Benjamin Alire Sáenz received the American Book Award in 1992 for his first book of poems, Calendar of Dust. His many other awards include a Southwest Book Award, the Paterson Prize, and the Americas Book Award, and his collection of short stories set along the Texas-Mexico border, Everything Begins and Ends at the Kentucky Club, won the 2013 PEN/Faulkner Award for Fiction. His most recent poetry collection is The Book of What Remains. Sáenz is the chair of the creative writing department at the University of Texas at El Paso.

By Hand

Fiction and Poetry in Manuscript

by Benjamin Alire Sáenz

William Styron once remarked that he wrote by hand because his mind didn’t move faster than his hand. Writing is physical. Writing that embodies characters, that lyrically inflects to express emotions and states of being, that offers images and sensations, that rhythmically creates time, that quickens the heart and mind of the reader, requires the focused presence of the whole person who puts the words on the page. The acceleration of modernity, from the typewriter to the word processor and now to digital media, potentially weakens the link between the body and soul of literature. So, as a visual reminder that handwriting has an eloquence of its own, from time to time we are presenting handwritten drafts and typed pages revised by hand by some of our authors.

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