by Vinnie
Hansen
Does writing make you insane or
preserve your sanity? Salad Bowl Saturdays is pleased to welcome Vinnie Hansen
to share her thoughts on the subject. Welcome, Vinnie! — Paula
Writing
can drive me insane. As I used to tell my students, “It’s a short drive.”
There have been so many crazed authors, who
can doubt the connection? However, perhaps the authors weren’t driven mad by
writing, but became authors because they were mad. I’m sure there are moments
when all of us think we are out of our minds to be engaged in the pursuit. George
Sand called writing “a violent and indestructible obsession.”
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| Vinnie in high school |
On the other hand, just as often,
writing preserved my sanity. I grew up in rural South Dakota in a poor family
with ten children. My earliest writings were cathartic, bleeding-on-the-page productions,
but they helped me heal. And many of the stories did go on to be published.
When I was in my thirties, my older
sister—my best friend and a surrogate mother to me—struggled through chemo for breast
cancer. When she eventually succumbed to the disease, writing allowed me to
deal with the grief.
I’m not quite calloused enough that
everything immediately becomes grist for the mill. When my father died, I cried
and cried with nary a plot in my head. Eventually, though, every event is
potential material. Sometimes I am aware of that even as an event occurs, and
that helps me to put the occurrence into perspective.
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| Vinnie after 35 years of writing |
With my work-in-progress I am grappling with
the burglary of our house on the day before Thanksgiving, 2012. My husband and
I came up the walk with our turkey as a burglar jumped over our backyard fence.
My 63-year-old husband gave chase. I called 9-1-1. During the chase, the
burglar twice pulled a gun and threatened to kill my husband. Fortunately, he
did not. The police apprehended the criminal. The case went to trial in April,
2014, and the young man was sentenced this morning. I’ve coped with the fear,
stress, and sadness by channeling it into fiction.
| The Burglary |
Writing allows us to convert tragedy and
humiliation into drama and humor. What experience have you transformed via the
magic of writing?
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| Vinnie Hansen |
Vinnie
Hansen is the author of the Carol Sabala mystery series: Murder, Honey; One
Tough Cookie; Rotten Dates; Tang Is Not Juice, Death with
Dessert and Art, Wine & Bullets. She was a 2013 Claymore Award
finalist for her upcoming Carol Sabala mystery, Black Beans & Venom.
A semi-finalist for the Iowa School of Letters Award for Short Fiction, she has
written many published short stories. Her story Novel Solution will
appear in the upcoming anthology Fish or Cut Bait. Vinnie lives in Santa
Cruz, California, with her husband, abstract artist Daniel S. Friedman.



