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I Love This Book I Hate to Love

by Laurel Snyder

I never meant to edit an anthology. Not really. Why would I? An anthologist is someone who devotes their energies to other people’s work. An anthology is hard labor. An anthology requires serious editing. It begs that you maneuver fragile egos. An anthology produces community, but almost never major awards.

So how did I come to edit Half/Life: Jew-ish Tales from Interfaith Homes? I got lucky.

I was sitting at the right table at a national writers’ conference. I was chatting with a delightful man, who turned out to be a delightful editor. I was ranting about how there is no literature for this strange hybrid-Jewish community I feel myself to be a part of. I declared that there should be an anthology of such work. I emphatically proposed that there is great need for such work.

And he said, “When your agent can’t sell it to anyone else, you come talk to me!” So I did.

Two years later, I’m intensely glad I wandered away from my own poetry and off down this strange path, but I won’t lie—I’ve found myself deeply angry at Half/Life, resentful of the labor it has meant. I didn’t write anything else for those years. I had to forget about my own thoughts, the images that fill my own brain. I had to focus on other people.

Almost immediately after I signed the contract, my life began to be about my contributors and their complicated, difficult stories. I spent late night talking people down from pulling their essays because they were “too personal.”

Once the book was bound, my life began to be about my readers, and the choices they were (and are still) struggling to make. I began to get emails from strangers, from all over the world. I spent hours just a few weeks ago with a grown man in tears, desperately afraid to talk about his faith with his fiancée.

Quickly, Half/Life became a tool for advocacy within the Jewish world, and so for a full year I’ve been an advocate, touring and talking and meeting with synagogues and JCCs. I’ve joined boards and spoken to educators. I’ve held hands and given interviews. I’ve become some kind of (completely unequipped) “relationship expert,” and a “religion writer,” whatever that means.

But I don’t just resent the loss of my time and focus—I’m also resentful of the success Half/Life has been. Because it isn’t really mine. Of course, when the book offends someone it’s mine. It was my idea, and that’s my name on the cover. But when I’m on TV, or the radio, when I’m asked to speak for “my community”, that’s not me up there. That’s not Laurel Snyder the writer. That’s me standing in for my contributors. Whenever Half/Life touches someone, changes someone’s life, I have to remember that it’s not my words that touched them. Those words, stories, memories—they belong to my contributors. I’m just the conduit, the face, the secretary.

Which is wonderful, but let’s face it—a writer is a special kind of egomaniac. I don’t write to advocate for others. I write because I think that I have something worthwhile to say. And with this book, I’ve had to put myself on the back burner.

Which is, in the end, my reward.

How can I explain this to you? How can I adequately describe the experience of being hugely excited at selling my first book, and then hugely disappointed when I realized that the book wasn’t really mine? That it belonged to others? How can I possibly tell you about becoming my own advocate, and then helping to build a community of people like me?

It’s been a great and difficult gift.

Half/Life taught me to be a better person. It helped to teach me my place in the world. It created that place. I got to be a part of something bigger. I got to feel proud and happy and accomplished, without the shame that sometimes accompanies success. The shame of thinking you’re hot shit, of believing the hype.

This book wasn’t mine, but it gave me a lesson in both success and humility. I got to promote and support and claim this project unencumbered by the weight of my own ego. Which is the blessing of an anthology, as well as the curse. I haven’t had to fake humility, hide my joy. It’s much easier to say “my brilliant contributors” than “my brilliant self” without feeling like a total shmuck.

Now, having learned that, will I take on another anthology? Not for a long long time. I’m still an egomaniac after all.



Laurel Snyder is a poet, nonfictionist and children's book writer. She is the editor of Half / Life and Daphne and Jim, A choose-your-own adventure biography in verse. Her blog is jewishyirishy.com.



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