1. How would you summarize
your book in one sentence?
“The
Nesting Dolls” is about the potency of secrets and the redemptive power of
love.
2. How long did it
take you to write this book?
Two years, but during that time I also wrote a children’s play about the
last of the Galapagos tortoises and a short novel for adult readers with
literacy challenges. I also attended 186 recitals/badminton games/track meets
and Christmas concerts in which our grandchildren played roles of varying significance
and success.
3. Where is your favorite place to write?
Truthfully, Anglin
Lake in Northern Saskatchewan. The lake is pristine with a large population of
loons that still feel at home around non-invasive humans, and every day birds
drop by the feeder outside the window where I write.
3. How do you choose your
characters’ names?
For
close to twenty years I’ve had people bid at charity events for cameo roles in
my books. I think by now I might
have raised about $50,000 for organizations like Oxfam, many cancer societies;
literacy groups—in general just groups that I believe in. This year’s crop will
include characters whose names were purchased by donors from Grandmothers 4
Grandmothers and Camp fYrefly a place where gay/lesbian/trans/ and other teens
can feel comfortable being themselves.
I’m a Virgo. Don’t ask, because even though the books in question, are already published, I’ll feel compelled to do a final polish.
5. If there was one book you wish you had written what would it be?
“Charlotte’s Web”.
7. What’s your favourite
city in the world?
Regina.
W.B. Yeats. I would ask him how he could have written a poem as brilliant as “Among School Children” with the lines that always stop my heart by their beauty. “O body swayed to music. O brightening glance/How can we know the dancer from the dance?”
When
I’m having a difficult writing day, Glenn Gould with the “Goldberg
Variations”. The rest of the time,
whatever strikes my fancy—from Green Day to Renee Fleming. I listen to Glenn
Gould a lot.
My husband, but only after it’s been sent to my editor. Ted and I’ve
been together for 42 years and I have plans for the next 42 that don’t include
me being sullen because of an ill-chosen metaphor.
12. What’s on your nightstand right now?”
“The Emperor’s Children” – Claire Messud (a re-read because I just finished her earlier novels and was dazzled.)
“Solar” Ian McEwan
“The Uncommon
Reader” Alan Bennett
“Innocent” – Scott Turow
13. What is the first book you remember reading?
“Madeline” by Ludwig Bemelmans
When our daughter named our first grand-child, Madeleine, and I read our grand-daughter the ‘Madeline’ books, I felt as if I’d come full circle.
14. Did you always want to be a writer?
15. What do you drink or
eat while you write?
I start writing at 5:30 a.m. At that point I drink herbal tea. I have
one cup of good coffee in the morning and one in the afternoon. Both are rewards. When I stop writing I have a glass of
vermouth before dinner. That’s my ticket to perdition—no more writing till the
next morning at 5:30 a.m.
As a feminist, wife, mother, grandmother, academic and political person,
my POV was a no-brainer. I wanted
to write from the POV of a Canadian woman in mid-life who realized she lived a
privileged live and wanted that life for others.
