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Imad
Rahman was born and brought up in Karachi and educated at the Karachi
Grammar School. He went to the United States for higher studies,
has an M.A. from Ohio University, and an MFA from the University
of Florida. He was the 2001-2002 James C. McCreight Fiction Fellow
at the Wisconsin Institute for Creative Writing, a subject he taught
at the University of Wisconsin-Madison for several years and now
teaches at Kansas State University. His first book, I Dream Of Microwaves,
a collection of interlinked short stories narrated by a Pakistani-American
actor, published in April, has received considerable critical acclaim
in the American press and is now being translated into French. In
this e-mail interview, Imad Rahman answers a few questions about
literature and writing.
Q: You grew up in Karachi and were educated at the Karachi
Grammar School. Did you have an interest in literature at the time?
A: I've always been a reader, but I didn't really read anything
at school that overwhelmed me in any significant way, so I started
reading books I probably wasn't supposed to. The first two books
that knocked some barrier open for me were Salinger's Catcher In
The Rye and Heller's Catch 22. I was about sixteen then, I think.
Q: When you were in college in America, did you have a career
in mind? When and why did you decide to become a writer?
A: I didn't know what I wanted to do, but I knew what
I didn't want to do or who I didn't want to be. A liberal arts education
allowed me to float around from one field to another until I found
one that I felt I could commit to. At that point I didn't know that
I loved reading and that I was interested enough in writing to want
to learn more about the craft. I don't think I ever decided to become
a writer. I just kept writing until I reached a point where I realised
that writing fiction was the one thing I did better than anything
else, and that it was the one thing I liked doing better than anything
else. I've been fortunate to have the most generous-yet-rigorous
mentors possible. But writing is such a lonely and painstaking process,
and ultimately I don't think I would have kept plugging away at
it unless I felt somewhere in the back of my mind that I had what
it took to make it. And being in a community of writers was incredible
too - I don't think you can ever underestimate that.
Q: What is it that makes you write?
A: That's a good question. I think we write about
the world as we see it, so if there's anything that makes me write
- apart from the obvious schizophrenic voices in my head demanding
to have their stories told -it's a desire to make sense of the world
as I perceive it by getting it all down on the page.
Q: During a college holiday in Karachi, you took part
in amateur theatrics. Have you been much involved in theatre before
or since?
A: My acting ability has always been somewhat limited,
in an over-the-top sort of way. Luckily for me, and for the rest
of the world, I can limit my role-playing to the computer desk in
my office now. I haven't been involved too much in theatre since
then, unfortunately, but I'm always open to the possibility of chancing
my hand at playwriting sometime soon.
Q: How did the character of your narrator, Kareem Abdul
Jabbar, a Pakistani American actor, evolve?
A: I think KAJ, the character, has been lingering
in my subconscious for the last fifteen years or so. I'm not sure
where he came from, or what made me finally tune in to him, but
I'm glad I did. I've always been fascinated by method acting, by
the ability of certain actors to cast off one persona and completely
inhabit another, and I've always wondered about what would happen
when the lines started blurring and you forgot where the part left
off and where you began. I think Donald Barthelme once said he wrote
so many stories about architects because he didn't want to write
about writing. I often think of acting as a close cousin to writing,
and since I didn't want to write about writers either, acting seemed
like the next best thing.
Q: Did you start off with the notion that I Dream of Microwaves
would be a series of interlinked short stories?
A: I started the book with the first line. Everything
else, as they say, obtained. I usually don't have much of a game
plan as I write, but I do have several disjointed and non-sequiturish
sentences, images, characters, etc., that I want to somehow connect
within a single narrative. And at the heart of it all, I think that's
what writing is to me: making unlikely things connect.
Q:
The book was a wonderful satire of America and Pakistani Americans
and much else. Do you find satire a particularly effective way of
making a comment, or did the comedy just come naturally?
A: To be perfectly honest, I've always thought of
the book as being more tragic than comic, but I think I'm in the
minority there. The sort of work that I like to read generally blurs
the lines between literary genres, and I hope I did some blurring
of my own here. And it's all au naturelle anyway. I'm not smart
enough for premeditated artifice as yet.
Q: What is your next project?
A: I've told myself I'm writing a novel and I wouldn't
want to disappoint myself by saying otherwise.
Q: Which writers do you admire the most?
A:
Anyone who knows me knows about my unholy love for the fiction of
Barry Hannah. I read a lot and I admire anyone who can slave away
in a locked room long enough to produce a book. But if forced, at
gunpoint, to pick, I'd probably choose George Saunders, Denis Johnson,
Mary Gaitskill, Lorrie Moore, Barry Hannah (of course), Flannery
O'Connor, Mark Richard, Padgett Powell, Mary Robinson, Walker Percy,
Harry Crews, John Fowles, Amy Hempel and T.C. Boyle and be able
to respect myself in the morning.
Q: Where do you think American fiction is headed?
A: I'm not sure where American fiction is headed,
but it's probably as diverse now, structurally and stylistically,
as it's been in a while. I think as long as new voices keep pushing
through and familiar voices keep finding different ways to be heard,
we'll be heading in the right direction.
Q: What space does it offer the S.Asian/Pakistani-American
writer?
A:I think that there's space for anyone who writes
a good book and has the persistence to stick with it till someone
picks it up.
Q: Do you get many students of South Asian or Pakistani
origin in your creative writing classes?
A: I haven't had a single South Asian student in any
class that I've taught, but hopefully that'll change somewhere down
the line.
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