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WRITING THE INTERVIEW
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Rochelle Shapiro is a regular columnist for Authorlink. Watch for her insights every month on Authorlink. |
| "Nothing enlivens an interview as much as allowing someone to tell what he thinks in his own words." —Shapiro |
There are loads of opportunities to publish interviews from your local paper to major ones to blogs. Literary magazines usually have interviews with writers and editors. All you have to do is query an editor. Of course, if you know someone famous who is extremely hard to get to such as Osama Bin Laden, you will be able to publish your interview anywhere. But sometimes an interview with a homeless person or the resident of a trailer park can draw a lot of interest. It’s all in the way you write it. Nothing enlivens an interview as much as allowing someone to tell what he thinks in his own words. Even if you are the most brilliant writer, nothing will be more interesting than the other person’s words in an interview. Speak in his voice. Be true to how he puts sentences together. Think about an interview as an opportunity to get to know someone. The more you really want to get to know that person, the better the interview will be. It is also a great way of learning about other professions, backgrounds, attitudes. Not every word that the person says will be put in the essay, but his words can help you create an interview that will inform and entertain the reader. Humor, regionalisms, lingo, words of his trade will convey the interviewee’s enthusiasms and personality. The first step in doing an interview is to get permission from the interviewee. If you make a good impression, you’ll be able to get more interviews. |
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"Be honest about why you’re doing the interview . . ." —Shapiro |
Tips:
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"Email interviews are best when the person’s input will only be a part of the interview." —Shapiro |
A lot of interviews are done by Email today. It gives your interviewee a chance to organize his thoughts instead of speaking off the cuff. It also gives busy people leeway in when they are going to respond. Email interviews are best when the person’s input will only be a part of the interview. But this wouldn’t be a good form if you want a personal interview where the person’s gestures might mean everything. For example, “I had nothing to do with it,” John Bartholomew said, but his shoulders were hunched, his head down. Often you will use a Q and A format for this and sometimes that is how it is printed. Make sure you give the interviewer a deadline. William Zissner in On Writing Well says that “the nonfiction writer’s rare privilege is to have the whole wonderful world of real people to write about. When you get people talking, handle what they say as you would a valuable gift.” |
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About Rochelle Jewel Shapiro |
Rochelle Jewel Shapiros novel, Miriam the Medium, was nominated
for the Harold U. Ribelow Award and is currently selling in Holland, Belgium,
and the U.K. Shes published essays in NYT (Lives) and Newsweek-My
Turn, and in many anthologies such as Its a Boy (Seal Press, 2005),
The Imperfect Mom (Broadway Books, 2006) About What Was Lost (Plume Books,
2007,) For Keeps, (Seal Press, 2007.) Her poetry, short stories, and essays
have appeared in many literary magazines such as The Iowa Review, Negative
Capability, Moment, and in many anthologies such as Father (Pocket Books,
2000). The short story from that collection, "The Wild Russian,"
will be reprinted for educational testing purposes nationwide. She currently
teaches "Writing the Personal Essay" at UCLA on-line and is
a book critic for Kirkus. She can be reached at http://www.miriamthemedium.com/
or at her blog: http://rochellejewelshapiro.blogspot.com/ |
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