Staff Spotlight

Kit Ball

What do you write?

 

Popular fiction, more leaning towards horror and dark fantasy

 

 

Is there an author or artist who has most pro­found­ly influ­enced your work?

 

I’ve always loved Ray Brad­bury, lately I’ve been more influ­enced by Sayaka Murata and Carmen Maria Machado

 

 

Why did you choose Stonecoast for your MFA?

 

I’m orig­i­nal­ly from Maine and there was some­thing really cozy about coming back to work on my writing, since it has always been largely influ­enced by growing up in the middle of the ter­ri­fy­ing woods.

 

 

What is your favorite Stonecoast memory?

 

Prob­a­bly trivia game night, since it falls in the middle of the res­i­den­cy week when most of us are half exhaust­ed and don’t get a single ques­tion correct. I enjoy Justin’s dis­ap­point­ment in us.

 

 

What do you hope to accom­plish in the future?

 

I hope to one day teach writing so I can have a captive audi­ence to my rants about nar­ra­tive devices.

 

 

If you could have written one book, story, or poem that already exists, which would you choose?

 

I will always have a very special place in my heart for Some­thing Wicked This Way Comes by Ray Bradbury.

 

Excerpt from “Incit­ing Inci­dent” by Kit Ball

 

Denton calls it an “incit­ing incident.”

I think he does that because he knows it pisses me off. The way the words sounds in his mouth, like someone else’s ghost is speak­ing through his grey tongue, the way I know he must have picked it up from some­where, dusted it off, and brought it home.

Denton claims the incit­ing inci­dent is where it all started. The day we (Denton, me, the other lowlifes like us that are passed out at the park) decided to give up. He claims that some­thing hap­pened to us, some trauma, some melt­down, that was the snap. And there was no going back from a snap, he says.

I’m not sure I believe him, but it has become a pet project for him to dig the incit­ing inci­dent out of me. If I remem­bered one, I might even tell him. just to get him off my back. But nothing comes to mind. You could blame a lot of big things, dooms­day big, and clouds hanging over­head, but gen­uine­ly I don’t see any­thing as an inci­dent. I remem­ber it was very slow and com­fort­ing. I remem­ber it like downy com­forters laying over my head, grand­moth­er’s quilt, the sound of the adults in the other room talking.

And then there’s the scrap­ing of chairs.

If there was an incit­ing inci­dent, it came a lot later.

© 2024 Stonecoast Review. Indi­vid­ual copy­rights held by contributors.

The Stonecoast Review is the lit­er­ary journal of the Stonecoast MFA at the Uni­ver­si­ty of South­ern Maine.

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