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written …

       PUBLISHERS WEEKLY

      Ambitious, affectionate, sorrowful rhapsody … Tisdale’s voice is fluid and richly varied.

       CHICAGO TRIBUNE

      [Tisdale’s] prose is music for the mind’s ear.

       SEATTLE TIMES

      Conjures the Northwest in a rare and magical way … This book will make you hit the road.

       CRAIG LESLEY, author of Burning Fence: A Western Memoir of Fatherhood

      Tisdale’s portrait of her home territory is personal and ingenuous.

       THE LOS ANGELES TIMES

       Lot’s Wife: Salt and the Human Condition

      A rare book about a common subject.

       RICHARD SELZER, author of The Exact Location of the Soul

       Harvest Moon: Portrait of a Nursing Home

      A rare combination of candor, compassion, and deft art. I recommend this book to anyone seriously intending to grow old.

       JOSH GREENFIELD, author of Homeward Bound: A Novella of Idle Speculation

      Copyright © 2016 Sallie Tisdale

      All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage-and-retrieval systems, without prior permission in writing from the Publisher, except for brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.

      Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

      Tisdale, Sallie. [Essays. Selections]

      Violation: collected essays / by Sallie Tisdale.

      pages cm

      ISBN 978-0-9904370-9-3

      I. Title.

      PS3570.I717A6 2016

      814’.54–DC23

      2015029013

      9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2

      Hawthorne Books & Literary Arts

      2201 Northeast 23rd Avenue

      3rd Floor

      Portland, Oregon 97212

       hawthornebooks.com

      Form:

      Adam McIsaac/Sibley House

      Set in Paperback

      ALSO BY SALLIE TISDALE

       Women of the Way

       The Best Thing I Ever Tasted

       Talk Dirty to Me

       Stepping Westward

       Lot’s Wife

       Harvest Moon

       The Sorcerer’s Apprentice

       Contents

       Gentleman Caller

       The Weight

       The Happiest Place On Earth

       Meat

       The Basement

       The World Made Whole and Full of Flesh

       Big Ideas

       The Hounds of Spring

       Temporary God

       Crossing to Safety

       Recording

       Violation

       Second Chair

       The Birth

       Scars

       On Being Text

       Balls

       Chemo World

       Twitchy

       The Sutra of Maggots and Blowflies

       Falling

       Here Be Monsters

       The Indigo City

       So Long As I Am With Others

       Publication notes

       Introduction

      WHEN I WAS SEVENTEEN AND A SOPHOMORE IN COLLEGE, I took any course that interested me. One semester, I signed up for Advanced Writing. (I had never taken a writing class, but I was a bit of a snob.) I bugged Dr. Ryberg constantly, haunting his office hours until he took pity, declared me his assistant, and set me to the filing. I gave him a lot of junk to read. Toward the end of the semester, I gave him a story with trembling hands. I was so proud of it; I thought it might win a few awards. He handed it back to me a few days later with entire pages crossed off in red ink. He had circled the last paragraph and written, “Start here.”

      The following spring, I ran into him in the college bookstore. I was dropping out, I told him. Going north to test my theories of love and goodness.

      “You’re a writer,” he said. “You’re already a better writer than me. What are you waiting for?”

      I think I laughed. What an idea—that you could be a writer. But I wasn’t ready; I was consuming life like a gourmand just let out of jail. I went north and joined a communal household and a co-op and tested, with some success, several theories of love and goodness. I was still signing up for every subject that looked promising. But after a few years, when I had a new baby and hardly any money and decided at the last moment not to move into another commune in the mountains, I thought that instead I could be a writer. I hocked my piano and bought a typewriter and joined a writing support group. The leader told us to study Writer’s Market, so I sat in the reference room of the library and read about query letters and submission guidelines. I started writing essays about all kinds of things and sent them out more or less at random, with polite cover letters and self-addressed stamped envelopes.

      Out they went and back they came. Sometimes there was a little note thanking me for my submission, but often not. I would type a fresh copy and send the story out again. The support group dissolved after a few months when the leader committed suicide. Others might have taken that as a sign, but I was young and ignorant and somehow immune to despair. I had decided to be a writer and so I wrote. I sent stories out, again and again. And then one didn’t come back.

      The essays in this book are a selection of work spanning almost thirty years. I have never lost my fascination with the essay, and the stories here range across the continuum of the form. You don’t know what your voice sounds like until you speak. My writer’s voice chose itself. I recognize it here, but I’m not in charge. I used to wish I was a comic writer or a novelist or an investigative reporter. I tried to be a poet for a while. What I am is an essayist.

      Certain themes recur as well; why should this ever surprise us? Life is just following a trail around a mountain. The path loops back to the same view time and again. Sometimes we see all the

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