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Interview: Tania Hershman

The literary virtues of keeping it short

November 6, 2008 10:32
Tania Hershman: “A short story is a slap in the face, a shot of something”

ByAnne Joseph, Anne Joseph

2 min read

A good short story is "like a slap in the face and you reel from it", says Tania Hershman. A former science journalist, whose short stories have been published in literary journals and broadcast on Radio 4, Hershman gave up journalism to write fiction full time in 2007. It seems to have been a good decision: over a 24-hour period in August, she picked up no less than three writing awards.

Her first anthology, The White Road and Other Stories, is made up of stories inspired by articles from the New Scientist magazine. "Science to me is endlessly fascinating" she says. "Scientists ask themselves ‘what if?' This is the same question fiction writers ask."

The fact that there are things you can do with a story that you can't with a novel, says Hershman, "is part of their magic. A novel is a slow release; a short story is a shot of something." Both her science background and her journalism, she says, have taught her that every word is important. Being precise was deeply instilled in me - "I'm a stickler for punctuation and grammar."

Though Hershman's appetite for short-story writing has intensified since her move from London to Jerusalem in 1994, few of her stories are Israel-based. "It's hard to write about the place you're in - and I have heard that some writers need to leave Jerusalem before they can write about it. I don't find my life interesting enough. Although I am aware that there may be elements about me buried in my stories, I don't want to look for them. I'm wary of over-analysing."