I am excited to introduce you to some fabulous writers in a series called “Where Rye Writers Write.” Â They have all captured my attention with wonderful novels, memoirs and poetry. Â I thought it would be fun to find out where these writers like to write in their home and what inspires them. Â I am going to kick off the series with my friend and poet, Kristina Bicher and the rooms where she writes in her beautiful home.
I received a master’s in writing from Manhattanville and I’m half-way through the MFA in Poetry program at Sarah Lawrence. Â But the best, best, best training for writing is READING. Â That’s how you develop your ear for language, expand your range, grasp the possibilities.
I guess I’ve been writing for as long as I remember. Â I think I was a very big talker as a child and I exhausted my poor mother… it was probably she who first put a pen in my hand. Â Verbal children often gravitate to writing. Â I remember once I asked her about why there hadn’t been any female presidents. Â Before I knew it, I had written a letter to the President of the US! Â She was always one to encourage people to use the power of the pen. Â In high school and college, I was on the newspaper or magazine staffs.
Why did you start writing/motivation?
I kept journals as a teenager and especially during college as a way of sorting out my thoughts. Â I always liked writing essays for school but had never tried my hand at fiction or poetry until much later.
Where in your home do you like to write?
I’m a bit of a writing nomad… it depends on my mood. Â If I really need to buckle down and revise lots of pages, I need a room with little distraction and a big table to spread out on, so that would be the dining room. Â If it’s a gray day, I have a sunny yellow “meditation room” that instantly perks me up. Â In the morning, I like to sit by the window and look at the garden.
What in these rooms inspire you?
Natural light, colors, patterns and view are all important.
I try to write at least every other day. Â Or I will revise existing work. Â Or at the very, very least, I try to write down little tidbits: ideas, phrases, and other things that come to me. Â I don’t think you need to write every single day, but every day you should have your eyes and ears open – that will become your material.
I have read so widely it’s hard to know. Â When I was younger, I would be reading Hardy, Vonnegut and Solzhenitsyn at the same time. Â I always loved the Russian novelists (Tolstoy and Dostoevsky), the French (Balzac and Hugo) and also Garcia Marquez. Â Stylistically, I was very influenced by Virginia Woolf. Â That’s all fiction… in terms of poetry, I guess I haven’t figured that out yet! Â Dickinson, Rilke, William Carlos Williams…
I’m mostly reading now for school. Â Just finished “Some Ether” by Nick Flynn which was incredible.
Who is your favorite up and coming writer?
For poetry, I really admire the work of Natalie Diaz: her book “When My Brother Was an Aztec” is amazing to me.
In Provincetown, there are old writer’s shacks among the dunes. Â I haven’t seen them, but they sound so romantic. Â Closer to home, I have a little garden shed I’ve been eyeing, but first I have to clear out the bikes and rakes….
Well, I wouldn’t call it reading, but I’ve been known to waste time with Angry Birds…
Dream accomplishment or project?
I’m writing a full-length manuscript now so I would be thrilled to get that published. Â I’d also like to explore a collaborative project with a visual artist.
Here are links for more information on Kristina and her poetry!
3 comments
She sounds wonderful. would love to meet her. A poet is a very special breed.
Melinda sweet
It is a shame that I am just now discovering these wonderful talents Kristina, I had no idea. Great article.
In high school I remember her as mysterious, different, quirky, kind, confident. She was unique and beautiful, natural and sophisticated at the same time. She is a person worth knowing. I wish her all the success in her writing.
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