Why I Write: Holly M. Wendt
*
Sibiu, Romania is an old city, dating to the twelfth century,
and though it is in Transylvania—famous for Bram Stoker’s undead Dracula and
Vlad the Impaler—it is a city very much alive. Its heart comprises three
medieval market squares clustered together, restored and grand: Piața Mare, Piața Mică, and Piața Huet, or Big Square,
Little Square, and Huet Square. If you have seen a photo of Sibiu, chances are
it is of Piața Mare,
where the eye-like windows of the burgher houses watch over the fountain and
pigeons, the Baroque Brukenthal Museum and opulent tourism office. However, if
you walk down into the lower city that had lain outside of Sibiu’s medieval
walls, into the tightly packed buildings and winding cobbled streets far enough
to get lost, the thing to search for is the spire of the Evangelical Cathedral
of Saint Mary, seated in Huet Square. The cathedral’s 240-foot spire breaks the
skyline and peppers it with unmistakable particolored tiles, and though I’m
sure there are places where the spire isn’t visible, every time I needed to be
able to see it, there it was.
The day I stumbled onto the lower city’s farmers’ market, I
was working on getting properly lost. I was simply walking, to see what I could
see, and what I saw were passersby with blue plastic shopping bags brimming
with fennel fronds and radish tops. The day before, there was a man with a single
small, blue bag of strawberries, the plastic purpled with fresh juice, at least
three miles from this neighborhood. I’d wanted to know where the berries had
come from, but I’d been too embarrassed to try to fumble through an
interrogation about produce. I’d risk losing my way, happily. So I kept going
in the direction the people were coming from, making turns based on where I’d
seen the last blue bag, well away from any known territory. Eventually, I found
the market, and I was not disappointed. Upon leaving, though, with half a kilo
of earth-smudged, ruby-bright strawberries hanging from my wrist and a powerful
yen to eat them as soon as possible, I had to find my way back to my lodgings. Before
I bothered with a map, I tipped up my chin. There was the church spire, perched
atop the city’s high ground, the fixed center. I was an hour in walking to the
market, twenty minutes in returning.
I write because it, too, is the fixed center of my life. Writing
means never feeling lost. Perhaps it means wandering a while, perhaps it means
being caught out without the metaphorical umbrella, but writing always means, always leaves me with a feeling
of direction and purpose. I come from a family of makers, people yoked to purposeful
creation—houses, tools, food for themselves and others. I don’t know how to want
otherwise.
*
Still, if the spire had an easy clarity, the cathedral’s
interior remained a mystery. For the duration of my visit, the cathedral was
completely closed for repair and renovation. Even from the outside, though, it
was something to see: the stone walls, the stained glass, a rain-softened
gargoyle so much like a waiting dog. I want to know: was it a dog? Dogs are dredged in faith. It might have been a lynx;
its posture was cat-like, and the forested Carpathians in Romania house the
Eurasian lynx. That detail is one I
haven’t been able to look up, and the shuttered, mortar-dusted church left me
with no one to ask. One day, I will write a story, and there will be a cathedral,
and the stone will be a lynx because I have never (definitively) seen a carved lynx
perched atop a buttress and I would like to. All the photos in the world won’t
tell me everything I missed behind those doors, behind a hundred doors, the
ones left open or held closed. Writing creates a way of knowing the small,
unknowable details. In fiction, I can visit every street again, and once more
still, when both I and the place have changed, and even what is familiar will never
be the same twice.
*
Not far from the cathedral, Huet Square connects to the
Little Square via a footbridge that spans the sloping street into the lower
city. Scrolls of black ironwork and spilling geraniums make the bridge
picturesque, but its name and its lore are more memorable: it’s called the
Liar’s Bridge, and if you tell a lie while you’re standing on it, the bridge
will collapse. This is why it leads to the market squares, why business people make
deals atop it, and why lovers pledge between its rails. The legend hinges on faith
and a medieval flair for consequence, brooking no uncertainty: know and speak your
truth or face disaster.
On the bridge, I don’t think I said anything to anyone at all,
though I did have to duck out of a few sets of wedding photos being taken
there. Maybe I said pardon, scuze. If
I did, I meant it. Someone more playful or cynical might have tested the
superstition. Instead, I took a picture of two clean, empty glass jars sitting
neatly beneath it. The jars were ordinary—one sized for pickles, the other
shaped for mustard or jam—and another bit of inexplicable trivia (who left
them? why?), but I liked them there, clear and fragile, where a bridge might
fall on them or a bored child might kick them into a rolling shatter where the
street curved. The jars were all unknown, and they weren’t there the next time
I passed.
Writing is an exercise in not-knowing, in uncertainty, far
beyond content and details, uncertainties about quality, about perseverance,
about audience, about measures of success and failure, and even about what a
piece of writing is or does. Writing
is an acceptance of these uncertainties (and occasionally crushing certainties
that I wish I didn’t know).Writing is also an understanding
that the opposite will be true, too. There will be moments of startling clarity.
There will be successes, even if the rewards are small: a morning starts more
sweetly or the pillow feels softer because there were words, or I find one
sentence about which I am utterly, perfectly sure and that sentence invites
another. So I promise myself, and so I trust, and may my desk collapse if I’ve
been false.
It is that trust in the act itself that keeps me coming
back. While I am writing, I am the best version of myself, as John Gardner contends
in The Art of Fiction (79). Writing becomes
its own country, a place where I am not without trepidation, but a place where
curiosity and hope trump the fears at my heels. I write because I am always the
better for it, wherever it takes me.
# # #
Holly M. Wendt is Associate Professor
of English and Director of Creative Writing at Lebanon Valley College. Holly is
a recipient of the Robert and Charlotte Baron Fellowship for Creative and
Performing Artists from the American Antiquarian Society and a fellowship from
the Jentel Foundation. Their writing has appeared or is forthcoming in Shenandoah,
Barrelhouse, Memorious, Baseball Prospectus, Gulf Stream, Hobart, Bodies
Built for Game: The Prairie Schooner Anthology of Contemporary Sports Writing,
and elsewhere. Learn more at hollymwendt.com or @hmwendt.