Personal essay (narrative nonfiction, brief memoir)
Date Published: Oct 19, 2020
Publisher: Jack Walker Press
Friendships serve as a cornerstone to a rich life. Each of these twenty-four accomplished authors shares authentic stories that consider the meaning of life affirming, sometimes life saving or gut wrenching, and fun realities of investing in each other: Think chicken soup with adult beverages.
Editorial Reviews:
"A thoroughly enjoyable and heartfelt read! This is an invaluable book for anyone seeking insight and comprehension of the convoluted and often misunderstood road we travel known as friendship. A definite 5-star rating!" --International Review of Books
"Friends: Voices on the Gift of Companionship will take you through the full spectrum of what it means to call someone "friend." It's the book you reach for when you need to feel connected to humanity." --Skye McDonald author of the Anti-Belle series
"The authors in this anthology come from a wide range of backgrounds, and share their stories of friendship with convincing, if often difficult, passages. ...We may still regard the gifts of shared histories as nourishment to sustain us." --Carol Barrett, Ph.D. Coordinator, Creative Writing Certificate Program, Union Institute & University; author of Calling in the Bones and Pansies.
"As the stories evolve, readers will relish the personal tones, touches, and explorations that consider the nature of friendship, its gifts and resiliency, and its lasting impact on all. ...an outstanding key to understanding how relationships evolve, change, pass, and often come full circle to become even more valued as the years go by." -- D. Donovan, Sr. Reviewer, Midwest Book Review
Can you tell us a little about the process of getting this
book published? How did you come up with the idea and how did you start?
Thank you for having this conversation about ‘Friends:
Voices on the Gift of Companionship.”
This is the second in the Voices anthology series. We selected the theme of Friendship because
this relationship is essential yet underexplored. Accomplished authors submitted essays from
across the country. The range of
friendships astounded us. Friendships
are life-affirming and can be complicated.
Many were important for a season, some fizzled, some lasted decades: all
helped to build that which we love about our lives.
What surprised you most about getting your book published? I wrote about a friend who is still very important
to me although we have both changed. She
lives a much wilder lifestyle, yet our differences have not distanced us. The surprise was that when she read the story
about her, she called me crying. She
thought the story was beautiful and had always wondered how I judged her life
choices. Our relationships are so important.
“Friends“ is becoming a popular gift as a way to tell a friend that they
are cherished.
Tell us a little about what you do when you aren’t writing
I’m a nature nut.
Mushrooms, Cedar waxwings, wood violets, fuzzy bear caterpillars and
more all captivate me. Every nature walk
I take brings me new observations, details to explore, and reasons to love our
Mother Earth. Much of my reading and
writing involves the natural world.
As a published author, what would you say was the most
pivotal point of your writing life?
For me, the writing life makes my existence more vivid. A moment that may have passed from my memory
will enrich my life if I’ve written about it, explored it, and assigned it
meaning through a journal entry or personal essay. I wrote a series of walking essays about
times in nature with my son. The moments
in Every Natural Fact: Five Seasons of Open-Air Parenting are more vivid
and meaningful to me not only because they exist in print, but because I spent
time processing those days. The writer
Joan Didion said that she wrote to find out what she thinks about a topic. I’d have to agree that our values, our
priorities, and our loves, can be magnified within the writing life. So writing
a book about time with my son did slowly pivot me into someone who
confidently calls themselves a writer.
Where do you get your best ideas and why do you think that
is? I have to admit that I get ideas all
the time: too many ideas. I’ve got a
wild brain. My challenge is to focus on
my priorities and goals while honoring the gift of inspiration. The Poet Liam Rector adopted the literary
metaphor of a vortex for the graduate program at Bennington where I received my
MFA in Writing and Literature. Put many
different experiences, practice writings, discussion, readings and more into a
life of letters and the ideas and work will flow from that. Liam’s metaphor lets me be at peace with my
wild brain.
What is the toughest criticism given to you as an author? We do have to buck up when it comes to
criticism. People have a right to love
or not relate to my work. One thing that does bug me is when people say they
don’t usually like books like this and approach it negatively. So, If you don’t like personal essays, It’s
tough to hear your criticism of a collection of personal essays. And I wonder why someone wouldn’t like
personal essays, not every personal essay, but from David Sedaris to Bell Hooks
and beyond, personal essays entertain and inform as much as any work of fiction
or poetry. Do I sound defensive? I am
defending the personal essay and narrative nonfiction. Try some today!
What has been your best accomplishment as a writer? My
best accomplishment happens every day I work through my own resistance to
create written art that didn’t exist before.
I once thought that writing got easier, but every day is the resistance,
the fear, and usually the breakthrough to words on the page.
How many unpublished and half-finished books do you have? What a great question. I have files full of ideas. One book, in particular, I researched for
years, abandoned, restarted, abandoned; it
haunts me. I’ve probably got
another dozen books 10% in, they wait like neglected children. I fight the guilt.
Thanks so much. If
your readers would like to sign up for a chance to win a free copy of Friends:
Voices on The Gift of Companionship, they may do so at JackWalkerPress.com
until the end of 2020.
About the Author
Amy Lou Jenkins holds an MFA from The Writing Seminars of Bennington, has taught writing at Carroll University, Milwaukee Area Tech College, and conferences and workshops, including NonfictioNow/Iowa Writers Workshop and Write by the Lake/University of Wisconsin, Madison. Her essays and stories have appeared in literary journals and anthologies, including The Florida Review, Flint Hill review, Leopold Outlook, Sport Literate, Earth Island Journal, Consequence Magazine, The Maternal is Political, Journeys of Friendship, and Women on Writing. She’s the author of several books including Every Natural Fact; Five Seasons of Open-Air Parenting. Her writing has been honored by US Book Award, Living Now Book Award, Ellis Henderson Outdoor Writing Award, and XJ Kennedy Award for Nonfiction and more. She pens a quarterly book review column for the Sierra Club. She writes for children under the name Lou Jenkins. She and her husband split their time between Wisconsin and Arkansas. Unless it’s so cold it hurts, she’d rather be outside. Follow her at www.AmyLouJenkins.com
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