About Chad Harbach: Chad Harbach is an American writer. An editor at the journal n + 1, he is the author of the 2011 novel The Art of Fielding.
I play American football every Saturday, which I find calming.
Tall people have a real advantage in the world.
I've earned my living in all sorts of terrible ways - as a janitor, a copy editor, a psychotherapist.
There's certainly a large literature around baseball in the U.S.
It's quite a feeling to finish something you have been 10 years beholden to and to have a clean slate.
Fiction and nonfiction, for me, involve very different processes.
When I write for 'n+1,' I begin by doing a lot of reading, to try to convince myself I'm not stupid. Then I scribble down a paragraph here, a paragraph there, when a notion strikes. Then I see if I can arrange those notions in a way that yields an ar...
I've been a Brewers fan since birth.
Writing on a computer feels like a recipe for writer's block. I can type so fast that I run out of thoughts, and then I sit there and look at the words on the screen, and move them around, and never get anywhere. Whereas in a notebook I just keep plo...
The novel has always been the form that incorporates other forms. For me, it has always been the ultimate medium.
Somehow, you can achieve a directness in the novel that you can't get anywhere else.
I feel like every time I start up, it's like a truck you have to get into 15th gear, so you very solely crank into that mental space where you feel really immersed in the world of the book and then you can just kind of go. But there's just that few d...
Baseball is a team game but, at the same time, it's a very lonely game: unlike in soccer or basketball, where players roam around, in baseball everyone has their little plot of the field to tend. When the action comes to you, the spotlight is on you ...
I mean, first, almost all writers these days teach because they don't make enough money publishing to live on, to support themselves - people like Tobias Wolff, Anne Beattie, Amy Hempel, Stuart Dybek; a lot of short story writers, for one thing.
You know, in the old days, you might be able to slowly sort of build an audience for your work by publishing two, three novels before you hit it big. You know, now, there's much more of an emphasis in the publishing houses on making sure that every b...
You know, it's sort of common wisdom among New York publishers that short story collections don't make money.
In fact, there's a lot to legitimately hate about pro sports and the way they are conducted.
I was a ballplayer, but only for a limited time. I grew up playing in Wisconsin. It's a very sports-centric part of the country that I grew up in and I played a lot of sports, but baseball first and foremost. I played through high school. I was a mid...