Quantcast
Channel: Sunday Times Books LIVE » International
Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 1389

Sunday Read: Writers, Take the Slow Train

$
0
0

Trains, Literature and CultureJessica Gross found a writer’s garret-cum-paradise on a train – and inadvertently sparked a new writer’s residency. See the comments below her piece for more on writers and trains.

I am in a little sleeper cabin on a train to Chicago. Framing the window are two plush seats; between them is a small table that you can slide up and out. Its top is a chessboard. Next to one of the chairs is a seat whose top flips up to reveal a toilet, and above that is a “Folding Sink”—something like a Murphy bed with a spigot. There are little cups, little towels, a tiny bar of soap. A sliding door pulls closed and locks with a latch; you can draw the curtains, as I have done, over the two windows pointing out to the corridor. The room is 3’6” by 6’8”. It is efficient and quaint. I am ensconced.

I’m only here for the journey. Soon after I get to Chicago, I’ll board a train and come right back to New York: thirty-nine hours in transit—forty-four, with delays. And I’m here to write: I owe this trip to Alexander Chee, who said in his PEN Ten interview that his favorite place to work was on the train. “I wish Amtrak had residencies for writers,” he said. I did, too, so I tweeted as much, as did a number of other writers; Amtrak got involved and ended up offering me a writers’ residency “test run.”

Book details

  • Trains, Literature and Culture: Reading and Writing the Rails edited by Steven D Spalding, Benjamin Fraser
    EAN: 9780739165607
    Find this book with BOOK Finder!

Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 1389

Trending Articles