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Behind the Byline

Scott Broker

February 14, 2022

NER fiction reader Andrew Kane talks to Scott Broker about tonal friction, the “sinister pastoral,” and near-death experiences in his story “Kingdom” (NER 42.4).


Andrew Kane: There’s so much to love about this story—from the imagery and characterization to the language, which rides the line of zaniness without ever quite crossing it—that it’s difficult to know where to begin. But, since I have to begin somewhere, I’ll start by asking about the tone, which you strike right from the story’s first lines: part camp, part desperation, but immediately engaging and relatable, it constantly feels as though it’s shifting beneath the reader’s feet. What were you hoping to achieve with this kind of language? Did you have some sort of blueprint in mind, either in your own previous work or that of other writers, for how to lay down that type of language?

Scott Broker: Thank you for the kind words. I’m glad you asked about tone, as it’s one of my favorite craft elements. A lot of my writing includes the kind of tonal friction you’re describing, moving between different registers from start to finish. The intended effect, in this story at least, is of instant and ongoing destabilization. Gwen’s life is funny, and harrowing, and lonely, and mundane, and absurd, and relatable, and foreign. For the reader to be tugged in a different direction every few sentences helps convince them of this, and puts them in the same position Gwen is in, which is one where the future, both immediate and distant, cannot be forecasted.

A few years ago I took a workshop with Gabe Habash, author of the excellent Stephen Florida, and he helped give me more structure for how I think about this approach in the way he described bathos. In its simplest form, bathos is about subverting audience expectations, traditionally in a shift from the sublime to the trivial. During our workshop, Gabe expanded this to include any kind of unanticipated swing in tone. I realized I’d been doing this already, but it was nice to have more concrete language for the method. In terms of other writers who I look up to in a tonal regard: Joy Williams, Amie Barrodale, Muriel Spark, Diane Cook, and Jen George.

AK: The imagery, too, is striking, and the world Gwen and Jimmy inhabit feels as though it’s barely holding back some encroaching, sinister pastoral—there’s something of the pioneer to it all, a circle-the-wagons mentality that casts the natural world as an ever-present threat. Still, during the dinner party, she is gripped with a desire to flee to “somewhere less human,” longing for “a cactus, a canyon, or a cloud.” What is it about these characters—or perhaps Gwen in particular, or Los Angeles, or daily life under late capitalism—that gives nature this dual aspect, both solace and threat? What were you hoping to explore by bringing that element into this piece?

SB: I love that you picked up on nature’s hybrid quality in this story, and think the “sinister pastoral” is an excellent way of describing that duality. If I’m honest, the binary way Gwen encounters nature very much mirrors my own experience. I can’t speak for others, but I imagine a lot of people share in a similar estrangement from the natural world. Walking through the woods, I’m likely to be called toward revelry and dread in equal measure. When you live in a city, nature is difficult to access in so many different ways. Of course there’s literal distance, but I also think nature’s occurrence in a city can feel almost anachronistic. If I see a coyote walking along the highway, my first thought is What are you doing here?, when I really ought to be asking the same question of myself. Gwen’s world is full of nature, but it is split between real and artificial nature, because that is how the natural world manifests in cities—a real wolf, a real bird, a real desert, and, at the same time, a set of porcelain animals, a stuffed swordfish, a howl that might be an ambulance siren. Gwen wants nature to save her because it is so far from the life she is leading, yet she is also terrified of nature because her connection is fundamentally severed by the industrialized world.

AK: I’d like to talk a little about how you came to arrive at these characters, who are so idiosyncratic and oddly (but very humanly) opaque to themselves, none more so than Gwen. Did Gwen and Jimmy come to you more or less fully formed, or did you find yourself returning to craft those characters over time? What is your process like for creating and fleshing out the characters that you write?

SB: I wouldn’t say I had a great sense of Gwen and Jimmy before starting the piece, save for Jimmy being content (or willing contentment) with their new life, and Gwen being unhappy with it. Their specificities began to emerge within the first few paragraphs, which is common for my process. At the risk of sounding woo-woo, I do think characters have a way of determining themselves. For me this typically occurs through dialogue, where a character will say something, and even though I’ve written the thing they’ve said, I’ll find myself surprised by it. If the surprise feels like it has energy, I will build on it. So, for instance, Jimmy’s first lines of dialogue are foundational to who he is, both in terms of stated interests and in terms of general obliviousness, but I only realized that after the lines were written. Gwen clarified herself once I wrote about her failed efforts with gardening and poetry, where her desire (and failure) to make meaning for herself first makes itself known.

I’ve never been someone who maps out characters before I write, and the idea of filling out a character sheet sounds unproductive to me. I know it works for a lot of writers, but I prefer to let scene build character as much as possible. My hope is that the characters feel organic to the piece, then, including all of their idiosyncrasies, because they have been created in tandem with every other element, as opposed to in some overly-determined, out-of-scene space.

AK: I’m curious about the choice for this story to revolve around these major injuries and near-deaths. What made you want to write about near-death experiences, and what do you think it is about those experiences that builds walls between the initiated and those who are not?

SB: The essential challenge faced by most of my characters is loneliness. Part of what makes loneliness compelling to me is how ubiquitous it is. We’re just as likely to feel lonely when we’re home alone as when we are out at a bar with our closest friends, on a date, or sitting at a meal with our family. This isn’t to say these experiences are all lonely all the time, but that no facet of life is immune to loneliness. Moreover, the source of one’s loneliness can be obvious or opaque, sometimes both. In this story I wanted to create a separation between the characters that is quite extreme, i.e., near-death experiences, and to explore how the loneliness felt by that sort of overt division relates to the other, more everyday divisions in Gwen’s life.

Regarding the near-death experiences, I liked the idea of someone seeing the “other side” and being terrified by it, because so often the narrative is one of enchantment or peace. Maybe this says something about my feelings toward the afterlife, but I think it is a foundationally overwhelming concept, even beyond the notions of heaven and hell. That’s why the characters’ descriptions of the edge do not read to us as bad in any traditional sense. Instead, they are struggling to find language that articulates something inarticulable. And that’s part of what makes the whole thing so awful, and lonely—this inability to truly convey what one has seen. The irony is that Gwen is suffering from a similar pain insofar as she can’t nail down language for her own life. In my mind, this compounds the sense of alienation she feels. In not having seen the afterlife, Gwen is refused any validation or commiseration for her emotional state.

AK: What do the nuts and bolts of your writing process look like? Do you have any formal process for keeping notes and tracking ideas, and how do you know when an idea is ready to become a story?

SB: For better and worse, I’m incredibly loyal to routine. Depending on my work schedule, I write at the same café, at the same time, three or four days a week. Typically I’ll work for two to three hours. This happens in the morning, with an occasional burst of editing later in the afternoon. I’ve accepted that I’m a slow writer, and that a good day often yields less than a page, with the occasional anomaly (joyous every time) when I’m able to produce more. Part of this slowness has to do with my inability to not edit the few pages prior to wherever I am. Some people push against this approach, but it’s how I get back into the present scene, and also tends to make for tighter drafts.

I’ve always wished I were someone who wrote by hand, but my handwriting is so ugly that I would never be able to stand it, so a laptop it is. I keep a note in my phone with ideas for stories, and another note that’s specifically for my novel, but both lists are quite short at the moment. Similar to my approach to character, I’ve learned that the fastest way for me to steal the wind from a project’s sails is to outline exactly where it’s headed. I typically have four or five plot points that I expect to occur, and I’ll use those as guides, but most often I’m trying to build the story in the most organic way possible. Sometimes this works, other times it fails.

I wish I had a clear way of knowing when an idea can become a story! When I’m writing short stories, I typically have five or six false starts before landing on an idea that sticks. The measure, maybe, is when the narrative begins to unfold without so much tugging on my end.

AK: I believe I’ve seen on social media that you have recently completed a novel, and I know that you have had a number of other publications over the past few months. Is there anything else that you’re especially excited to be working on at the moment? And, perhaps unrelatedly, who and what are you reading when you aren’t working on that?

SB: Right now I’m working on my second novel titled The Disappointment. I don’t have a great logline, but have been messily describing it as a combination of Shirley Jackson and Garth Greenwell. In the broadest strokes, it is about a couple who go on a doom-fated vacation while trying to escape their respective grief states. I’m trying to strike an even balance between literary realism and absurdism, not dissimilar to “Kingdom.” Some of the topics I’m exploring are ambition, failure, art, loyalty, and conflicting types of loss. But it’s also funny. (I think.)

This year I’m trying to read more nonfiction, because I’m very biased toward fiction and poetry. I began 2022 with Sarah Schulman’s Let the Record Show, a brilliant and epic history of ACT UP New York, and recently read and enjoyed One Friday in April by Donald Antrim. In my bag currently is Claire-Louise Bennett’s forthcoming novel, Checkout 19, which has been mind-bogglingly good so far. And here are a few more books I’ve admired recently, some of which are forthcoming this year: Trust by Hernan Diaz, Revenge of the Scapegoat by Caren Beilin, The White Dress by Nathalie Léger, Time Is a Mother by Ocean Vuong, Registers of Illuminated Villages by Tarfia Faizullah, and Who Will Pay Reparations on My Soul? by Jesse McCarthy.


Andrew Kane, a longtime fiction reader for NER, has work published or forthcoming in Cimarron Review, Puerto del Sol online, The MacGuffin, The Normal School, The Rumpus, and elsewhere. A former senior writer for NPR’s Ask Me Another, he is currently earning his MSW at New York University.

Filed Under: Featured, News & Notes Tagged With: Andrew Kane, Scott Broker

Meet the Readers

Andrew Kane

July 12, 2021


“I like more than anything to be surprised by freshness, especially freshness of language; I’m always looking for the novel turn of phrase, the inevitable volta that I somehow never saw coming.“


Tell us a little bit about yourself. Where are you from and what do you do when you’re not reading for NER?
I grew up in northern California—along the stretch of coast between San Francisco and Santa Cruz—but I left for good in 2013, and I’ve been in Brooklyn for six years now. I’m currently in a social work grad program at NYU, so when I’m not reading for NER I’m mostly reading, writing, and interning for that. I also have a handful of freelance writing jobs, the most interesting of which is my role as a senior writer for the NPR program Ask Me Another, which is less time-consuming than it sounds.

What made you decide to be a reader for NER, and how long have you been on staff?
I’ve been reading for NER since May 2017, when NER put out a low-key call for readers via their mailing list. (I should note that my value as a reader was pretty limited for the first year or so, and I credit then–fiction editor Janice Obuchowski with some incredibly deft, patient, and not at all confrontational mentorship on that front.) I was also, at that time, casting about pretty desperately for some way to feel connected to the literary world—I’d attended a writers’ conference put on by the Virginia Quarterly Review but was otherwise very much at sea—and in that regard NER has been a terrific lifeline.

Have you ever read a submission that later got selected for publication?
Yes! After three years of reading and a handful of near misses, I was finally able to recommend a submission that ended up being selected for publication—a short story by Scott Broker, which is scheduled for inclusion in the next “Emerging Writers” issue (NER 42.4). I am very excited about this piece, which is so unlike anything else I’ve encountered in my time reading for the magazine.

What is your reading process like? What do you look for in a submission?
I like more than anything to be surprised by freshness, especially freshness of language; I’m always looking for the novel turn of phrase, the inevitable volta that I somehow never saw coming. There is also a feeling, which I’ve gotten while reading certain submissions, when I can tell that an author is completely in control of their process: they know where they’re taking you and how you’ll be getting there, and they allow the story to unfold exactly as it needs to.

Of the pieces you’ve read at NER—whether in the magazine or among the submissions—which was your favorite or most memorable to you personally?
Hands down the best story I’ve read in NER was Emma Duffy-Camparone’s “The Package Deal,” (NER 40.3), which is a rich and funny and very sexy story about a woman navigating her relationship with a newly-divorced father and his young son. Some other favorites have included “The Elephant God” (40.1) by Lauren Acampora, “The Corridor” (41.2) by Ryan Eric Dull, and “How Can You Be Happy?” (40.2) by Steve Almond—all of which, I’m now realizing, walk a fine line between comedy and despair—as well as a pair of stories by Scholastique Mukasonga (41.3, 39.1), who is top-notch. As for submissions, a few stories that didn’t make it to print still stay with me: there was one in particular, about a girl who stars in the DIY horror movies that her brother makes, that I think about fairly often.

How has reading for NER influenced your own writing/creative pursuits?
Honestly—and I’m no Malcolm Gladwell apologist by any means—the greatest boon has been the whole “ten thousand hours” thing: assessing the strengths and weaknesses of several hundred short stories annually is pretty well guaranteed to make one a better writer; at the very least, it’s made me a better, more critical editor of my own work. The variety of work I encounter as a reader has also empowered me to take more chances with my own writing, linguistically and plot-wise; it’s also helped me to crystallize my understanding of the nuts-and-bolts aspects of writing like story structure and character.

What do you read for pleasure? Is there something you’re reading at the moment that you would recommend?
Perhaps unsurprisingly, I tend to read a lot of short fiction—I recently read Joy Williams’s collection of microfictions, Ninety-Nine Stories of God, which I enjoyed a lot, and am currently reading the Karen Russell collection Orange World, which I’m not particularly enjoying at all. Other recent hits were Brian Evenson’s collection Contagion and Emma Duffy-Camparone’s Love Like That (see above—I picked this up as soon as it came out and cannot recommend it highly enough). I also subscribe to One Story—I’m a sucker for anything shaped like a zine—where I recently read the story “Breastmilk” by ’Pemi Aguda; I’ve since tracked down some of her other work online and I think she’s terrific.


NER‘s staff readers, all volunteers, play an essential role in our editorial process and in our mission to discover new voices in contemporary literature. A full list of staff readers is available on our masthead.

Filed Under: News & Notes, Staff Reader Profile Tagged With: Andrew Kane, Emma Duffy-Camparone, Lauren Acampora, Ryan Eric Dull, Scholastique Mukasonga, Scott Broker, Steve Almond

Behind the Byline

Ryan Eric Dull

August 14, 2020

A character type I find myself writing a lot is Person with nothing concrete at the center of their life, who, in their hunger for meaning, grabs ahold of a shaky set of principles / practices / ambitions and refuses to let go.

Author Ryan Eric Dull talks with NER fiction reader Andrew Kane about writing “The Corridor” (NER 41.2), which included “a lot of time pressed up against the wall trying to figure it out.”


Andrew Kane: This story is so thoroughly unexpected—it begins with the protagonist, Alex, relocating from Baltimore to Providence, and ends with him slathered in peanut oil, nude but for a belt, with enough food and water to survive several days inside an eight-inch-wide crevice. How did the idea for this piece come to be? Did it arrive more or less fully formed, or were extensive brainstorming and revisions necessary?

Ryan Eric Dull: The central idea kind of dropped from the ceiling. My wife wondered aloud why someone on social media was trying to lose weight and I said, “Maybe he’s trying to get through a really tight hallway,” which struck me as a funny thing to get passionate about, to be looking at this hallway every day thinking, “Soon.” From there, it was all step-by-step logical chain stuff: What kind of person does he need to be to end up wanting this so badly? What needs to be true about the building that it has this weird, barely usable hallway? The building renovations paralleled Alex’s self-transformation in a way that felt interesting, so I tried to make those elements dovetail. I wrote the first draft for a workshop (thanks again to Ben Loory and that whole group! Can I do shout-outs here? If so, my wife from a few sentences ago is named Allison) and I didn’t have a lot of time, so it was a lot of writing impulsively, letting one idea chase the next, that kind of thing. By this process, I gradually turned a spontaneous goof into a studied, laborious goof.

AK: There is a wonderful sense of physicality throughout the story, ranging from comical to terrifying—the scene where Alex becomes briefly stuck in the corridor reminded me of nothing so much as the starkest passages from James Salter’s rock-climbing novel Solo Faces. What was your vision for the overall tone of the piece? Was there any specific goal you hoped to achieve by working in the space between these modes?

RED: I’m glad the physicality works! I spent a lot of time pressed up against the wall trying to figure it out. Generally, I don’t think about tone in an instrumental way—I usually have a kind of intuitive sense of how I want the story to feel and then I orient all of the elements toward that feeling. In this case, I think the core concept of the story is so goofy that I had to keep the tone pretty earnest or it would have felt weightless. Maybe there’s a way to tell this story where Alex faces a little more ridicule from other characters and from the story itself, so the reader is a little more alienated from him and experiences the story more analytically. That could be interesting. But I wanted to take him seriously, which meant the struggle had to be genuinely arduous and the hallway had to be genuinely menacing. And of course treating something really undeniably silly with a lot of gravity creates kind of a funny dissonance for the reader, so everything feels heightened and strange. Ideally, I want to create an atmosphere where every sentence could plausibly end with a joke or a life-altering disaster.

AK: The character of Alex emerges in surprising ways. On the one hand, he willingly accepts his fairly dull workaday job; on the other, a primary reason for his return to Providence is that he remembers it as “alive with passionate intention”—certainly something he regains, though perhaps not in the way he had expected. What was it that drew you to writing this particular character, and how were you able to fully explore a protagonist whose primary arc is concerned with training to shimmy through a very tight space?

RED: A character type I find myself writing a lot is “Person with nothing concrete at the center of their life, who, in their hunger for meaning, grabs ahold of a shaky set of principles/practices/ambitions and refuses to let go.” Alex is reminiscing about a moment in his life where everyone around him had just finished the really purposeful, goal-oriented experience of formal education and was trying to ride that momentum into the rest of their lives. Now he’s becoming aware, without a lot of real understanding, that he never settled on any stable source of meaning, so he’s kind of drifting through his life, totally vulnerable to anything that can give him a sense of purpose. This is a pretty extreme version of that character type—he has to be searching so frantically with so little success or direction that this hallway adventure seems like a strong option. And once he’s invested, it’s like any other big ambition: he studies it, he approaches it from different angles, he arrives over and over again at junctures where he might reasonably decide it’s not worth the trouble, and every time he chooses to press ahead, he invests more of himself into the project, he makes it more and more this grand, totemic thing that has very little to do with his concrete goal and a lot to do with the heat of the ambition itself, everything else in his life is either incorporated into the ambition or discarded, and eventually he douses himself in peanut oil.

AK: The story walks a fine line between the straight-faced and the absurd, and the dialogue follows suit—a single spoken line can feel at once comical and vaguely sinister. Do you have a particular process for writing dialogue that feels so alive and believable on the page?

RED: Oh! My process is: I talk to myself a lot. I stage a scene in my head and kind of improvise through it over and over again and make a lot of dramatic facial expressions. When a phrase starts to feel resonant, I’ll iterate on that for a while and eventually write it down. This technique is easier to practice at home than at the library.

AK: Do you see this story as being part of a particular tradition of fiction writing? Who are some authors who have had an impact on you, either for this piece specifically or else as a writer in general?

RED: One possible influence for this piece that sticks out in my mind: I’d recently read the Brian Evenson story “Watson’s Boy,” which is about a family living a very narrow, ritualistic life in a labyrinth that is never explained or justified to the reader. It’s a real “begin with a blank space, then add a few elements” kind of story where the whole narrative universe is a handful of people in a fixed space, and it really drives home the lesson that any narrative circumstance can be visceral and affecting as long as the writer takes the characters’ experiences seriously. For a while after I read it, I was treating weird, implausible ideas for stories with a deeper respect. I probably wouldn’t have written this story if I hadn’t read that one. I definitely wouldn’t have written it so earnestly. Some other big names for me are Karen Joy Fowler, Steven Millhauser, Charles Portis, and Karen Russell, whose impact is maybe kind of traceable in this story, and Samuel R. Delany, Ted Chiang, E. L. Doctorow, and Annie Dillard, whose impact here is probably just about invisible.


Ryan Eric Dull lives in Southern California. His work has appeared in the Missouri Review and the Pushcart Prize Anthology and is upcoming in Beneath Ceaseless Skies.

Andrew Kane is a writer and editor currently living in Brooklyn, New York. He writes for NPR’s Ask Me Another, and his work has appeared or is forthcoming in the Rumpus, Rupture, the Normal School, Rattle, and elsewhere.

Filed Under: Featured, News & Notes Tagged With: Andrew Kane, Behind the Byline, Ryan Eric Dull

Behind the Byline

Ben Miller

April 15, 2020

Head shot of long-time NER essayist Ben Miller, half in shadow with his flannel shirt

The literature, the librarian, and the luck that saved Ben Miller’s life. 

Ben Miller, veteran NER author of “The Haunting of Byerly Hall: WC”
(NER 40.4) is interviewed by longtime NER fiction reader Andrew Kane.
The version presented below is an excerpt. Read the full interview here.

Andrew Kane: One of my favorite aspects of “The Haunting of Byerly Hall: WC” is the way it evokes an incredibly specific time and place. Could you talk a little about the particular ways the social climate and the landscape—physical, emotional, psychological—helped to shape this narrative?

Ben Miller: Well, there are actually two very specific timeframes here—the one you mentioned enfolded as a flashback into the (for me) unprecedented experience of starting a fellowship year at the Radcliffe Institute in Cambridge. . . . And what could 2014 in Cambridge have to do with 1979 in urban Iowa—a rusty city on the Mississippi River? For me both were points of startling transition.

In 1979 I was 110 pounds thinner than I had been in 1978. I had starved myself into a new shape in the aftermath of sexual abuse. This new shape I hoped would be the one that could survive, and integral to the survival was not only vanquishing the obese son who had been preyed upon by a parent, just as vital was my attachment to writing. Art did not fix anything but was the one thing I found I could still believe in . . .

AK: Throughout the essay, you bring your fellow members of the Davenport Writers’ Studio to life through assiduous characterizations, and reconstruct their work with what feels like a genuine affection for—if not the cat poems and Boy’s Life submissions themselves—then the act of sharing those works with outside listeners. Later, you write how the group’s president, David Collins, “peered across [you] as if [you] were a lake. . . . Seeing, then, more than [your] disaster, something beyond it, the rest or what else might be.” What are your thoughts on this notion of seeing and being seen in the context of making art?

BM: I’m glad you focus here on the “seeing.” I’m fascinated by the portrait—whether by the painter Goya or essayist Lytton Strachey or composer Virgil Thomson. I define a portrait as a certain face in alignment with a certain time and a certain place. And of course the end result is as much about the seer as the seen.

There was so much to adore about this unique group of writers. I feel there is still much to learn from them. The choices they made. The fortitude they showed. They deserve a book of their own, and “W.C.” is part of that work-in-progress.

It wasn’t just that I was this kid desperate for any connections. I knew another bad connection could be the end of me.

But as soon as I meandered into the first club meeting and chose a folding chair I could feel I was no longer in the city where my educated parents had had no luck, succumbing to a bitterness that by turns paralyzed them and caused them to exploit their sons and daughters in various ways. I was elsewhere.

I mean, these adults—just like teachers and clinic doctors and almost all neighbors—had every reason to be spooked by my rag-tag appearance and office supplies arranged around a copy of Eliot’s The Wasteland—but they were not afraid, I saw. They welcomed me. A group that did not fear me, reject me? That was a first. I had been welcomed often as a child into the sweet warm kitchen of the one nice neighbor, homebound Mr. Hickey in the clip-on bow-tie, but a group?

To cover rental of the stale room there was a dollar attendance fee but the fee did not, I was quickly told, apply in my case. They did not want to take my money either? (Lucky: I had none.) Then, over a few hours, I heard that each club member was so in love with the notion of being a writer that obvious failures did not discourage them. When the whole thing ended the last miracle. I was invited back.

Read the interview in its entirety here. 


Ben Miller is the author of River Bend Chronicle: The Junkification of a Boyhood Idyll amid the Curious Glory of Urban Iowa (Lookout Books, 2013). His prose has been featured in Best American Essays, One Story, Southern Review, AGNI, Raritan, Yale Review, Kenyon Review, Antioch Review, and elsewhere. Chapter 12 of it all melts down to this: a novel in timelines will appear in Best American Experimental Writing 2020. Miller is the recipient of creative writing fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts and the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study at Harvard University.

Andrew Kane is a freelance writer and editor living in Brooklyn, New York. He currently writes for NPR’s Ask Me Another, and his work has appeared or is forthcoming in The Rumpus, The Rupture, The Normal School, and elsewhere.

Filed Under: News & Notes Tagged With: Andrew Kane, Behind the Byline, Ben Miller


Vol. 43, No. 4

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Literature & Democracy

Tomas Venclova

“A principled stance against aggression should never turn into blind hatred. Such hatred does not help anyone to win . . .”

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