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Novelist
& Short Story Writer
First United Methodist Church
December 12, 1994
Biography
Excerpt
Selected Works
Links
Biography
Lorrie Moores short story "How to Become a Writer" begins:
"First, try to be something, anything, else." Fortunately, Moore
did not take her own advice. Her humorous prose is filled with wisecracks
and pithy one-liners, but it is always built on a core of sadness in her
characters lives.
Born Marie Lorena Moore in 1957, in Glens Falls, New York, she was nicknamed
"Lorrie" by her parents. Moore remembers being painfully skinny
child who always felt that she could "fall down the slightest crevice
and disappear." Academically
ambitious, she skipped ahead in school, earned a Regents scholarship,
and attended St. Lawrence University. There, as an English major, she
was the editor of the literary journal and won, at nineteen, Seventeen
magazines fiction contest.
After graduating, she moved to Manhattan and worked as a paralegal for
two years, then in 1980 enrolled in Cornells M.F.A. program. At
Cornell her stories were accepted at magazinesone by Ms.,
for which they paid her but never ran, others by Fiction International,
John Gardners magazine, and StoryQuarterly. She felt encouraged
by having her work published, but she was still not convinced it would
lead anywhere. I remember thinking, rather naïvely, that
I would give myself until I was thirty, and if I hadnt published
a book by then, I would probably have to find something else to focus
on, that I obviously just was completely deluded and I didnt know
what I was doing.
In 1983, when she was twenty-six, Knopf bought her collection, Self-Help,
comprised almost entirely of stories from her masters thesis. One
of Moores teachers at Cornell, Alison Lurie, had mentioned that
her agent, Melanie Jackson, was looking for clients. Neither Moore nor
her classmates really knew what an agent was. I sent her the collection,
and she sent it to Knopf, and they took it. Now, I realize, that doesnt
happen ordinarily, Moore says.
The 1998 OHenry Award winning story "People Like That Are the
Only People Here" is a good example of how Moore handles tragic subject
matter with witty prose. In the story, a writer and her husband discover
a blood clot in their baby's diaper. When baby is diagnosed with a kidney
tumor, the husband urges his writer wife to "take notes" for
a story to earn some extra money for hospital bills. "Sweetie, darling,
I'm not that good," she tells him. "I can do succinct descriptions
of weather. I can do screwball outings with the family pet. But this?
Our baby with cancer? I'm sorry. My stop was two stations back."
Since 1984, Moore has taught English at the University of Wiconsin. She
claims her literary ambitions have become more prosaic than ever. "I
used to stay up all night and write and read, and I was quite obsessive.
But now its a much more modest endeavor. When your life gets crazy
and complicated, your hopes turn into 'I hope I get enough sleep so that
I can get some writing done this year.'"
Excerpt taken from Who Will Run the Frog Hospital
(1994)
In Paris we eat brains every night. My husband likes the vaporous, fishy
mousse of them. They are a kind of seafood, he thinks, locked tightly
in the skull, like shelled creatures in the dark caves of the ocean, sprung
suddenly free and killed by light; they've grown clammy with shelter,
fortressed vulnerability, dreamy night. Me, I'm eating for a flashback.
"The grass is always greener on the other side of the fence,"
says Daniel, my husband, finger raised, as if the thought has just come
to him via the cervelles.
"Remember the beast you eat. And it will remember you."
I'm hoping for something Proustian, all that forgotten childhood. I mash
them against the roof of my mouth, melt them, waiting for something to
be triggered in my head, in empathy or chemistry or some other rush of
protein. The tempest in the teacup, the typhoon in the trout; there is
wine, and we drink lots of it.
We sit beside people who show us wallet pictures of their children. "Sont-ils
si mignons!" I say. My husband constructs remarks in his own patois.
We, us, have no little ones. He doesn't know French. But he studied Spanish
once, and now, with a sad robustness, speaks of our childlessness to the
couple next to us. "But," he adds, thinking fondly of our cat,
"we do have a large gato at home."
"Gâteau means `cake,'" I whisper. "You've just told
them we have a large cake at home." I don't know why he always strikes
up conversations with the people next to us. But he strikes them up, thinking
it friendly and polite rather than oafish and irritating, which is what
I think.
"What aggrandizement are we in again?" my husband asks.
"What `aggrandizement'?" I say. "I don't know, but I think
we're in one of the biggies." My husband pronounces tirez as if it
were Spanish, père as if it were pier. The affectionate farce I
make of him ignores the ways I feel his lack of love for me. But we are
managing. We touch each other's sleeves. We say, "Look at that!,"
wanting our eyes to merge, our minds to be one. We are in Paris, with
its impeccable marzipan and light, its whiffs of sewage and police state.
With my sore hip and his fallen arches ("fallen archness," Daniel
calls it), we walk the quais, stand on all the bridges in the misty rain,
and look out on this pretty place, secretly imagining being married to
other peopleright here in River City!and sometimes not, sometimes
simply wondering, silently or aloud, what will become of the world.
Selected
Works
Self-Help: Stories (1985)
Anagrams (1986)
Like Life (1990)
Who Will Run the Frog Hospital? (1994)
Birds of America (1998)
Web
Site Links
Salon.com interview
with Moore
New York Times featured author
CNN.com interview
with Moore
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