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JAVA Dec '18 issue

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combined with a university and being a cool, small blue blob in a red state, made<br />

me happy.<br />

<strong>JAVA</strong>: Tucson Salvage is such a great title. Did you come up with that?<br />

BJS: I never intended this to become a book. I came to Tucson and I just wanted<br />

to write about people that I feel a connection with. Tucson Salvage was a nod to<br />

Bonnie Jo Campbell and her book American Salvage, which has been my favorite<br />

collection of short stories for decades. She wrote a blurb for Spent Saints, and<br />

I was totally honored. Tucson Salvage is just the perfect title for this thing, but<br />

American Salvage came first, and I nicked it from that.<br />

<strong>JAVA</strong>: What message do you hope that Tucson Salvage imparts to your<br />

son as he grows up?<br />

BJS: Compassion for humankind, empathy.<br />

MRS: Reece is in the book.<br />

BJS: Yeah, I wrote a story about when I first started hanging around him. It’s<br />

about – well, Maggie and I weren’t quite a couple yet, and I met this kid and he<br />

was super smart, his first language was Spanish, and he hated Kid Rock. He was<br />

two years old and he hated Kid Rock, so I thought, “This guy is awesome.” He’s a<br />

kid after my own heart. His unending curiosity is really inspiring, plus his default<br />

switch is joy and happiness. My default switch is sadness. How did I ever lose<br />

that, or did I ever have it? Kids are amazing.<br />

<strong>JAVA</strong>: There is a line from the documentary where one of the subjects<br />

says, “I don’t know if the free world is worth it.” Is this something that<br />

resonates with you, Brian?<br />

BJS: All the time. I ask myself this every day. I end up choosing people to write<br />

about that I’m unconsciously attracted to.<br />

<strong>JAVA</strong>: That same person talks about the fact that the hardest thing to do<br />

is stay disciplined. At the reading you talked about having a struggle with<br />

this very thing. How hard is discipline for you?<br />

BJS: Well, that’s funny. I used to write songs all the time, and now I can only write<br />

when I feel like it. It’s the hardest thing in the world because this is my job. I have<br />

to do it. I have to set hours where I can sit and write. If I don’t, everything falls<br />

apart and I get so depressed. Discipline is a way that I force myself to work.<br />

<strong>JAVA</strong>: What is coming up for the documentary?<br />

MRS: We are entering it in a bunch of film festivals. We are getting the film fourwalled,<br />

which basically qualifies us for Academy Awards. It’s going to run in a<br />

theater for a week in LA in February, so the sky’s the limit. It’s a very exciting year<br />

for us.<br />

BRS: The main inspiration for me doing Tucson Salvage in the very beginning was<br />

a reaction against so much irony in the world. Everybody is so afraid to just tell the<br />

truth about things. They have to hide behind humor and irony and sarcasm. That’s<br />

so simpleminded. It’s like white noise. I really just wanted to tell stories. Telling<br />

stories about people that are mainly ignored by other people. To me, that’s the<br />

most powerful thing in storytelling right now.<br />

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