Hal Sundt on Writing About Pythons and Amusement Parks
April 15, 2020
Hillary Hempstead
Hal Sundt 鈥12, visiting assistant professor of rhetoric and composition
Photo credit: Tanya Rosen-Jones '97
Hal Sundt 鈥12, visiting assistant professor of rhetoric and composition, teaches literary journalism and academic essay writing, and his writing has appeared in publications including the New York Times Magazine, the Ringer, and the American Scholar. Sundt writes about topics as disparate as python hunting and the world of amusement parks, and his most recent essay 鈥樷樷欌 takes readers along on a journey deep into a swamp with a python hunter. Another piece detailing the was recognized on , an aggregator of top literary journalism stories.
We asked Sundt about his inspiration for writing about these topics.
Your writing covers a wide range of subject matter: pythons, orchids, amusement parks, and even Norman doors. How do you choose your topics?
My favorite book is The Orchid Thief by Susan Orlean. I picked up the book after graduate school, when I was having a crisis of interest. I used to love basketball; it used to be my life. Then, by the time I was around 25, my interest was starting to wane. I didn鈥檛 really know what I was interested in鈥攚hich is a problem when you want to be a nonfiction writer and don鈥檛 have strong interests. A professor recommended that I read this book, which I was initially skeptical about, because I don鈥檛 have a particular interest in flowers. But it鈥檚 actually about a writer who鈥檚 trying to make sense of the fact that they don鈥檛 know what their passion is.
In the book, Orlean says, 鈥淚 read lots of local newspapers and particularly the shortest articles in them, and most particularly any articles that are full of words in combinations that are arresting.鈥 What she does in her writing is look for tension鈥攕omething that doesn't quite belong. So I鈥檓 drawn to subjects that at first glance don鈥檛 seem super important but that I can find meaning in.
What made you want to write about pythons?
I took Susan Orlean鈥檚 advice and went looking through local newspapers online for 鈥渨ords in combinations that are arresting.鈥 I found a story about a woman in Northeast Ohio who had a boa constrictor that attacked her. I first tried pursuing a story about it, and at that time the story didn鈥檛 take. A few months later, I went to the swamplands to write a story about orchids, and the guide I was with mentioned pythons in the swamps, and I thought, 鈥榮nakes keep coming up.鈥 Then, what really sealed it was a meeting with Professor of Biology Mary Garvin. I had a question for her about something flower related, and Mary mentioned a python link in the conversation. I thought, OK this seems interesting and unusual. It percolated, and then I decided to pursue it.
What was it like going to the Everglades to find pythons?
It was pretty scary. I didn鈥檛 really know at first what I was getting into. It wasn鈥檛 until the morning of my flight that I thought鈥斺檞hat does someone do when they go hunting for pythons in the Everglades?鈥 I think why I write about topics like these is that it makes me a more adventurous version of myself. I鈥檓 introverted, but when I鈥檓 working on a story it gets me to talk with people whom I wouldn鈥檛 normally talk with or it takes me to new places.
What makes for a story that鈥檚 worth pursuing?
For me, a topic should have lots of different dynamics. For the story about amusement parks, there鈥檚 the history of theme parks, the designers, what it鈥檚 like to visit one鈥攖here are lots of dimensions to it. But the number one thing is, and the students in my class will know that I鈥檓 going to say this word, is that a great subject has tension. It doesn鈥檛 mean that there鈥檚 tension in a negative way, it just means that there are two things that don鈥檛 seemingly connect or make sense at first glance.
What are you working on right now?
I鈥檓 working on pitching this story about this really old plane developed for the United States Air Force, the A-10 Thunderbolt II鈥攏icknamed the 鈥淲arthog.鈥 The military has been trying to replace it for a while, but they haven鈥檛 been able to because it鈥檚 still really good at its job. I鈥檓 really interested in it as a relic. It鈥檚 nearly 50 years old and continues to be successful. I鈥檓 particularly interested in the engineers who help maintain it; the engineers use 3D modeling to keep this old plane up in the air. I鈥檓 interested in the tension between old and new.
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