Issue 67: Natalie Sypolt

nataliesypolt

About Natalie Sypolt

Natalie Sypolt lives and writes in West Virginia. She received her MFA in fiction from West Virginia University in 2005 and currently teaches writing at WVU. Her work has appeared in various journals, including Kenyon Review Online, The Queen City Review, Flashquake, Potomac Review, Oklahoma Review, and Kestrel. Natalie’s writing has received several awards, including the 2009 West Virginia Fiction Award from Shepherd University, judged by Silas House, and the 2009 Betty Gabehart Prize sponsored by the Kentucky Women’s Writers Conference. Her stories have also been honored by writers Ann Pancake, Amy Greene, and Bobbie Ann Mason. Her story, “Love, Off to the Side” (published in Still: The Journal) has been short listed for the Pushcart Prize. Natalie’s first collection of stories, tentatively entitled Kitchen Accidents, is currently seeing a home.

A Profile of the Author

Notes on “Lettuce”

I wrote the first draft of this story nearly in one setting. This is my favorite way to write stories, though it seldom happens, and it always feel like a sort of gift when it does.

This story was inspired by a poem called “Everything Good Between Men and Women” by CD Wright. I was listening to the podcast “Poetry Off the Shelf” from the National Poetry Foundation on my way home from work one day, and Wright was the featured poet. I had the first pages of the story written in my head before I entered my driveway.

Of course, there has been much research. I’ve been really nervous (and still am, actually) about getting important things, like the information about Chris’ prosthetic arm, right. Taking on a story of a veteran who has brought home wounds—both those that are visible and those that are not—is not something I take lightly.

I also must mention the awesome writer Ann Pancake who worked with me during the West Virginia Writers Workshop in Morgantown, WV last summer. She helped me tweak this story and refine some rough edges; most of all, though, she gave me confidence that this was a good piece that people would want to read. Both she and the incredible Appalachian writer Silas House have been so instrumental to my writing career thus far and I can’t thank them enough.

Notes on Reading

I don’t read as much as I would like to, or as much as I should. This is a constant source of frustration for me, and I’m guessing also for many writers who also teach in order to survive financially. I enjoy my classes, helping students refine their writing and come to the understanding that words really are important—that they really do matter. Unfortunately, though, between August and May each year, what I read the most of is drafts of undergraduate essays. For those reasons, it can take me quite a while to finish a book, and when I do get the opportunity to read, I don’t want to squander that time reading something I’m not completely in love with.

I’ve recently really enjoyed two collections of short stories out of Greywolf Press: Mattaponi Queen by Belle Boggs and Volt by Alan Heathcock. Heathcock is currently getting a lot of buzz (including a review in the NY Times), and it’s well deserved. His collection is truly impressive. Both of these are collections of connected short stories— connected sometimes by character, but always by place. I suppose I’m attracted to these books because having a strong sense of place is also something that is so important to me and my writing. My current “collection” of stories is not a linked collection, but I’m interested in creating a cycle of stories someday.

Also very important to me are the writers Ann Pancake and Silas House, who are currently showing the literary world that Appalachian literature is alive and strong. Ann’s book Strange as this Weather has Been is incredible. Not only does she tackle timely and crucial issues (like Mountaintop Removal), but her sense of language always amazes and inspires me. Her writing is lyrical, beautiful, and so real to the people she’s describing. I’ve been lucky in the past two years to meet both Ann and Silas through writing contests that they’ve judged and am continually impressed by their work, both as writers and as voices for Appalachian issues (which, really, are also important American issues).

Four Poems by Jorge Carrera Andrade

Found in Willow Springs 13 Back to Author Profile Transformations   My work is bartered between who windows to the street, in ten meters of worldly ground, every night in a … Read more

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“Four Black Poplars by Octavio Paz

Found in Willow Springs 13 Back to Author Profile As this line follows after itself through the horizontal boundaries pursuing it and, eternal fugitive, in the declining west in which it … Read more

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6 Poems by Faiz Ahmed Faiz

Found in Willow Springs 10 Back to Author Profile #1   Victory is to return alive after death        in one’s palms         the lines of martyrdom I loiter in … Read more

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“From Prison” by Emperor Li Yu

Found in Willow Springs 54 Back to Author Profile When shall spring flower, autumn moon cease? Past gold days are endless. East wind last night at my tower cell. My head … Read more

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“Chico the Child-Eater” by Miguel Murphy

Found in Willow Springs 55 Back to Author Profile I spit one seed of the watermelon to the floor it shakes its six legs & walks back into the ear of … Read more

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“Andy Warhol and the Art of the Bullet ” by Sean Lovelace

Found in Willow Springs 59 Back to Author Profile You return from shopping. Isn’t there something you forgot, baby aspirin or turpentine? Raspberries, razor blades, Hula-Hoops? Oven-fried-Corn­ Flake-chicken? Or maybe a … Read more

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5 Stories by Aurelie Sheehan

Found in Willow Springs 60 Back to Author Profile Cigarette It is a night like any other, except for the visitation. I put my head on the pillow, ready for bed. … Read more

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“The Receiving Tower” by Matt Bell

Found in Willow Springs 65 Back to Author Profile NIGHTS, WE CLIMB to the tower’s roof to stand together beneath the satellite dishes, where we watch the hundreds of meteorites fall … Read more

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Willow Springs 75 Cover shows pink pressed flowers on rough paper.

“Copycats” by Lucas Southworth

Found in Willow Springs 75 Back to Author Profile THE SUN WAS BRIGHT in the airport windows, shining through without any heat. At the counter you gave  the  name s  you’d … Read more

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Two Poems by Charlie Clark

Found in Willow Springs 87 Back to Author Profile Devil Collecting Roadkill   So often little pieces of the bodies stay. Not just insects or the bleaching the roadside grasses take, … Read more

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