Q&A with Emily Croy Barker, author 'The Thinking Woman's Guide to Real Magic.'
Emily
Croy Barker, author of
THE THINKING WOMAN’S
GUIDE TO REAL MAGIC
Pamela Dorman Books/Viking; on-sale
August 5, 2013; 9780670023660; $27.95
Q. Which of the characters in THE
THINKING WOMAN’S GUIDE TO REAL MAGIC did you
most enjoy writing?
A. Aruendiel, no question. He says
exactly what he thinks, and he doesn’t mind giving offense to
anyone. Not something that most of us can get away with in our daily
lives.
Of course, Ilissa was also a lot of
fun, too. Because she’s also honest—Faitoren can’t tell
lies—but at the same time, she’s thoroughly deceitful.
Q. Are any parts of this novel
autobiographical?
A. You mean, is it about the time I
stumbled into an alternate world and started studying magic? Sadly,
no.
There were things in my life that I
deliberately borrowed for the novel. The way Aruendiel talks about
other magicians—I was thinking of how my father, who was a painter,
used to talk with his artist friends about other artists, about who
was doing good work and who wasn’t. My dad was the kindest and most
gentle person ever, but he was ruthless when it came to criticizing
bad art. It’s the idea that you have a calling that you have to
follow and you don’t sell out.
I gave Nora some of my interests—a
penchant for memorizing bits of poetry, a love of cooking—although
she’s much better at both things than I am. She’s also braver
than me. You could never get me to go up a cliff like the one at
Maarikok, even with a levitation spell! And I let her take a path
that I considered but never took—going to grad school in English.
Q. Your heroine, Nora Fischer, is
swept away by magic into a kind of too good to be true existence.
Even though a part of her knew it wasn’t right she stayed. Why
would she allow herself to be easily enchanted?
A. As Aruendiel himself would point
out, Faitoren enchantments are very hard to fight, because they give
you something you want. Nora was feeling bruised and defeated, and
suddenly she had everything that she thought she was missing.
I also think the kind of idealized
femininity that Ilissa offers Nora—being beautiful, being the belle
of the ball, having this perfect romantic love—is a very seductive
thing, even for someone like Nora who has read all the feminist
theorists and has really chosen the life of the mind. Maybe
especially for someone like Nora.
Q. You
have so many literary references, John Donne, Miguel de
Cervantes, William Carlos Williams, Alice in Wonderland and Grimm’s
Fairytales, but it’s Jane Austen’s Pride &
Prejudice that Nora ends up with as her only possession in
the alternate world. What is the significance of this particular
book? Any personal connection to it?
A. Well, Pride and Prejudice is
so modern in many ways, although written and set in a premodern time.
So it seemed like a good match for A Thinking Woman’s Guide,
where a contemporary woman is thrown into a world where women are
still second-class citizens, at best. And Pride and Prejudice
reflects some of the themes that I was interested in—an intelligent
woman engaging with a man who has both higher status and worse
manners than she does—without being too closely parallel to the
plot of my story. Finally, I love Pride and Prejudice! And so
do many other readers. So I hoped it might resonate with those who
read my novel.
Q. Words are a powerful tool and
language is a very important status symbol in Nora’s new world.
Women are uneducated and don’t speak to men the same way Nora does;
something she is repeatedly frustrated by. How did you develop Ors,
the language Nora must learn in order to communicate?
A. Language reflects society, so as I
thought about Aruendiel’s world, I tried to imagine what sort of
linguistic rules it would have to help keep women in their place. And
as anyone who has studied a foreign language knows, there are all
kinds of subtleties that you don’t pick up right away. You can make
blooper after blooper, sometimes for years. So Nora keeps bumping up
against things like the feminine verb endings, which she never
noticed until Aruendiel rather officiously points them out to her.
I was also inspired by how Tolkien, who
was a philologist, essentially began imagining Middle-Earth by
inventing various Elvish names. He wrote poems about these characters
and, eventually, fiction. I thought, wow, what a powerful tool to
create a believable fantasy universe, to develop some kind of logical
linguistic framework that underlies your story.
Q. You’re a journalist by trade.
What was it like, switching to fiction? Where do you write? Do you
set hours or just put pen to paper when inspiration strikes?
A. It took me a while to feel
comfortable writing fiction. It’s a different kind of narration.
Suddenly, after years of having to be super-careful about collecting
facts and double-checking them, I could make everything up. That felt
wonderful! But what exactly do you include, what do you leave out?
Beginning writers are always told, “Show, don’t tell.” Well, in
fact there’s a lot you have to simply tell, or you’ll write
twenty pages and your character will still be finishing breakfast.
The journalistic skill that I found
most useful in writing fiction was simply the ability to sit in front
of the computer and write. Even if you’re just trying to write,
even if what you’re writing isn’t great at the moment or if all
you have to show after three hours is three sentences. And then to do
it again the next day. It doesn’t matter if you have to rewrite it
all over again—because you’ll find something that’s worth
keeping, or you’ll learn what not to do. The important thing
is to keep going.
Usually I write at home on my
laptop—sometimes on the train when I travel. I write best during
the day. If I try to write at night, I’m usually too tired to get
very far. Or occasionally I’ve had the opposite problem—I get
really into it and then suddenly it’s way past my bedtime and I’m
useless the next day. So starting out, I wrote for a couple of hours
every weekend. Then it became every spare moment of every weekend. I
still owe huge apologies to so many of my friends for turning down
all their lovely invitations to go to museums, parties, movies, et
cetera, over the past seven years.
Q. Who would be in your dream book
club? Where would you meet and what would you talk about?
A. Henry James, Charlotte Brontë,
Scott Fitzgerald, Mary McCarthy, Zadie Smith, and couple of my
friends. We’d meet at Florian’s in the Piazza San Marco every
third Tuesday in the month—this is a dream, right?—and
talk about whatever I happen to be reading at the moment. I imagine
it would be a lively group.
Q. Are you a fan of other fantasy
novels?
A. Yes, although I certainly haven’t
read everything that’s out there. I tend to like the denser, more
literary kind of fantasy. Unlike Nora, I love Tolkien. Also Neil
Gaiman, Susanna Clarke, Alice Hoffman, Margaret Atwood, Ursula
LeGuin, and Kelly Link. Kate Atkinson is best known now for her
Jackson Brodie mysteries, but I’m really glad that I didn’t read
her Human Croquet until after I wrote The Thinking Woman’s
Guide, because in some ways that’s the book I wanted to write.
Q. Your writing is
loaded with references from history, literature, and fantasy. What
sort of reader did you envision for this series?
A. I tried to write the kind of novel I
would want to read, so I guess in that sense I wrote it for myself.
And as the book took shape and it became clearer that I would
actually finish a draft at some point, I decided I would send it
first to one of my oldest friends to see if she thought it was any
good. She and I grew up watching Star Trek and Monty
Python, reading Sherlock Holmes and The Black Stallion and
Jane Eyre, and doing the ultimate in geekdom—taking Latin—so
I trusted her judgment. She liked it, so that encouraged me to keep
revising.
Beyond that, I was thinking that it
might appeal to some of the adults who loved Harry Potter but who
wanted more of a adult perspective and a strong female character at
the center of the novel.
Q. The
Thinking Woman’s Guide To Real Magic ends on a
cliffhanger. Can you hint at what’s next for Nora and Aruendiel?
A. I’m pretty sure that Nora will
find her way back to Aruendiel’s world. The two of them really need
to talk and to be straight with each other, don’t you agree? And of
course she has a lot more to learn about magic—and how to use it
properly.
For more information
please contact:
Meredith Burks,
Meredith.Burks@us.penguingroup.com, 212-366-2275
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