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Author Q&A for www.bookclubs.ca 1) Can you tell us how you became a writer? My creative writing career was equally serendipitous. I'm a bit of an Irish story teller so once at a party I told a childhood tale about how I'd worked full time from the age of four delivering drugs with a black delivery car driver and how we'd been trapped in the snow overnight. Someone at the party told me to write the story and send it to a publisher. So I quickly wrote up the tale and then mailed it in on a Friday. On the following Monday I received an advance check in the mail with a yellow post-it attached which said "finish it". Not wanting to give back the check, I finished the book. That is how my childhood memoir Too Close to the Falls was hatched. It was on the best seller's list for 72 weeks so that helped me to decide I must be a writer. 2) What inspired you to write this particular book? Is there a story about the writing of this novel that begs to be told? For example in 1895 Freud proposed the seduction theory. Some of Freud's hysterical patients reported having had incestuous relations with their fathers in childhood. Freud then postulated that these incestuous (what he called 'seduction') relationships resulted in the adult onset of Hysteria. Then suddenly two years later in 1897 Freud retracted the seduction theory saying he had made a mistake. He said he finally figured out that it was the patient's fantasy that she had been seduced by the father. Freud said he mistook the patient's fantasy, based on longing for the father, as a reality. No scholar ever really knew why Freud changed his mind and critics have raved on for years about it, but the truth is no one really knows. My novel Seduction is about what I imagine happened in that two year time period to make Freud change his mind. 3) What is it that you’re exploring in this book? The second level is an exploration of Freud's early work and Darwin's later work. Freud was a biologist until he was over 40 and then he turned to psychology. Darwin, on the other hand, was a biologist until his later years and then he became a psychologist. I wanted to explore in what way these two men are mysteriously related. Along the way I explore various secrets that both of them could be covering up. I have always been interested in the history of science and the interaction between theory and personality and social context of the theorist. The idea of Objective knowledge has always seemed to me to be an oxymoron. I am hoping that Seduction will give the readers some new and fascinating information about Darwin and Freud, while they have a good time reading a page turning yarn. 4) Who is your favorite character in this book, and why? Every character is an extension of the author or they would have no understanding of what makes the character tick. There is a section of me in each character, but the book is written in the first person and in order to do that I had to get into Kate's skin. She traveled with me like a Siamese twin until the book was finished. 5) Are there any tips you would give a book club to better navigate their discussion of your book? The other thing I would say is try not to commit the sin of presentism. Darwin and Freud were writing in the Victorian era when no one believed in the unconscious or evolution. Try and place yourself in the era before you judge their actions. In terms of approaching the book you might want to look at the parallels between the lives Kate, the detective, is investigating and the life she herself has led. A book group might want to discuss those parallels. 6) Do you have a favourite story to tell about being interviewed about your book? 7) What question are you never asked in interviews but wish you were? 8) Has a review or profile ever changed your perspective on your work? I was also shocked when the reviews referred to my childhood as unusual. I thought I had a totally normal childhood. However, I discovered that working full time at four and having a mother that never made a meal was unusual. It seemed normal to me because I lived and enjoyed it. If you are happy, your parents never say an unkind word to you or to each other, you aren't poor, there are no wars, you have no idea that your childhood was strange. 9) Which authors have been most influential to your own writing? The Bronte sisters really moved me and in a way Jackie, the detective and quasi-love interest of Seduction who has spent most of his life in jail and then come out and bettered himself, is a modern day Heathcliff. Kate the heroine of Seduction is a Katherine-like figure from Wuthering Heights. Like Heathcliff and Katherine, Jackie and Kate can't be together nor can they part. I have read all of Dickens and still see characters on the street that I think resemble some of his finest creations. As a child my mother read me Dickens and then that night, since I was an only child, I would 'talk' to the characters as though they were playmates. As a teenager Sidney Carton was my first crush. I have always been a lover of character development and I can only thank Dickens for that. 10) If you weren't writing, what would you want to be doing for a living? What are some of your other passions in life? I love competitive sports. I am on a masters rowing team and we have competed for eleven years on a racing team. We even went to the worlds a few years ago. I also windsurf whenever I can and have on rare occasion raced. I enjoy hiking and the outdoor world. 11) If you could have written one book in history, what book would that be? |
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