TDR Interview: Andy Brown
Andy Brown
is a Montreal writer and publisher. He is the co-editor of You
& Your Bright Ideas: New Montreal Writing (Véhicule
Press) and Running with Scissors (Cumulus
Press), the latter co-edited with Meg Sircom. He is a contributing
editor for Matrix magazine
and the publisher and founder
of Conundrum Press. I
Can See You Being Invisible (DC Books, 2004) is his first
book of fiction.
Nathaniel G. Moore conducted this interview via e-mail in February 2004.
Read
the TDR review of I
Can See You Being Invisible
Where did you grow up,
background?
Andy Brown:
I grew up in Vancouver in a well-adjusted area of town. Played a lot of
sports, shy with girls, the usual. I took a literature course in my
final year of High School which really inspired me, especially the
metaphysical poets, but I was too interested in trying out for the
junior national baseball team, or how to navigate the BMX track. I went
to university at Queen’s simply to get away from Vancouver. I hated
much of my time there, I was taking pre-med which may have something to
do with it. At one point I drove a cab to try and pay for my tuition.
How did you wind up
getting involved in the writing community in Montreal?
Andy Brown:
I used to hitchhike to Montreal from Kingston now and then and fell in
love with the city. So after traveling the world I settled there. After
doing my MA at Concordia I slowly fell in with a group of writers and
performers. But all this time I was working in factories, printing
t-shirts, punching metal. This was in the years around the 1995
referendum so Montreal was a grim place, everyone leaving, 30 per cent vacancy,
so still cheap. People had nothing to lose so the arts scene was
extremely vibrant.
My first real break was when Corey Frost asked me to
write an article for the new index magazine which he had just usurped
and was turning into a hotbed of interesting writing and controversy.
Writing groups followed. I didn’t get into the Concordia Creative
Writing Masters program so I wrote a novel out of spite. This ended up
many years later being hacked up into the "Uzma & Isaak"
section of "I can see you being invisible". My academic thesis
at Concordia was on photographic theory in Michael Ondaatje (this was
before The English Patient), so the fact that Uzma is a
colour-blind photographer is not too surprising.
How did the idea for
Conundrum Press come about?
Andy Brown:
The publishing started because I was roommates with Catherine Kidd and
she was just starting to do these amazing performances, and she was
obviously a very talented writer. So we just got together to make a
book/cassette, "everything I know about love I learned from
taxidermy" (1996) and figured it out as we went along. Of
course it was a lot more work than I could have imagined but the
response was overwhelming. I just kept publishing the talented people
around me and one thing led to another.
You have a comedic edge to
your writing, which combines wit and deadpan angst, where did you
develop your voice that teeters on morbid surrealism, or tragic bravado?
Andy Brown:
I’m not really sure where this came from. Some people say I’m the
funniest guy they know (both of them), others not so much. I’m not
very interested in being too earnest, I want that to come through in
some other way, and maybe humour is a screen. But I also get bored with
writing that isn’t self-aware, that doesn’t wink at itself in some
way. Humour entertains readers, keeps them involved, but it also allows
this angst to come out in an accessible way. Black humour is a writer’s
tool in the same way that metaphor or setting is. Not sure where the
morbidity comes from.
I guess I’m fascinated by death because of its
complete negation of everything we do. It exists for everyone,
democratically, on the periphery, and it influences many of our actions.
And yet we all function as if it’s not there, we live, love, make
jokes despite the elephant in the room. I guess I’m fascinated by that
dichotomy, but I don’t want to come across as too morbid to a reader.
Humour helps us laugh at the plague. I’ve become interested in plague
narratives as well, which are becoming more popular in literature
("Blindness", Atwood’s latest), or just watch the evening
news fabricate fear of the latest epidemic.
In Illness as
Metaphor Susan Sontag writes that the multi-determined nature of
illnesses opens them up to the widest possibility as metaphors for what
is felt to be morally or socially wrong with our society. Global warming
as objective correlative. So I try and laugh at the cancer, mock it,
control it, keep it at bay because obviously it is terrifying. When I
wrote "Invisible" I was very depressed but then I met and
married a nice woman so I’m finding it harder to tap into the dark
side. She just introduced me to the TV show "Six Feet Under"
which is brilliant. I find it hard to watch it’s so good. It’s
created by Alan Ball, who did "American Beauty". And as one of
the characters says on the final episode of season one, "Death
makes life more valuable".
Conundrum is now a part of
the Literary Press Group. For those who don't understand what that means in terms of
distribution, etc. and your recent and innovative decision to form a
bookclub at conundrum's site, where do you see the future of the
independent publisher in the arena of the book trade considering there
are these massive stores with plenty of book shelves but seemingly no
prospect of a mutually beneficial relationship?
Being a part of the LPG
means conundrum press has national distribution, the books can be
ordered from any store, which is the least I can do for the authors I’m
publishing. Although my life has been made easier since joining, I’ve
actually lost money. Before joining I would sell directly to people, or
to stores on consignment. I would keep the money from the sales. Through
any distributor in Canada there are plenty of other costs. Bookstores
take their 40 per cent, sales reps, distribution, and the killer is
postage. So in the end my cheque doesn’t always cover the printing
bill. The main reason being that bookstores return the books and don’t
pay. So an ordered book is not a sold book.
Of course when you
corporatize this arrangement small publishers become heavily screwed.
This is what happened with the whole General Distribution collapse which
was directly connected to Chapters’ massive returns of unsold books.
The problem hasn’t gone away and never will. The problem is the
bookseller’s paradigm. In the 1980s comic shops opened all across
North America. Their terms to publishers were to take a larger discount
(50 per cent) but have a no returns policy. In other words the books were bought
when ordered.
I publish graphic novels as well as literary fiction so I
am seeing both sides of the fence. What’s happened in the comics world
is that now all the stores order from one corporate distributor, so if
you are not carried by that distributor you will make considerably fewer
sales. And they distribute action figures and t-shirts as well as books.
But at least after they’ve ordered my books I get a cheque! Even
though they are this huge corporation who do not have my interests at
heart I still get paid! Being a part of the LPG means that we can
discuss these issues and perhaps introduce a 50 per cent no returns policy in
all stores. Some publishers are already doing this. I have a huge amount
of respect for these publishers, some of whom have been around 40 years,
so they can lobby the governing bodies etc. They are also hip to the
subtle changes in funding policies. So I’m mostly an observer at the
moment.
The bookclub is an idea to
try and get around the whole bookstore paradigm. The idea is to sell
conundrum titles directly at a reduced price and then offer lots of
extras on the website to facilitate discussion of the titles. Conundrum
books are basically the opposite of "Canada Reads" or
"Oprah" and I think there are people out there who would get
together with their friends and discuss a title, but the titles offered
by the mainstream clubs (which are in themselves huge corporations) are
boring. It’s a bit of an experiment. The real solution I believe is
the revival of the salon. Get rid of bookstores altogether and have
publishers sell directly from their own "salons" which will
also be focal points for the artistic community in general. Look at
Hogarth House and Bloomsbury. We need to reclaim the book as a cultural
artifact. Of course the problem arises because how do I sell my books in
Saskatoon if my salon is in Montreal? Well, it is through groups like
the LPG that I can envision a network of publisher salons which will act
co-operatively in different cities.
I Can See You Being
Invisible is your solo debut,
what is it like NOT being the publisher, are you someone who can't
mitigate, who has to be involved in every aspect of a project?
I didn’t want to publish
this book myself because everyone needs a little validation from the
outside world. And yet I did have control over the design, which was
important to me. And I got them to print it on 100 per cent recycled paper which
was a first for them. Rob Allen edits the New Writers Series for DC so
it was he who elected to publish the book and he gave very broad
editorial comments. At the final proofing stage I cut 40 pages which
meant rearranging things. But that was also due to my wife who is my
harshest critic. But I just met with the publishers of DC and planned
tour dates and talked about reviews and such. And it was such a relief
to have someone else do the marketing and arranging of tours, the
stuffing of envelopes. I can have a little division of labour for once.
So, I’m happy to follow along.
Did you research any other
one-armed sports heroes for this book?
The Pete Gray story ("Something
Blue") was just information which I pulled off the internet. I
recently saw the Ken Burns nine part BASEBALL documentaries and there is
this incredible archival footage of Pete Gray playing outfield and
hitting, but this was after my book had come out. Dave McGimpsey was
helpful with that story as well. "Invisible" is filled with
these characters who have non-debilitating handicaps. One arm,
anosmatic, colour-blind, fear of heights. Handicaps that don’t confine
someone to a wheelchair, or make their life extremely difficult, but
help define their personality. I think there is some metaphor for
repressed emotional relationships in there somewhere but that’s an
issue for the critics to fight out among themselves. A real Jack Kirby
punch up!
What is the writing
process to you, I mean the Andy Brown that is running around picking up
proofs and ordering ad space, designing Matrix and carrying boxes of
books to bars, does that person disappear? How do you see yourself in
the space of writing?
This is an excellent
question because what you describe is my life and although I am
surrounded by writers and writing I find very little time to do it
myself. Many of the stories in I can see you being invisible
were written with chapbook self-publication in mind. I included a
publication history in the back for those who are interested in the
genesis of the stories. Many of the stories were written before I’d
ever published anything. This would have been early 1990s. My writing
process now is very much about finding space away from my regular life.
I do the 3-day novel writing contest every Labour Day, usually at a
friend’s cottage, so I’m isolated. The first time I ever did it I
produced the "Everyone Must Dance" section of the book, which
is sort of a Lord of the Flies parody in a treeplanting camp.
I wrote
the story about the one-armed baseball player over a few days in the
back room of an artist’s house, which she was offering as a retreat
called "A Week in the Woods". I very seldom sit at the
computer and whip up a story anymore because my computer has become an extension
of my job. So I have moved more toward writing little scenes
or notes in a notebook and transcribing them later when I have some
time. When I was rejected from the Banff Writer’s program I went to
Vancouver for two months to finish the first draft of a novel. I was
house-sitting for my parents but I also feel I did it out of spite.
Bitterness has been a driving force in my writing. I stuck to a
five-page-a-day routine and managed to do it. Of course what was a Nova
Scotia novel about buried treasure and riding the Globe of Death became
a Vancouver novel about murders of crows and taking pictures of
billboards, but that’s another story.
One of the parts which I cut
from this book was all about a fictional band on the Plateau called
Umbilical and they had an EP called "Interrogating Moments". I
think that’s what writing is ultimately, interrogating moments. I’m
giving you the outtakes here. I am in the process now of writing another
novel called The Mole Chronicles. That’s where my
head is at. I really want to go to my friend’s cottage and pound out
some pages. But when I’m writing, when I’m in the "zone"
all I really think about is the craft and all the writers who have come
before me. How can I improve on what they’ve done, what can I take
away? But in the end it is just the feeling I might get on writing the
perfect sentence that makes everything worthwhile. The sentence that
might stop a heart, like diving into a glacial lake. That feeling is
mine alone.
So yes, I do disappear in the act of writing, I can see
myself becoming invisible.
Nathaniel
G. Moore is constantly in turmoil. |