Karim Shamsi-Basha, Winner of the 2017 AWC Short Story Contest
As first prize winner of the short story contest, what inspired this story? Any particular images, sights, or sounds? Why?
“A Tale of First Love” is very autobiographical, the same thing actually happened to me. I just retold it.
Dad’s hand on my back while I laid on the bed is something I will never forget. I wrote this because I believe that human love should be honored at all stages of life.
Many fiction authors maintain the line between fiction and nonfiction is a permeable one. Is this true for you? How do you decide when a memory or essay has crossed the line from nonfiction to fiction?
For me, the line is ever so vague and blurry. I use a lot from my own life in my fiction, after all, no one knows me any better!
What short stories do you admire the most? Why? What have you learned from them?
I love Eve’s Diary by Mark Twain, to me he’s a brilliant writer. He goes past what we know and expect, without us even noticing.
Do you have any current projects we should know about? Explain.
I have a novel with agent Rena Rossner with the Deborah Harris Agency in Jerusalem, we just submitted it to publishers. it is about a fifteen-year-old Muslim boy in love with a Christian girl during the civil war in Syria. I want people to stop labeling each other and just love.
What Syrian writers do you admire and wish you could share or translate?
The Syrian writer I admire the most was my father, Kherridean Shamsi-Basha. he was a noted poet in Damascus. Unfortunately translating his work would not work. In Literature, you lose many language merits.
Learn more about Karim from his unique blog, Arab in Alabama, as well as his columns and photographs for various media outlets.