F&M Stories
Want to Be a Writer? Hausman Speaker Shares Surprising Advice
Writing Rule No. 1: You need the right jacket.
That is, at least, according to Julie Otsuka, Ƶ & Marshall College's 2022-23 Hausman lecturer.
On Sept. 13, the novelist and short story writer shared her unofficial rules of writing with eager students at the Writers House. That evening, she delivered a lecture at the Barshinger Center for Musical Arts.
Established through an endowment by Richard Hausman '50, P'85 and Edna Hausman P'85, the Hausman Lecture has brought prominent writers to campus for lectures, readings and workshops for the past 40 years.
"That suede jacket — the 1980s equivalent of the beret of the 1950s — was aspirational. It signified something slightly out of my imaginative reach: Novelist," said Otsuka, who at the time was an aspiring painter.
The jacket, by the way, was a gift from Kabi Hartman, senior teaching professor of English at F&M, while the two friends were living in West Berlin.
Twenty years ago, Otsuka visited F&M for the College's first Emerging Writers Festival.
"Thank you to F&M for taking a gamble on me," she said. "I had no idea where my career would go professionally as a writer."
Now the author of three novels, Otsuka is the recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship and an Arts and Letters Award in Literature from the American Academy of Arts and Letters.
Her first two books, "When the Emperor Was Divine" and "The Buddha in the Attic," focus on the experience of Japanese-Americans in the 1900s.
Otsuka's latest novel, "The Swimmers," is a departure from serious fiction, "but the closest to my natural voice," she said. Otsuka read a passage of the work at her evening lecture.
The style deviation from her last two novels was something Otsuka discovered, in fact, through her own rules of writing.
Writing Rule No. 23: It's okay to break the rules.
"As long as you do it with style and originality, you can break any rule you want," she said.
Related Articles
December 5, 2024
Student Research Explores Pennsylvania History
Undergraduate research and community-based learning are key components of Reckoning With Lancaster, a curricular project at F&M supported by a Humanities for All Time Grant from The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation. Students Jessica Kinker ’26 and Hallie Hushion ’25 had a chance to experience both this summer while researching the Carlisle Indian Industrial School.
October 30, 2024
Jake Lamb ’25: F&M Transfer ‘One of the Best Decisions I’ve Ever Made’
“Becoming a Diplomat has changed me for the better,” said Jake Lamb ‘25. Learn about his experience transferring to F&M and meet other students who made the switch.
September 18, 2024
Junior Finds Culture & Community Through Lancaster Internship
When she transferred to F&M, Teagan Durkin ’26 set a goal to become further immersed in LGBTQIA+ culture and community. This summer, she interned with Lancaster Pride and helped plan a record-breaking festival. We talked to her about her summer responsibilities and how they added value to her overall F&M experience.