Potential for Permanence: An Interview with Erin Rose Belair
By Sarah Doan

Sarah Doan:Thank you for agreeing to take part in this interview! First, I’d like to hear about your start asa writer. When did you first realize you wanted to become a writer? What drew you to writing?
Erin Rose Belair:I started writing in high school, probably for the same reasons I write now: to makesense of the world and understand who I am at the current. I wrote poetry in high school, and I had anincredible teacher who encouraged me and introduced the idea that I could be a writer. She allowed me,my senior year, to submit a book of poetry for a self-designed course credit and I won an award for it. Iwas also listening to a lot of Dessa at the time. She is a spoken word artist, writer, and MC fromMinneapolis where I grew up. I remember distinctly seeing her perform and understanding for the firsttime how multi-dimensional I could be as a woman. She was beautiful and intelligent, and her words cutright through. She was a massive inspiration in shaping my concept of who I wanted to be.
What drew me to it? Perhaps the potential for permanence. I’ve been preoccupied my whole life withnostalgia and times gone by. Photography was one of my first loves for the same reason. I’ve always feltthe need to create and capture the now and save it for later.
SD:According to your, fiction is not the only form of writing you engage in.You also write travel essays based on the places in which you end up on your adventures, and youcomplete copywriting tasks for various brands. How do you think your experience as a creative writerplays into your skills as both a travel writer and a copywriter? What skills related to creative writing doyou feel have been most beneficial in your professional writing career?
ERB:I have never prescribed much to any one genre. I think all the work feeds the same beast. Travelwriting makes me a better fiction writer. Fiction writing makes me a better copywriter. The more youwrite, the better you get: and I was lucky to find a way to both work on my fiction and make a livingwhile remaining in my writer brain. I also teach writing workshops and am super blessed tospend my life interacting with writers on the daily.
I do think voice is the strongest skill that relates to all of the work. Finding the right voice is key, and Ido think it’s a strong suit of mine that comes particularly from fiction writing and creating characters.
SD:Out of curiosity, what kind of writing do you enjoy the most out of the genres you participate in? Outof those, do you feel there’s one that suits you the best? Or do you enjoy all of them equally?
ERB:My fiction is my life’s work. This is what I would like to do more than anything and what Iwill never give up. Copywriting is more of a trade that fuels my adventures, and travel writing is the product ofme digesting and experiencing the world. I love nonfiction and have fallen deeply for the lyrical essay inthe past few years. I have an essay collection coming out this year and if I had to guess, I might be best in thisregard. But, fiction is my one true love.
SD:Now, I’d like to ask you about your piece in the spring 2022Southern Indiana Review, “Just Details.”What inspired this short story? Was there a certain moment or experience in your life related to the story’scontent that inspired you, or did the concept just pop up?
ERB:Both. I very much write short stories in alet’s see where this takes uskind of mood. I never plan outa story, and yet, they are nearly always germinated from something I cannot seem to let go of. I had theopening line of this story, “In June the boxelder bugs get stuck between the window panes…” in mynotes for years (no joke, like six years), knowing it was the start of a story. I was at a house party in Utahand in between the window panes were box elder bugs, and it was June. I don’t know if they diedthere, but in my head they sure did.
There is also the scene later with the robbery, and all of that is near true. I witnessed a robbery as a childthat happened much like this, and I borrowed the details for this story. All of that really happened,everything from the bike helmet to the jeep at the golf course.
SD:In “Just Details,” although the main character’s husband, grandmother, and grandmother’s caretakerare given names, the main character herself is not, nor are any of the other people she meets in town. Howdo you think this anonymity, combined with the utilized first-person point of view, emphasizes the maincharacter’s desire to free herself from the boredom of her life before her grandmother’s death?
ERB:You know, I’ve done this before and I don’t know why. I wish I had a smart answer, but it’s just athing I do. I rarely name immediate characters, and yet people on the periphery get names, perhapsbecause they don’t get as much detail or dialogue and we have to identify them in some quick way. Themore immediate characters get mannerisms and other identifiers that feel truer to life, and names feel likean afterthought. Names don’t tell you much about a person.
SD:The story begins with the mention of boxelder bugs living (and dying) in the window panes of themain character’s grandmother’s house. Although boxelder bugs can have life spans up to one year old inreal life, they always (in the story) end up dying in the window panes after becoming stuck. Do you feelthe main character finds herself relating to the boxelder bugs, even though their ultimate fate contrastswith the freedom she feels while choosing to remain in her grandmother’s house? If so, how? If not, whydo you think their presence stands out to her so much?
ERB:You know the bugs came first in this story, so I am sure on some subconscious level that imagery iswhat created the main character and her situation for me, but I assure you it was not a conscious choice.Like I mentioned earlier, this line about the bugs was rattling around for some time and when I finallywrote the story, it was a question of who sees these bugs and then what kind of state someone is in wherethese dead and dying bugs would be noticed and have an impact on them. She is living in a very insulatedmoment in her life; she doesn’t have much around her. Things are complicated and yet also incrediblysimple at the same time for her. If I were analyzing my own story, I’d say yes, she relates to them, but inthe end chooses a different fate. The trapped space in her life is not the house, like the bugs, but rather herold life; perhaps she sees herself in her old life through those same window panes. But again, this is all inhindsight. I didn’t write the story thinking that.
SD:In the big picture, what aspects of “Just Details” do you feel reflect your style or approach as awriter? It is often the case that writers gravitate toward some of the same general topics and images whencreating a work, whether they are aware of it or not. What parts of “Just Details” do you feel arerepresentative of your authorial “fingerprint”?
ERB:I went back and looked at my stories to answer this question and it was really fun. So I’d say yes, itfeels like a verymestory: young woman at a crossroads. I’m really interested in those moments in life inwhich we take a new path because they often are not grand moments at all. We make huge life alteringchoices on totally innocuous days and this is where a lot of my stories take place.
Also, the food in this story. The writing about it and the presence of it is something that has become moreand more present in my writing, and I wanted to highlight that here and allow it to actually becomeessential to the narrative. I would be curious what someone else who has read my work would say, andwhat part of this story has my fingerprint.
SD:Lastly, I’d like to briefly ask you about your goals as a creative writer. Writing is often done not onlyfor oneself, but also for one’s audience. What do you hope your audience takes away from your writing,either in the case of “Just Details” or in general?
ERB:My goal for writing remains the same as it always has been and always will be: to never stop. Ihope, regardless of the outcome, I spend my life writing. This to me is the hallmark of a writer. I ambeyond grateful to have any audience at all, and I hope someone who reads my work might recognizethemselves in it or take some granule of truth that helps them process their own life. I hope someone isentertained by my stories and gets lost for a moment. I hope other writers feel inspired by a character or aturn of phrase. And I hope all of my stories outlive me.
received her MFA at Boise State University, where she wrote her first collection of short stories,Vinegar. Stories from this collection have won awards and been published withGlimmer Train, Narrative, Greensboro Review, Juked, and more. She just finished her first novel,The Only Road Home. Belair lives and writes in Laguna Beach, California.