I'm so excited to be interviewing Kel Schmutz, who joins us again as a runner-up in the WOW! Spring 2024 Flash Fiction Contest. Before we get to our interview, make sure you read her story, A Charmed Life, then come on back.
But first, here's more about Kel:
Kel Schmutz is a novelist and short story author of YA fantasy, horror, and romance. Her favorite types of characters are the ones who are unashamedly themselves, and her favorite types of stories are the tough ones that still find hope. When she is not writing, she enjoys reading webtoons, watching K-dramas, playing board games, pontificating on why Frozen 1 had the wrong ending, and making costumes. She lives in Clemson, SC with her family. Find her on Instagram @kel_schmutz.
-- Interview by Nicole Pyles
WOW: First of all, congrats on winning runner up! I love that you write characters who are unashamedly themselves. How do your characters come to you to write them?
Kel: First of all, thank you for saying that! I get sad when I come across characters who’ve been watered down so that readers will like them. Real people are sometimes despicable, and sometimes loveable. I think good characters are the same.
The glimpse we get of Andi tells us she’s privileged, headstrong, and also brave and thirsty for life. Writing her into A Charmed Life was an interesting experience, because it broke all of my rules. Usually, characters come to me first and the plot follows after. With A Charmed Life, I had an idea of what I wanted to happen, and Andi’s personality kind of wrote itself in. Discovery–writing a character has never happened to me before!
WOW: What an interesting revealing! I love that your character revealed herself as you wrote. What was your revision process like for this short story?
Kel: The thing I love about short stories is the word count limit. I am an over-writer, and my stories always end up stronger when forced to pare them down. Most of my revision had to do with making the story’s cadence attractive, and with squeaking inside that word count.
WOW: I am an over-writer too and have noticed my stories vastly improve with me cutting word count! For those who are nervous about sending their fiction out into the world, what would you tell them?
Kel: The beautiful thing about storytelling is that it changes the teller. Writing is an act of courage. So is sharing what you wrote. If all you get out of sending your story into the world is a “you” that’s a little braver, a little stronger, isn’t that still worth doing?
WOW: I whole-heartedly agree! What are you working on now that you can tell us about?
Kel: I’m currently working on a dark YA fantasy about a tenacious girl on a ragtag team of monster hunters, who starts to realize over the course of their hunt that she’s turning into one of the monsters herself. It’s about community and hope and the darkness inside each of us, and you can follow its progress (and mine) on Instagram @kel.schmutz
WOW: I can't wait to read this book when it comes out! What lasting thoughts do you want to leave with our readers about writing?
Kel: The other day, my introspective ten-year-old told me he’d been wondering about the point of life. I told him he was very smart (he is), and that his question was one all people, eventually, have to answer for themselves. (The conversation didn’t end there, in case anyone’s wondering. And by the way, if you’re feeling like this, a very good thing to do is to drink a cup of water outside and then call someone you love).
Why that anecdote? Because if someone’s reading this, I’m guessing they’re probably a writer themselves. Maybe they (like me) sometimes wonder if all the labor poured into their stories even matters. What, after all, is the point?
When I get in my feels like that, I first go touch some grass. Then, I remind myself of this: that storytelling, like life, is the act of pulling meaning out of chaos, of creating something transformative and wondrous out of a million smaller, mundane pieces. How important are our stories? They’re as trivial and as essential as life itself.
WOW: What a beautiful thought! Thank you so much for sharing. I hope the best for you and your writing!
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