| 
        
         Reading 
            and Writing
        
        | 
       
      
       | 
         
         
          
           
            Michael
           
          
          
           :
          
          When I was at your place six or seven years ago, you showed me a 
              device that helped you read. It was a small video camera that you 
              could lay on top of a printed page, and the words would show up 
              much bigger on your computer screen. When I was there more recently, 
              your computer was talking to you out loud, reading the text of an 
              article you were writingalbeit in a monotonous, staccato voice. 
              I assume the shift in technologies reflects both your changing needs 
              and the evolving state of the art of reading aids.
         
         
        | 
       
      
       | 
         
         
          
           
            Joel
           
          
          
           :
          
          The device you remember was a closed circuit TV reading system (CCTV). 
              Some CCTV's use your computer's screen for display, but most have 
              their own monitors, mounted above a movable reading table on which 
              the camera lens is focused. This is the type I have now. I use it 
              mostly for examining bills, reading snail mail, and CD liner notes. 
              At first, I used a CCTV to read entire books, but now the glare 
              (unnoticeable to normal eyes) and the extreme magnification needed 
              to keep print from looking as if it's been chewed up by insects 
              makes this impossible.
         
         
        
         
          The 
              talking computer trick is done with a text-to-speech system, a screen 
              reader. Mine is called Jaws for Windows, from the Henter-Joyce Company. 
              Jaws lets me perform all computer tasks, including e-mail and Web 
              surfing. The technology emerged in the days of the text-based DOS 
              operating system. Later, developers had to scramble to adapt the 
              concept to the graphical interface of a Windows or MAC display, 
              find menu alternatives to the icons and keyboard equivalents to 
              mouse commands. Despite the robot-like synthesized voice and, more 
              importantly, the profound adjustments required for reading and especially 
              for writing by ear, I love this thing, and can't imagine life without 
              it.
         
         
        | 
       
      
       | 
         
         
          
           
            Michael
           
          
          
           :
          
          Can you say a bit about your difficulties adjusting to the screen 
              reader? I'm so accustomed to hearing my own little inner voice when 
              I read; I get impatient even with a good actor reading, say, a short 
              story on the radio. It must be tough hearing that machine voice 
              droning away at you for long stretches.
         
         
        | 
       
      
       | 
         
         
          
           
            Joel
           
          
          
           :
          
          I've accustomed myself to the synthetic voice, despite the undeniable 
              annoyance. Still, listening to its unreal, grating diction and timbre 
              all day is stressful and ultimately exhausting. At the philosophical 
              level, I'm okay with it. After all, I need it. But listening to 
              the voice hour after hour simply wears me down. I take a lot of 
              breaks to get away from it, in the midst of working. Play guitar. 
              Cook a pot of black beans for lunch. Fold laundry. Listen to NPR 
              or talking books. The real problem, ultimately, is the way working 
              by ear distorts the mental processes of reading and writing.
         
         
        | 
       
      
       | 
         
         
        
         
          
           Michael
          
          :
         
         
          So it's not just the voice itself, but the fact of working that 
              way, without using your eyes to scan the words on the page, that 
              makes reading and writing difficult?
         
         
        | 
       
      
       | 
        
         
          
           Joel
          
         
         
          :
         
         Like a child, I appreciate being read to, even by a computer with 
            a voice like your worst dystopian nightmare. The problem is that I 
            can't scan backward and forward visually to check details, to maintain 
            a sense of context, and to enjoy optimal recall when that text, vocalized, 
            is in the air and gone, to paraphrase Eric Dolphy's remark on the 
            ephemerality of music. Writing is really a challenge. Monitoring the 
            flow of thought, the coherent use of imagery, the rhythm and melody 
            of the language. I used to observe as I typed, correcting course instantaneously, 
            doubling-back to tweak something and then plunging forward again. 
            And knowing that even the most sprawling first draft could always 
            be inspected later, visually, to see the sculpture leap out from within 
            the superfluous stone. Now I have to plan meticulously, holding a 
            kind of sketch in my mind, filling it in as I go, and committing each 
            particle of thought and language to memory.
        
        | 
       
      
       | 
         
         
          
           
            Michael
           
          
          
           :
          
          In what ways do you think this new method of working affects the 
              finished product, the final draft of a piece of writing?
         
         
        
         
        | 
       
      
       | 
        
         
          
           Joel
          
         
         
          :
         
         Writing without being able to see the words I type can yield unexpectedly 
            good results or produce horribly dull, pointless prose. At best, I 
            may wind up with an essay or story in which every word, image, and 
            thought seems inevitable, and the overall effect coherent and convincing, 
            even moving. But all too often, what I get is something very stiff, 
            and a little bit off, like someone who shows up at a rave in an ill-fitting 
            tuxedo. At which point, regardless of how much concentration and time 
            I've already expended, I've achieved nothing more than a first draft.
        
        | 
       
      
       | 
        
         
          
           Michael
          
         
         
          :
         
         In the past couple years you've written some longish articles, and 
            I know you've recently been working on some fiction. Have you ever 
            gotten to a point in a piece of writing ("by ear") where you start 
            to get lost because you can't hold enough of it in memory?
        
        | 
       
      
       | 
        
         
          
           Joel
          
         
         
          :
         
         My memory is challenged at every stage of composition. I hold what 
            Ive written in my mind as I go, continually back-tracking to have 
            the computer recite the last bit to me again, or everything from the 
            beginning. Over and over. Only by constant review can I know if my 
            words make sense at all, let alone whether they attain anything beyond 
            that. Then I push forward a little more, hoping fervently not to overshoot 
            the limits of retention and create too unwieldy a mess to revise. 
            I wish my best thoughts came to me in declarative journalistic sentences 
            and orderly, utilitarian paragraphs, or even in the terse staccato 
            outbursts of David Mamet's dialogue, and so were easier to manage. 
            But they mostly don't. It¹s a very labor-intensive process, as they 
            say.
        
        | 
       
      
       | 
        
         
          
           Michael
          
         
         
          :
         
         On the other hand (to put a Polyanna spin on it), what you do now 
            is closer to oral tradition, and (for instance) to Homer, who was 
            blind. I know the process is tremendously difficult, but have you 
            occasionally discovered some real advantage to relying so heavily 
            on your ear and memory?
        
        | 
       
      
       | 
        
         
          
           Joel
          
         
         
          :
         
         Composing by ear and memory can yield prose as smooth, hard, and inevitable 
            in every detail as a well-cut diamond. But the cost in stress is high. 
            Using that method to write an essay of a thousand or so words, not 
            to mention a short story five or six times longer, is tedious and 
            frustrating. First drafts are especially difficult, because the freer 
            I've been in letting those initial thoughts flow, the harder it is 
            to discover, by repeated listenings, what it was I really meant to 
            say, and how I should have said it. And what I write, unlike ancient 
            legends, archaic poetry, or a Stevie Wonder song, follows no conventionalized 
            template of stanzas, rhythm, rhyme, and repetition that would prevent 
            me from getting lost or tripping over the tangled thread of my own 
            ideas. But when it works, I'm really proud of what I've accomplished.
        
        | 
       
      
     |