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Home / home / Dave Housley Talks Craft and Kraft with Hobart Lit Journal

Jan 14 2022

Dave Housley Talks Craft and Kraft with Hobart Lit Journal

The Other Ones author sits down with ASP's own Hannah Grieco (for Hobart) to discuss some of the food-based inspiration for his new novel

Dave Housley Interview (snacktime)

In a new interview with Hobart Literary Journal, Dave Housley breaks down the role of food in his new darkly comedic office novel The Other Ones. In a section of extended metaphor, Housley describes TOO as if it were a recipe, and in another section assigns a snack to each of the characters in the office. The interview is conducted by ASP's own Hannah Grieco. Read the full interview HERE. An excerpt follows:

Okay, tell us about your book!

It’s a novel about a group of people whose co-workers win the lottery. The book follows the people who do not win the lottery over the course of the next year as they shoot off in various (mostly bad) directions. It’s told in short chapters from seven different point of view, including a rather incompetent ghost of a man who jumps off the building in the first chapter and then comes back to haunt the lottery winners. I think it’s dark and also funny and nearly every thing that’s annoyed me over thirty some years of working in offices found its way in there as well. I was really happy that Matt Bell called it a “bighearted office comedy” because that’s really what I was going for.

If The Other Ones was a metaphoric recipe, what would the ingredients be?

I love chili, and one thing I love about it is the mix of flavors – you’ve got hot and also sweet, a base and some flavors kind of dancing around at the edges, all of these ingredients eventually combining to make one cohesive thing. I think all of those things could generally be said about this book: it’s a little dark and hopefully a little funny. It's character driven literary fiction but also very much driven by plot, and part of that plot involves two people who buy guns. It’s realistic but there’s a fair amount of mystery and one of the characters is a ghost. So yeah, I think this book is one of those chilis where you run out of a few things and have had one too many chili-making beers to get back to the grocery store so you improvise.

Read the entire interview at Hobart Order the other ones from Bookshop.org

Patterson Reads HUIDEKOPER on the New LFTRR

July 21, 2020

In this episode of LFTRR, James J. Patterson reads “HUIDEKOPER”, a story about a wild group home full of artists and musicians.

Elizabeth Hazen Shares Her Tsundoku (Poetry Books to Read)

June 26, 2020

In a new guest blog post, Elizabeth Hazen shares some cool words from all over the world, and gives us a peek into her recently conquered tsundoku.

Rose Reads, Writing about Art and an UPDATE

June 25, 2020

On the 12th episode of Rose Reads, Rose Solari goes in-depth on writers writing about writing and art. She reads from her own novel which contains a good deal of beautiful prose about visual art, A Secret Woman, and the extraordinary short work of Richard Peabody as found in The Richard Peabody Reader.

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