Other Writing

Chapbooks

“Following a long tradition of writers bringing impossible children to life, Melissa Scholes Young’s words crawl deep into your skin and explore the fabric of family, motherhood, and what it means to love a child born differently. This short story is a master class in fabulism and heart that will linger with you for a long time.”

Sequoia Nagamatsu, author of Where We Go When All We Were Is Gone

“A beautiful, heartbreaking meditation on what it means to be a mother, and what it means to be a person, and what it means to give yourself to love in all its astonishing forms.”

Amber Sparks, author of And I Do Not Forgive You: Stories and Other Revenges

Scrap Metal Baby


Articles

Homestead

The Believer Magazine

“Survivor Jane is not what I expected. Her auburn hair is pulled back in a ponytail, and her lips are painted tomato red. She wears a khaki button-down shirt, fitted cargo pants, and sturdy leather work boots snug on her petite frame. Survivor Jane steps out from the podium to hype us. She has the swagger of a woman still glowing in her fifteen minutes of fame from being featured on a 2015 episode of the National Geographic Channel’s “Doomsday Preppers” along side her husband, Rick “The Survivalist Gardener” Austin.”

Your Class is Showing

Brevity

“At a reading for my first novel, a reader waited patiently at the microphone and asked, “Why would someone like you write about people like this?”

My friend in the front row shook their head. The bookseller hosting me inched closer. I smiled and asked back, “Someone like me? People like this?” The audience laughed. It relieved the tension.”

Writing With Intention: On Hiring a Sensitivity Reader

Writer’s Digest

“Whether you’re looking to pitch your work to an agent or are setting out on your self-publishing journey, author Melissa Scholes Young has some tips for hiring a sensitivity reader to up-level your work.”

On Writing The Hive

Women Writers, Women’s Books

“Dear Reader,

Political and personal struggles are rifting our hometowns, our communities, and our families. They are occurring on the dirt road I grew up on in rural Missouri near the banks of the Mississippi River and near the campus where I teach in Washington, D.C.”

What Needs Done: The Love and Burden of a Family Business

Literary Hub

“On the radio in the 1980s, between the latest hits by Richard Marx and Madonna, my eight-year-old voice told the tri-state area of Missouri, Illinois, and Iowa about our family’s pest control business.

Thank You, Rush Limbaugh, For My Feminism

Ms. Magazine

“Every morning when my dad left for work as a pest control technician, his truck stirred up a cloud of dust on our dirt road in rural Missouri. It was a kind of magic to watch him disappear into a plume of earth.”

Why I let my third-grader dye her hair blue

The Washington Post

“My daughter wants to dye her hair electric blue the night before the first day of third grade. “It matters, Mom,” she says. “I don’t want to look like everyone else.””

Mark Twain’s America

CAS Literature

“I’ve always been interested in how we construct identity. One of the themes I wrestle with in FLOOD is whether the stories we tell ourselves are true. In this book, Clara Clemens tells us about Mark Twain, literary persona vs. Samuel Clemens, the man she knew as father. In her grief, she recounts a magical childhood as the daughter of a great storyteller.”

I don’t censor the books my children read. I think they’ll be stronger for it.

The Washington Post

“At book events, I’m often asked whether my debut novel, “Flood,” is appropriate for young readers. The story parallels Mark Twain’s exodus from our shared hometown, Hannibal, Mo., and the characters are modern-day Tom Sawyers and Becky Thatchers — except grown up and wrestling with issues of race, class and rural identity.”

The Cost of Being First

The Atlantic

“When Chris was accepted into the Georgetown’s School of Foreign Service, he didn’t think of himself as a first-generation college student. Acknowledging his first-generation identity and how it influenced his path came years later, but the label assigned by his college is only a part of Chris’s individual story.”

Where We Write: Hannibal, Missouri

Poets & Writers

“When I decided to set my first novel, “Flood,” in Hannibal, Missouri, the hometown I share with Samuel Clemens, aka Mark Twain, I knew I was wading into murky water.

Navigating Campus Together

The Atlantic

“I knew Sarah was one of them on the first day of class. We made eye contact as I reviewed the lengthy roll of campus resources listed on my syllabus. “Just so you know,” I said, “all of these people are here to help you. No extra charge. You’ve already paid tuition. These services are included.”

On the Extravagance of Mark Twain’s Family Dishes

Literary Hub

“Susan Crane’s china isn’t at Quarry Farm anymore. Or at least I can’t find it. I’m rummaging through every cupboard, cabinet, and sideboard looking for it. At Quarry Farm, the family home where Samuel Clemens, aka Mark Twain, summered and wrote his most important works, I search for Susan Crane’s dishes to set the table for my own family’s Thanksgiving meal.”

The Politics of Dialect

Origins Journal

“Every summer, I return to my hometown, Hannibal, Missouri, to reconnect with my roots. I have thirty-seven first cousins and most still live near the dirt road where I grew up.  Ten minutes of chatter on my mom’s front porch, holding fast to a sweaty glass of iced tea, and I sound like me again. Inevitably, one of my children comes up from the pond and asks, “How come you talk funny when we’re here?” I’d like to protest, but I’m already drawing out my vowels and slicing my gerunds.  Instead, I send the kids off to catch fireflies in a glass jar or gather sticks for roasting marshmallows.”

A Residency of One’s Own: Navigating the Complicated Path to a Writers Retreat

Poets & Writers

“What about the kids?” they asked, again and again, especially the women, when I shared the news of my upcoming writing residency. To which I thought: “I didn’t stop being a writer when I gave birth; I won’t stop being a mother during my retreat.”

Why teachers struggle to teach their own children

The Washington Post

“It was 95 degrees in the parking lot at the base of the Frederick Douglass National Historic Site on the June day my daughters and I visited. We sprinted for the air conditioning of the visitor information center. As a documentary of Douglass’s life played and we roamed the lobby exhibits, I casually mentioned to my children, “I teach his books to my college students. I’m happy to answer any questions.””

St. John’s River, Florida

Narrative Magazine

“Dad and I are on the St. John’s River just inside Florida’s Ocala National Forest. Eight ten-foot rods arch from the side of the boat like giant spider legs. Our fishing guide is Denny. His job is to ensure that we catch a lot of fish. He’s a salty dog and I flirt shamelessly with him. Dad threatens to kick Denny’s ass right there in the boat. “It’s her,” Denny waves his cigarette at me, “not me!” But I can do no wrong in my dad’s eyes.”

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