Literary Hub

Hannah Tinti on Learning to Shoot a Gun for Literature

At the 2017 Bay Area Book Festival, Literary Hub went backstage to interview authors and panelists on a wide range of topics: the personal, the professional, and the political. In the below video, Hannah Tinti, who visited the festival for a panel with Dani Shapiro called “My Literary Friend,” discusses the lack of empathy plaguing contemporary culture, and talks about learning how to shoot a gun for The Twelve Lives of Samuel Hawley—but perhaps more importantly, finding common ground with some of the people one finds themselves spending time with when learning how to shoot a gun.

Hannah Tinti: “The thing that seems to be lacking these days is the ability to empathize and see other people’s points of view. People get very righteous and tunnel-vision, rather than trying to actually understand and see the other side. I feel like artists of all kinds, and writers in particular, can try to find ways to get readers to understand those other points of view, no matter how difficult they are.”

Originally published in Literary Hub.

More from Literary Hub

Literary Hub4 min read
Poet Sister Artist Comrade: In Celebration of Thulani Davis
Thulani Davis has been my poet sister artist comrade for nearly 50 years. We met in San Francisco one night in either 1971 or 1972—young poets with flash and sass, opinionated and full of ourselves. We were reading at the Western Addition Cultural Ce
Literary Hub8 min read
On Cairns, Hoodoos, and Monoliths: What Happens in the Desert Shouldn’t Always Stay in the Desert
You cannot walk straight through the Utah desert. “Start across the country in southeastern Utah almost anywhere and you are confronted by a chasm too steep and too deep to climb down through, and just too wide to jump,” Wallace Stegner wrote in Morm
Literary Hub9 min read
On Bourbon, Books, and Writing Your Way Out of Small-Town America
For years I drove back and forth between Mississippi and Kentucky to spend time with the bourbon guru Julian Van Winkle III, sometimes for a day or two, sometimes just for a dinner. We talked about our families and about my business and his business

Related Books & Audiobooks