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Making Riddles Out of Answers
Lan Samantha Chang MPA2 1991
Policymakers, politicians, and public servants they make up the
bulk of the Kennedy School alumni database. But look for professional
fiction writers and youre certain to come up with fewer than a handful.
In fact, Lan Samantha Chang MPA2 1991, whose first novel, Hunger,
was recently published, could be one of the very few. So how did a woman
whose dream even as a child was to one day be a writer, end up at a graduate
school whose mission is to prepare future leaders and solve global problems?
In an interview from her office at the
Iowa Writers Workshop (the countrys oldest creative writing
degree program, which includes distinguished graduates such as Flannery
OConnor and Andre Dubus), where she spent the spring and summer
teaching, Chang discussed her path to the Kennedy School and her current
fellowship at Princeton.
Q Youre
a fiction writer. So why the Kennedy School?
When I enrolled,
I was 24 years old and trying to convince myself that I would be happy
in what I called a "real" job the kind of job where I
would show up every day at work and engage with the world in a constructive
way. The Kennedy School was, and is, in my opinion, a place where intelligent
and dynamic people prepare themselves for such jobs. But not long after
I began my coursework, I realized that I was not cut out for that kind
of work. Classes emphasized group collaboration designed to solve problems.
I love working alone; moreover, I feel far more comfortable exploring
the different sides of problems than I do solving them. As [Austrian satirist
Karl] Kraus wrote, "A writer is someone who can make a riddle out
of an answer." This kind of thinking would make a mares nest
if applied to policymaking. Still, I stayed on to finish my degree, and
Im glad I did.
Q Did
any KSG people ever find their way into your characters?
There havent
been any characters based directly on KSG people, but my KSG experiences
had a direct impact on my writing. Politics is about human nature, and
I had an opportunity, through reading case studies and taking certain
courses, to learn about the kinds of issues that are particularly challenging
to societies.
Q How
did you get into fiction writing?
I have wanted
to be a writer since before I could read. As a child, I copied picture
books out onto sheets of paper, with the illustrations and all of the
letters, before I could even put the letters together to form words. I
loved books and wanted to have my own collection. My parents, on the other
hand, grew up in a wartime atmosphere where any extraneous possessions
were weeded out. My mother didnt think it was necessary for us children
to buy novels. Sometimes I think that my parents ideas gave rise
to my desire to create books: if owning as many books as I wanted was
not possible, then perhaps I could literally make my own.
Q Did
writing come naturally to you?
In general
I find writing rather difficult. Ive never been very articulate,
in my opinion, and I also lack the ability to think with the specificity
that leads to detailed, convincing writing. But I do believe that things
"clicked" while I was actually studying at the KSG. I had begun
taking classes at the Cambridge and Boston Centers for Adult Education,
and somehow the act of doing the work for those classes, along with my
realization that I wouldnt be happy in government, combined to give
me a focus I hadnt had before.
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