From a Q & A at his publisher's website:
Your books and stories are highly unusual and often border on madcap – men rowing in a lake of blood, or falling into volcanoes, orRead the rest of the Q & A.discovering women suspended in yogurt – what inspires you to push storytelling to its limits?
I’m interested in how much we need to believe in stories, and how far we will go to suspend disbelief. I can feel every cell of my body shift the minute someone says, “Let me tell you a story,” and sometimes I think: why should I believe you? — but then I do, because it’s more pleasurable than not believing. Another word for “madcap” in your question might easily be metaphor, or nightmare, in my opinion.
Girl Factory is set in a frozen yogurt store, which houses young women, suspended in vats of an acidophilus solution in the basement. Hmmm... now what started you thinking about girls in yogurt – where did that image come from?
Where the women came from exactly, I’m not sure. But the yogurt parlor itself only happened on the fifth or sixth attempt to tell a story, and there is something about yogurt that seems to be important to my imagination, maybe something in bacterial action I find inspiring. It was yogurt that allowed the story to begin, not the women. The women in the basement arrived later because I needed something that would cause me to push my limits.
See January Magazine's Author Snapshot: Jim Krusoe.
The Page 69 Test: Girl Factory.
--Marshal Zeringue