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Spring 2002
READING AND WRITING OPEN THE UNIVERSE TO AUTHOR SARAH ZETTEL '88 Adventurer in print By Kurt Anthony Krug
Sometimes, the interactions have led to "violence and misunderstandings, to long, old feuds that we are still very much dealing with to this day," Zettel says. And sometimes the different groups wind up getting along quite well. But at the crux of such interactions are the questions that most interest Zettel: "How do we see each other as human beings?" and, "What is human?" Her debut novel, Reclamation (1996, Aspect Books), explores that philosophical terrain. Retaining the core of humanity Zettel grew up in Buffalo, New York, and Trenton, Michigan. She learned to read out of The Wizard of Oz and has been writing since the fourth grade. "Ancestor-wise, I'm mostly Scottish and German," she says, adding that zettel means notepaper in German and therefore she may have been destined to be a writer. "On my mother's side my ancestors were cattle thieves, and on my father's they were messengers for German kings." 'Reading was the only adventure I had' At Michigan, she didn't take any of the science fiction courses, "because I'd already read so much of it, but I did take every writing course I could, including advertising and television writing, since I knew I wanted to make my living writing." She took just one creative writing course, however. "It opened my eyes to some language and ideas I hadn't considered before, but those courses are geared toward 'high' literature creation, and writing sci-fi is discouraged."
Playwrighting was her favorite course. "It was a senior level class, but you got in on a professorial interview," she recalls. "So, brash little freshman that I was, I walked in with my three-ring binder of things I had already written, which included scraps of plays, said I was a freshman, but look how much I had done, and I got in. I took the course three times for credit. That class taught me more about dialogue and visualizing scenes than any other. I would have been a playwright if my nerve had stretched that far."
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