Archived Interviews, Reviews, & Writing on Writing for Sybelia Drive

From Steph Post’s Interview Series Writer Bites! - October 2, 2020

It's been a minute, hasn't it? The world may seem off the rails, but at least we'll always have books... Today, I'm thrilled to bring you a Writer Bites interview with Karin Cecile Davidson whose debut novel, Sybelia Drive, hits shelves this coming Tuesday (10/6)! 

Karin Cecile Davidson has written a keenly-observed novel about the persistence of family ties and friendships, the press of history on private lives, and the tug of both home and away. At once delicate in its prose and bold in its vision, Sybelia Drive is a luminous debut. —Elizabeth Graver, author of The End of the Point


Have you ever fallen in love with a book?


Many times. Perhaps typically, E.B. White’s Charlotte’s Web was one of the first, and Richard Adams’s Watership Down, back when it first came out in 1972. I still have my first editions with their soft worn pages. My copy of Louise Erdrich’s Love Medicine is a tattered paperback from ages ago that replaced the one I first bought at Prairie Lights in Iowa City in 1987, a few years after the book was published. That first copy began to lose pages and almost all of “The World’s Greatest Fisherman” disappeared, so there was no choice. I’ll always have a copy of this book. It’s been so influential and inspiring. Italo Calvino’s Difficult Loves completely captured me in the same way that John Berger’s Into Their Labors Trilogy did, their questions about society and relationships remarkably supported by inventive narrative structures. And always, always Eudora Welty’s stories—any and all of them. 


Just recently I listened to Gabrielle Hamilton reading her memoir Blood, Bones & Butter. Published nearly a decade ago, and now with Hamilton’s NYC restaurant Prune closed due to Covid, it was strange and bittersweet to hear this beautifully written story read by the author herself. I felt like I was taken away, completely enraptured by her way of telling the details of her childhood, reporting in vivid terms the stress of running a wildly popular 30-seat restaurant, and describing her dishes in the clearest, most delicious prose.


How do you choose the names for your characters? 


It’s funny. They simply arrive. Lord knows how LuLu and Rainey entered my novel Sybelia Drive. And LuLu’s brother Saul? Honestly, I just don’t worry about it and then they come along and steal the show. I think part of the process must be intuitive, a subconscious calling up of all the names I’ve ever known. For example, LuLu’s father’s initials, CRB, which first appear on a silver lighter he keeps in his top pocket, are the same as my grandmother’s. Completely unintentional, and yet. Charles Royal Blackwood, III and Cecile Robinson Bradley share those initials.


What is your least favorite part of the writing process? Your favorite? 


The least favorite. Well, there’s a point in the final edits when I’ve got to compare manuscripts. I find that pairing amazing and dizzying all at once. The dizzying part has to do with the flood of words before me, even though the end of the entire process is near. Of course, once I finally get there, the reward is rich.


And the favorite. I love the drafting of a story when it’s going well, when one word is thrown down after another, and suddenly the page is covered with possibility. Characters become clear, along with their desires, their landscapes, and the story opens up and out.


What is your favorite form of procrastination from writing? 


Research. From searching out exactly the right sort of wildflower for a scene to delving into a book of military terms or studying maps that are decades old. Certain chapters of my novel required an enormous amount of research. Eventually I had to tell myself, that’s enough. The writing doesn’t get done unless I’m at least a bit disciplined, or really good at tricking myself.


Do you write to music? 


Absolutely. When drafting Sybelia Drive, I listened to music of the 1960s and 70s that became part of the character’s worlds and essentially part of the narrative. For the collection of Gulf Coast stories I’m working on currently, I’ve listened to Leontyne Price singing arias from Puccini’s Madame Butterfly, Florida blues singers Ida Goodson and her sister Billie Pierce, as well as songs from Some Girls by The Rolling Stones. Placing lyrics into the writing is something I’ve learned to steer away from, however. Too much copyright nonsense there. That said, there’s something inside the music that allows a way into a piece. Art making way for more art is something I seriously believe in and appreciate.

 

An Interview on The Geography of First Kisses for Diverse Voices Book Review

On the podcast, Diverse Voices Book Review, host Hopeton Hay interviews me about The Geography of First Kisses. Our conversation touched on the stories’ themes of love and belonging, fabulist whispers, fact infused into fiction, and how long certain stories take to write. Hopeton and I have known each other since high school in New Orleans, and it’s clear that we both still have a great appreciation for literature. I always love speaking with Hopeton, and I loved this interview! Listen here!

Summer Reviews of The Geography of First Kisses

Beautiful reviews of The Geography of First Kisses to share!

With thanks to Chris Harding Thornton for her review in The Colorado Review/Center for Literary Publishing, in which she writes: “Absence, loss, disappearance—these things haunt us, and the stories in The Geography of First Kisses do, too. But even when they’re heart-wrenching, they’re never maudlin. The stories are filled with delight, beauty, and amazement.”

Gratitude as well to BettyJoyce Nash for her review in the Southern Review of Books. “In the title story Davidson poses the question: ‘Why is there no such thing as north by south or east by west? Why does direction turn only slightly, instead of leaning full tilt into another place, another time, another anything?’ These stories do lean, full-tilt, into time and space, excavating complex forms of love, loss, and longing, starting with the title story’s unnamed narrator, who is ‘sweet sixteen and never been,’ covering compass points, longing for a North Star or a magnetic pole, ‘to show me where I’d landed.’”

MER Literary Journal - Book Review of The Geography of First Kisses - by Teresa Tumminello Brader

Beyond grateful for this beautiful review by Teresa Tumminello Brader in MER Literary Journal of The Geography of First Kisses, in which the stories feel truly seen and are called “an exquisitely rendered collection.” The review begins:

The Geography of First Kisses, winner of Kallisto Gaia Press’s Acacia Prize, is a collection of fourteen short stories by Karin Cecile Davidson, author of the novel Sybelia Drive. The stories vary in that they are told from different perspectives, span the mid-fifties to today, and are set in locales ranging from Gulf Coast states to Midwest prairies, with a couple of stops outside U.S. borders. The constants are the lyrical and layered prose, and the focus on girls and young women. Whether these characters come down Lucinda Williams’s gravel road of the epigraph or visit the outskirts of Tallahassee, they are attuned to and act in response to the inherent dangers and beauties of their environments, whether to their benefit or detriment.”

To read more, follow this link to the review at MER: Motherhood, Literature, & Art.