The Liars' Club
author discusses worshipping art, getting sober, becoming Catholic, and writing
Lit
by Bill McGarvey
From Busted Halo,
March 22, 2010

Considering
the harrowing stories of her Texas youth — plagued by the alcohol,
drugs, violence and general mayhem she recounted in The Liars’ Club
(1995) and Cherry (2000) — it is a minor miracle that Mary Karr lived
to tell her tale. The fact that she still has more stories of tumult
and survival as an adult to write about, though, really begins to edge
into loaves and fishes territory.
In her third memoir, Lit, Karr
moves past her “drug sodden” adolescence into her young adulthood where
the joys of falling in love, getting married and becoming a mother are
overwhelmed by her debilitating alcoholism, depression and family
dysfunction. But Lit isn’t simply a catalog of grinding desperation and
addiction. Karr combines a poet’s eye for extraordinary detail and tone
— she was a Guggenheim Fellow in poetry — with an earthy honesty and
humor to create prose that is beautiful, unadorned and filled with a
survivor’s wisdom. Lit is Karr’s testimony to the actual, ongoing
miracle in her own life: her conversion from devoted cynic to devout
Catholic.
In the interview that follows, Karr discusses the
difficulties she encountered in writing about alcoholism, sobriety and
spirituality as well as her stormy relationship with a young David
Foster Wallace and some hard-won advice for spiritual seekers.
Interview