Monday, July 29, 2013

Interview with IHS Press Author Dan Carpenter

Dan Carpenter, author of the IHS Press book Indiana Out Loud: Dan Carpenter on the Heartland Beat, has been writing for the Indianapolis Star since 1979. In writing for the state's largest newspaper, Carpenter has covered the life and times of some notable Hoosiers, as well as serving as the voice for the disadvantaged. An Indianapolis native, Carpenter answers some questions about his work and career.

What influenced you to go into the journalism profession? 

I fell into writing not long after I learned to read, and fell in love with bylines and readers as a high school newspaper reporter. College in the 1960s, an era of explosive politics and social change, sealed the deal for one who yearned to be in on the action, or more precisely on the edge of it.

What were some of your early jobs with newspapers? 

First was the Greenfield (Ind.) Daily Reporter, where I covered police, fire, city hall and, on nights and weekends, high school sports. I also learned photography there by the sink-or-swim method. Next, 180 degrees removed, was the Milwaukee Courier, an African-American weekly where I practiced by straight and advocacy journalism and learned the priceless lesson that "straight" depends on where one stands.

How do you come up with the ideas for your columns? 

The general flow of news provides lots of ideas for spinoff features, further digging and commentary. Countless contacts accumulated over all these decades keep me supplied with possibilities and in touch with pursuits, people and causes that otherwise would be ignored or not given justice. My reading beyond the news, from history to poetry, often inspires themes and style turns.

Over the years, have you received regular comments from readers, both positive and negative, on your work? 

Many, but rarely a deluge on any single story. Gun control, religion, President Obama, marriage equality and Bob Knight (still) can be counted on to stir response. Rarely is there not a fair distribution of positive and negative.

With all the problems seemingly besetting the profession, would you encourage young people to pursue journalism as a career? 

Absolutely. But be nimble. The technology and market trends that have us multi-tasking and risking accuracy and nuance for speed and distribution will doubtless continue to accelerate and change. The writer who wishes to tell rich, humane, politically courageous, exhaustively researched stories will find his/her New Yorkers, Salons and even room in the daily "press." But he or she will need a closet full of hats to get established as an employee. Freelancers and bloggers likewise will have to be more resourceful than ever if they're to make a living. There's always PR and advertising, and more power to them. But we know what kind of word-and-picture-maker America needs. Desperately.

Any ideas for future writing projects? 

I'm fussing with a second book of poems for breathlessly waiting publishers out there. I also pine to write some intensive magazine-type stories from some of the locales I have observed from afar as a local newsie -- Haiti, Cameroon, the Middle East, etc. I am weighing the notion of teaching for a semester or so in a foreign country and writing about the experience, the place, the people.


7 comments:

  1. En el campo.

    En la luz
    del campo
    adorado
    siento una
    hoja pasar
    dulcemente
    en el llanto
    del sol.

    Francesco Sinibaldi

    ReplyDelete
  2. Le pas du sonnet.

    Le ciel limpide
    est comme
    la chanson
    qui décrit
    la lumière
    d'un oiseau
    solitaire.

    Francesco Sinibaldi

    ReplyDelete
  3. In a fine time.

    In a limpid
    perception the
    first intuition
    appears like
    a white shade
    near an intense
    idea.

    Francesco Sinibaldi

    ReplyDelete
  4. In the torpor.

    Sweet
    serenades
    and the light
    of a luminous
    darkness when
    a fine bird
    is singing.....

    Francesco Sinibaldi

    ReplyDelete
  5. Desire.

    Calling a
    pleasure when
    the night fades
    away and a
    fine bird
    returns....

    Francesco Sinibaldi

    ReplyDelete
  6. Soft serenade.

    In the dim
    light of a
    beautiful
    singing the
    primary care
    appears like
    a note in
    the breath
    of a feeling.

    Francesco Sinibaldi

    ReplyDelete

  7. In a luminous song...

    There's the
    light of a
    fine day in
    a luminous
    song, there's
    a beautiful
    sadness and
    a tender desire.

    Francesco Sinibaldi

    Una roca en el arroyo.

    Cuando el sol
    desciende en
    el sendero una
    candida luz
    ilumina el llanto
    de una rima
    gozosa.

    Francesco Sinibaldi

    Un son mystérieux.

    Quand la
    luminosité du
    jour rappelle
    la jeunesse le
    tendre oiseau
    revient en
    silence dans
    l'aube d'une
    poésie.

    Francesco Sinibaldi

    ReplyDelete