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Sherman Alexie's avatar

Gossip time: Junot, I'm remembering that New Yorker party where we met for the first time and we both remarked that we looked far more like the food service workers than the other writers. The writing world has diversified since, especially in the last few years, but the writer bios have largely remained the same. The same MFAs, the same fellowships, the same awards. I don't think the literary power structure has changed much. The only thing that's changed is that more brown and black folks have some power. This means a lot of great writers are getting chances they wouldn't have had otherwise. But it also means that the nepotism has also diversified. I do have high hopes that a new wave of risky writing is on the way.

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Kathleen Clare Waller's avatar

Thanks for sharing with us the nuance of your answer and letting us hang in the ambiguity. There's a lot to think about here, but agree one should simply WRITE if the ideas and curiosity are there before them. I remember seeing you on a panel in Hong Kong and somebody was giving you grief about writing from the female perspective. Whether it's 'right' or 'wrong' (I tend to think it's right), I really liked your answer which, at the time, was that you really didn't know how authentic it was necessarily but that part of the writing process is imagining ourselves as others and finding connections and empathy in all humanity. It's such a great perspective.

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