
I was nervous to introduce myself to Dennis Cooper when I spotted him in the audience of a Kevin Killian reading at After 8 Books in Paris in 2017, but I shouldnāt have been. He had been an early supporter of my literary magazine turned small press, Shabby Doll House, and, ridiculously, I felt at the time, seemed just as excited to meet me as I was to meet him. Dennis Cooper, the literary legend and filmmaker, editor of Little Caesar, author of The Sluts, the George Miles Cycle and many other booksāthe newest a collection of short fiction titled Flunker (Amphetamine Sulphate, 2024)āturned out to be just as supportive in person as he is on his incomparable, taste-making blog, through which he has celebrated the work of countless contemporary writers and artists for over two decades. That night, he asked me what I was doing in France and when I told him that I live here too, he said, āWe should hang out!ā And so thatās what weāve done in the years since, sharing a penchant for writing and editing books and magazines that manifest communities around them. āItās so easy and so natural to support people and give them strength,ā he told me when we talked on Zoom this spring. And I know, first hand, he means it. When I found out Flunker, a collection of six stories, and his first book following the masterpiece I Wished (Soho Press, 2021) would be published by an indie press, I knew we had so much to talk about.
āāā
LUCY K. SHAW: The first thing I wanted to say was that Iām excited about your book. I just read it and loved it.
DENNIS COOPER: Thank you.
SHAW: Every time Iāve seen you over the last couple of years, weāve been talking about your film. And then suddenly, I saw you last month and you go, āOh yeah, Iām going to do a book this year.ā And now the bookās coming out soon. So what happened? And when did you write this?
COOPER: Yeah, the film. Well, there was a lull. I donāt want to go into all the problems that caused the lull, but I always have to be working on something. And then I was like, āOh, I have these things that I never finished. I should go see if I can finish them.ā And some of them were just standalone things, some of them were pieces of novels that I didnāt end up using in the novel, and I just thought, āI wonder if I can make these autonomous.ā Theyāre all, from the last 10, 12 years. I went through and I managed to get enough of them to make a teeny, tiny book. Itās got this transgressive thing going on in it, so I thought, āOh, maybe this is something they (Amphetamine Sulphate) would be interested in.ā And thankfully, they were.
SHAW: Why did you decide to have just six stories? That seems unusual, but I really like it.
COOPER: Thatās as many as I could finish that were any good, and the rest werenāt good enough. There were some other ones, but I was just like, āI canāt get this thing to do anything.ā And then I had to try putting them in all different orders and stuff. And then I was like, āMaybe this orderās okay.ā
SHAW: How did you find that form?
COOPER: Oh, it was just about trying to create a contrast, trying to make it so that thereās a surprise every time you get to a new one, but at the same time thereās a flow. When I was writing The Marbled Swarm, I was really interested in emo, so I was looking into these emo social sites. They had these message boards and they would all explode at each other all the time like, āIām going to kill myself. Should I kill myself? I donāt know.ā Then they would talk back and forth, and I got really excited by how they wrote, because they wrote really fast and in that crazy way. It was like, āOh, I want to see if I can do this in an authentic way.ā Because those are all extremely honest. So then I made those, but I didnāt end up using them in the book. SO I just wanted to figure out things, āWhere do I put the really extreme one?ā Iām like, āI think I better wait a little while, so I think that one should be towards the end.ā
SHAW: The book feels like it would be really great for someone whoās never read any of your work before. You see a bunch of your different styles and voices.
COOPER: Thereās nothing in there that I havenāt done before, except for some of the formal stuff. Itās not like writing a novel, where youāre hoping to blow peopleās minds. Itās just like, āOh, hereās what I do. You want some more of what I do?ā Itās like an EP, lots of B-sides gathered together. A couple of the stories were things that I didnāt use in I Wished [Cooperās last novel].
SHAW: Oh, interesting. So my friend, Sebastian Castillo, whose book Salmon I published last year, heās a very big fan of yours.
COOPER: Oh, me too. Tell him Iām the same.Ā
SHAW: Yesterday I texted him, āIām going to interview Dennis tomorrow. Do you have any questions for him?ā And literally one minute later, he sent me a voice note. So I want to play you the voice note because he had this question prepared.
COOPER: Okay.
SEBASTIAN CASTILLO: I wrote a paper about Dennis Cooperās poetry in grad school, and one of the things that I had to talk about was the fact that Dennis is most recognized as a novelist. In the 1994 Anthology of Contemporary American Poetry, his work was included, but it was removed in the 2013 anthology. Given that the novel functions as his primary genre, how does he feel about returning to the short story as a form? And has his relationship to the short form work changed throughout his career?
COOPER: Oh, wow. Iāve never written short stories. Honestly, theyāve always been fragments of things, experiments. I wrote things and I wanted them to be longer, or it was me trying something out. It was straight from poetry to novels, I didnāt really have any interim thing. I guess prose poems are like short stories. The poems were removed from the Norton Anthology because they really just werenāt that good. And also, I wasnāt the only one. David Trinidad and a bunch of other people who were actually very good poets were also removed. I think they just got a little bit more official or classical and it was like, āWe need to put real poets in here, not these weirdos.ā Thank you, Sebastian.
SHAW: Do you feel like you learned how to write fiction through writing poetry, that it taught you how to write?
COOPER: Yeah. I read a lot of fiction, but I only read avant-garde fiction or whatever, I never read normal fiction. And then movies and music, Iāve always been really like, āOh, I want to make something thatās like this song. How can you do that with just words?ā But I was concentrating a lot on poetry until the mid-ā80s. It wasnāt like I just said, āAll right, now Iām going to write fiction.ā I started expanding them and turning them into paragraphs.
SHAW: Do you feel like you learned a lot from editing other peopleās work, for books or for magazines?
COOPER: Oh, thatās interesting. Iām sure I did. I love editing. And I did Little Caesar while I was editing, and that was in the late ā70s to early ā80s. I wrote a lot of journalism for a while. I wrote for Spin and Interview Magazine, and you do a ton of editing because I donāt know how to write nonfiction and thereās a real formula to it. So you would work with the editor and they would say, āWell, if you want this to happen, hereās how you do it.ā I didnāt know any of those tricks. That was a back and forth, editing, but it made a huge difference. My books got a lot better after I started writing journalism.
SHAW: I really love your book, Smothered in Hugs: Essays, Interviews, Feedback & Obituaries. What makes that book exciting to me is that the form of all those individual pieces are all weird versions of the thing that theyāre supposed to be.
COOPER: Yeah. I did my best, but I canāt stop being weird, unfortunately.
SHAW: This is an annoying thing to ask given that youāve just written this book and youāre working on a film, but do you have a sense of what kind of writing you would want to do after this?
COOPER: Iād like to write another novel, but I have to have a really good idea and I just donāt have one. I really want all my novels to be completely, hugely, gigantically challenging to me. But at the same time, I have my area that I work in, that I need to work in. And Iāve done 10 now, so itās like, āIs there anything left?ā Iāve done all these weird things like The Marbled Swarm, so I really need to think, āOh, this is an amazing idea, no oneās ever done this before, and it really excites me.ā The thing Iām mostly interested in right now is writing the script for the new film, because it really is extremely challenging.
SHAW: You are already working on a script for another one?
COOPER: Yeah.
SHAW: Have you always wanted to make films?
COOPER: Iāve always been obsessed with films and experimental films and stuff. When I went to college, I took filmmaking classes and I just had absolutely no gift for it at all. I always wanted to make a porn film. That was my big dream. āIām going to make a porn film,ā because I had this idea that porn was the great undiscovered medium and you could make a Citizen Kane of porn if you just did it right. I wanted to make a porn film for a long, long time, and then someone said, āIf you can do it, Iāll give you the money to do it.ā And then it turned out that what I wanted to do was not sexy at all. Cattle Towards Glow, our first film, came out of that thing. But I couldnāt make a film without Zac [Farley] at all. Thereās absolutely no way I could. But Zac could make a film without me.
SHAW: You and Zac have a shared love of theme parks, which would maybe surprise some people. But also it makes total sense, right?
COOPER: Yeah.
SHAW: I love how much you take them seriously and study them, how they operate, that whole immersive experience.
COOPER: I think theyāre a real art form. I grew up in Los Angeles, I went to Disneyland from the age of two several times a year my entire life. So I got completely corrupted by Disneyland because it was just the most amazing thing Iād ever seen when I was a kid. And I just wanted to figure out like, āWhy is this so fucking great?ā If you look closely, my books have a lot of references to Disneyland. We would totally make a film about amusement parks, except that it would cost millions and millions of dollars to rent an amusement park to film in.
SHAW: I actually had a similar experience. I didnāt grow up near Disneyland, but my parents took me there every year for several years when I was a kid. They really bought into it being the āhappiest place on earth.ā If I go now and watch the fireworks, Iāll still be overcome with emotion.
COOPER: Iām with you, babe.Ā
SHAW: We should go one day.
COOPER: Absolutely. You just say the word. We should go to Asterix. Asterix is really nice.
SHAW: Iāve never been there.
COOPER: Yeah, we should go to Asterix. Itās really a nice little theme park. Itās an hour from Paris. But where we should really go is Efteling, thatās the best music park in the world. Itās in Holland. Itās the one that Disneyland was inspired by. Oh, itās such a fucking amazing place.
SHAW: Letās do it. What can I talk about now?
COOPER: We need to be careful.
SHAW: Weāve gone off-topic.Ā I guess another thing that we have in common, aside from Disneyland, is that we both put ourselves in this position where we curate projects of art and literature that build community around them. Why did you do that? Why did we do that?
COOPER: I was always driven to do that. When I was a little kid, I built a playhouse in our attic and I had the kids in the neighborhood be the acting troupe and weād act out theater pieces for our parents or whoever. And every summer, I would get my friends to help me build an amusement park in my backyard. I just always did shit like that. I really like curating, I really like editing. Youāre probably the same way. Itās really gratifying to help people, and itās so fucking easy. Itās a lot of grunt work, but itās so easy and so natural to support people and give them strength. If someone comes to me and they like my work and theyāre artists of some kind, if you just take them seriously and treat them as peers and show support for their work, it means a ton. When I was just starting to write, when someone I respected gave me any kind of feedback or talked to me about what I was doing, it was just massively confidence-building.
SHAW: Was there anyone in particular who did that for you?
COOPER: Yeah. When I was writing poetry, people liked it. Allen Ginsberg was really nice to me, but he wanted to fuck me. And when he realized he couldnāt fuck me, he stopped being nice to me. But at the time, it seemed really nice. When I was doing Little Caesar, I would write to other poets, too. It was just like, āOoh, I want to get a poem by Joe Brainard or Ted Berrigan.ā So Iād write them note and say, āHey, I do this magazine, letās make a poem.ā And then luckily, a lot of them would say, āOh, I love that magazine.ā But those are weird people, right? But outside of that world, people would just go, āAh, these are just kids doing this silly thing. This is just some little weird project. This isnāt going to get me a blurb for my novel.ā I donāt know, I donāt understand it.
SHAW: When I meet people who are 10 or 15 years younger than me, Iām like, āOh. I want to help them and be involved.ā We love doing this. We canāt stop doing it. Thereās other stuff you could do that would be more meaningful in the world, but our thing is we want to make magazines and books really badly.
COOPER: Iām not picky about who I support. If they seem smart and they really want to be a writer or a painter or a filmmaker, thatās all I care about. I think people think of it as a gamble. Like, āWell, is this person going to actually become a major figure in the arts?ā Itās like, no one would ever have thought I wouldāve become anything when I was first writing. If someone really, really wants to be an artist, then thatās it. Do it, do it, do it, do it, because you never know whatās going to happen. I think a lot of people have that attitude like, āI need to believe thereās a payoff here somehow.ā I never think about that. If you end up becoming a great writer, cool. If you decide to quit writing, cool. Iām still going to like you and think youāre interesting, because you are.
SHAW: I didnāt plan to ask this, but now it just seems like something worth bringing up. Living in France, as we both do, does that affect your inclusion in the literary scene?
COOPER: Everythingās online now, so it doesnāt really feel that different. Itās nice to have all these writers that you like or correspond with and you donāt really know them. I like that, other than the extraordinary postage costs to get some books over to here. Iām thinking about going to AWP. Thereās a couple of people who want me to be on their panels and Iāve never been. That would be a good opportunity to actually meet a lot of these people.Ā
SHAW: Where is it?
COOPER: Los Angeles. Do you go to that? Do you go to AWP?
SHAW: Iāve never been to the actual thing. I like being separate and in France, and then being like, āOkay, now Iām going to America for a couple of months and Iām doing a tour and Iām going to see everyone and then I can leave again.ā
COOPER: Yeah, absolutely.Ā
SHAW: Are you going to do events for your book?
COOPER: No, I donāt think so.
SHAW: Not even one.
COOPER: I mean, itās just a little book, and Iām here. I mean, if I go to L.A., maybe Iāll see if I can do a little reading.
SHAW: You should.
COOPER: Iām just so curious to see what happens with it. Like I said, it feels like an EP or something.
SHAW: People seem excited online.
COOPER: I hope theyāre not getting too excited, but thatās good.


