your original
ideas take a back seat to what surfaces in the writing. That's the nature of
craft, in any realm. What finally emerges is most influenced not by any external
work, but by that very thing, when it is half-made. Maybe that sounds
like esoteric art-talk, but it isn't. I've seen the very same dynamic in the
making of software. And in photography.
Likewise, drawing on some older story is very common -- unavoidable, probably.
I began writing Edgar Sawtelle with Hamlet in the foreground of
my imagination, but also knowing that it was my job to subvert any simple equation
between the two. I understood a little of how to accomplish that -- looking
for unexplored white space, changing proportion and emphasis, dropping, adding,
or merging characters, playing with sequencing, and so on. But I quickly discovered,
as I went along, that I was interested in drawing more broadly on Shakespeare
-- certain other plays, the use of language, etc. I became especially interested
in how the stories in the plays so often feature the elements -- wind, rain,
fire -- as gigantic forces. A king on the heath, thunder crashing around him.
An old man conjuring up a storm out of the pages of a book of magic. A prince,
wandering through a cold, foggy castle. I was a farm kid, I'd spent time in
the basement waiting for tornadoes to pass over. I knew that weather and nature
really do shape lives.
That all sounds quite rational, though, which means it is partly a lie. In
fact, mostly I let the story wander, with no requirement to draw on any particular
source. When I look at Edgar's story now, I see mostly a place -- Wisconsin
-- and secondarily, bits of Macbeth, Lear, Romeo and Juliet,
and Hamlet. Maybe even a hint of Iago. Looking from a different direction
entirely, I also see Kipling's Mowgli. But this novel is -- I hope -- mainly
Edgar's story, a story about the Midwest, the character of the people there,
and a meditation about the nature of loyalty and familial allegiance.
BTW: Your awareness of dogs and their behavior -- down to details
of the tilt of an ear or even that that their paws smell like popcorn -- seems
like knowledge gained by experience. How did you come to know so much about
dogs?
DW: First of all, I grew up around a lot of dogs. My folks raised dogs
for about five years on our farm in central Wisconsin, from about the time I
was five until I was 10. Even when they weren't raising dogs, we had all sort
of dogs around. So some of that comes from early life experience. It made me
a lifelong dog watcher. But in addition to that, I'm an avid reader about canine
cognition and behavior -- the field now called canine ethology. As I was researching
Edgar's story, I ran into two books that were tremendously influential: the
first was Vicki Hearne's Adam's Task, in which she dissects the moral,
ethical, psychological, and linguistic issues involved in animal training. The
second was a long out-of-print book entitled Working Dogs, written by
Elliot Humphrey and Lucien Warner. That book was published in 1934. The breeding
program it described went by the name "Fortunate Fields," which readers
will recognize from The Story of Edgar Sawtelle because I rather rudely
invented a third author, Alvin Brooks, and made Brooks a correspondent and mentor
of Edgar's grandfather. The stated goal of that program was to produce "a
strain of dogs which are peculiarly able to profit by instruction." Well,
I read that and my imagination ran wild. (We all know the results of that work,
by the way: it resulted in the establishment of the Seeing Eye guide dog organization.)
In The Story of Edgar Sawtelle, Edgar's grandfather begins raising companion
dogs the way the Fortunate Fields program raised service dogs, and many generations
of dogs have come and gone before Edgar is born.
There are many other books I could recommend. Readers can learn more about
some other influential books on the Edgar Sawtelle website, www.edgarsawtelle.com, on the "Further
Reading" page. (Click "Extras" on the homepage).
BTW: Are you interested in writing nonfiction about dogs or other
animals?
DW: I have no nonfiction books planned right now. I wouldn't rule it
out, but it would take a pretty unique combination of access, circumstance,
and story to lure me away from novels, which are my enduring literary love.
BTW: As you've mentioned, you grew up on a farm in central Wisconsin.
What was your life like, and how similar was it to Edgar's?
DW: The Sawtelle farm is the farm I grew up on, transported about
four hours north of its real location. I can close my eyes and walk the fenceline
any time I want, see the creek, the sumac, the fields. That world is described
as accurately as I could manage. And, as I mentioned earlier, my folks raised
dogs when I was a kid. But the primary events of Edgar's story have no analog
in my life. In fact, my family was very quiet, and my parents both lived into
their eighties. We had our tragedies like any family, but they were the ordinary
tragedies of rural life -- poverty, illness, isolation.
There are many bits of Edgar's story drawn from my life, but no one except
for my family would know the references being made. Forte, for example, is based
on a stray dog that we did, in fact, adopt after it was abandoned up the road
from us, and it really did retrieve our trash from the dump. Our barn had to
be reroofed after a bad storm. The stairs in our old farmhouse house were just
as lumpy as the stairs in Edgar's house (and my niece still has those treads,
she saved them when the house was razed.) Surely there are hundreds more small
details drawn from life that even I'm not aware of.
BTW: Rudyard Kipling's The Jungle Book is mentioned throughout
the novel. Why did you decide to include it?
DW: I grew up reading Kipling's Jungle Book stories, so they
seemed a natural reference point for Edgar. As an adult, I admire the beauty
of Kipling's prose, the majesty of the voices of the animals. Bagheera still
floors me. He's such a tremendous force in those stories.
BTW: I know that your publishing house was very excited about Edgar
and worked very hard to get advanced reading copies into the hands of booksellers.
Did you get a lot of feedback and support from those early readers of your work?
DW: You bet -- not editorial feedback per se, but tons of support in
the form of selection for first edition clubs, requests for readings, even one-on-one
encouragement. Part of my education as a writer in the last year has been seeing
how profoundly bookseller feedback helps a book. Publishers listen to that feedback
-- closely. I'd spent time in my local bookstores simply because I liked them
as places to hang out, places where the world of literature mattered. What I've
learned firsthand is that booksellers are part of a chain of communication and
support that is direct and vital. It has made me think quite differently about
what it means to patronize a bookstore -- that walking in those doors is, in
fact, an act of patronage in the original sense of art patronage.
BTW: What's your next project?
DW: I have a new novel brewing, but it's in its early days, and, until
recently, whenever I came into my office I had to fight the urge to begin revising
some part of Edgar's story, even though it was off to the printing presses.
I consider myself to be building the workshop in which I'll make the next novel
right now -- hanging the tools on the wall, metaphorically speaking, and hauling
in the lumber. All sorts of jiggered up little scenes and characters are sitting
in the corners, and my pile of interesting facts grows daily. I know the story
in the large scale. This is a fun stage in the process -- you allow yourself
to play, pointlessly, for a while. --Interviewed by Karen
Schechner
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