.Writers.on.Writing.
Get to know our authors, the foundation and heart of Yellow Arrow Journal, and what writing means to them through our monthly series.
Describe an early experience where you learned that language has power.
When I was in first grade, my teacher tried to shame the class into calming down by saying, “You’re all acting like a bunch of wild Indians!” I burst into tears almost instantly. It is the earliest, clearest memory of learning that words have power because of how I felt, even if the teacher never intended to insult me.
What word(s) do you find yourself using most often in your writing?
My latest project is centered around race and culture, so “Native,” “blood,” and “tribe” are all pretty high-frequency. Thematically, I write about teeth a lot, both in fiction and nonfiction; the primal qualities teeth can show are very interesting to me.
What does your inner writing voice tell you?
As a nonfiction writer, my inner voice tells me to write my truth, regardless of how others may judge me. I have written my story and the stories of my family members in how they connect to me and affect my life, and I know that I do not always look like the hero. I know I’m sometimes the coward or the villain. I know some family members would prefer I only tell half-truths, that I cover up the troubles that we have faced in our history. My inner writing voice knows that I can’t hold back. It has to be the entire truth, bare and unflinching, or it isn’t the best it can be.
Leah is a member of the Jamestown S’Klallam Tribe. Pick up a copy of RENASCENCE (Yellow Arrow Journal, Vol. VI, No. 1) today to learn more about Leah’s relationship with her tribe’s language in her creative nonfiction piece, “A Writer Who Can’t Read.” Leah recently graduated with an MFA in Creative Nonfiction from the University of New Orleans, where she was awarded the Mockbee Prize for Nonfiction two years in a row.
Connect with Leah at leahmyers.com or on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram, or below in the Comments.