First, there is the website of Maria Semple. It's truly the funniest, funkiest, most original one I've seen, complete with dolls! Next, of course, is the book, Where'd You Go, Bernadette, which is rightfully racking up the raves. The author of This One Is Mine, Maria also worked in TV, writing for Beverly Hills 90210, Ellen, Mad About You and Arrested Development, and "bad shows" she won't name! Her new book is hilarious and so is she. How thrilled am I to have Maria here? I bet you can tell by the interview.
Emails,
FB, twitter--all of these provide clues in your novel. So I take it you think
social media is a boon? (Many writers hate it and think it takes away from
writing.)
I included emails in Where’d You Go, Bernadette, but not Facebook updates or Twitter
posts. In writing a modern day
epistolary novel, I realized I needed people to communicate by email. But I’ve distorted reality by having my
characters write long, formal emails.
Personally, I find it tacky when novels include junky, fragmented
communication, like texts, FB updates or Twitter. I’m seriously down on Twitter and about to quit
Facebook. (I promised my agent I’d
stay on it though the end of 2012.)
In my slightly hysterical opinion, we writers have reached a crisis
point. Publishers have instilled
fear in us that we have to be on social media. I strongly disagree.
Books sell the old fashioned way, by word of mouth. Literally, by people using their mouths
to talk to their friends about a book they love. We all know that.
Why are we succumbing to this insidious, energy-siphoning
distraction?
You've
hilariously skewered Seattle in your novel. Is Seattle on speaking terms with
you? What made you change into someone who now likes the city?
I admit I was a little frightened that I’d be run
out of town, but the reaction has been overwhelming. I get stopped on the street by people telling me how much
they love Where’d You Go, Bernadette. It turns out Seattle is full of fellow
transplants who had difficulty adjusting like I did. I began the book when I had just moved here and the culture
shock (plus other factors) had me in a very bad way. Time passed, I made
friends, and now Seattle feels like home.
The book is ultimately a love letter to Seattle, and I’m glad to see
that my affection shines though.
You've
worked in comedy writing for a long time. Was it hard to switch over to writing
a novel? Do you miss writing for TV?
I miss my fellow comedy writers, but not
TV. I’ve discovered that I’m much
more of a lone wolf than I previously thought. I like being in charge of my time. I need space to figure out if an idea leads anywhere, maybe
by going on a walk, lying in bed and staring at the ceiling for an hour. (And if watching three straight
episodes of Mad Men On Demand figures
in somehow, who’s gonna stop me?)
The transition to fiction wasn’t as hard as I
thought it would be. I was already
a voracious reader and taught myself how to write prose by studying John
Gardner’s The Art of Fiction.
I
read that your first novel did fine, but it was nothing like the extraordinary
sales and attention this one is getting. What's it feel like to now have this
fame--what do you love, what annoys you about it, and what do you want much
more of?
I think I’ve been around long enough, seen
enough career highs and lows to recognize that this, too will pass. A shrink once told me that projects
should be like a pearl on a necklace.
That’s a powerful image to me, the string of pearls. The success of this book isn’t any more
defining than the failure of my first book or any of the shows I worked
on. What matters is to keep adding
pearls.
If I may digress, that’s what I was trying to
write about with Where’d You Go,
Bernadette. It was about a
woman who had a big success followed by tremendous failure. She was unable to get over it, and when
the book begins, she’s been stuck, both creatively and as a person, for twenty
years. The novel ends with
Bernadette’s promise to move forward.
This is all an artist can do.
Nothing else matters.
As for the annoyances and rewards… The very
best part is sharing in the book’s success with those who helped me get here:
my boyfriend, my agent, my editor, my publicist and the marketing team at
Little, Brown. Everyone’s giddy
and proud, and that feels wonderful.
It’s also really cool to get to meet my literary idols and to even have
some of them love my book. That is
totally trippy, and something that still doesn’t compute. I got a fan letter a few weeks ago from
Michael Frayn, whom I’m mad for.
Unfortunately, the attention brings huge demands on my time. A ton of emails to answer, press
interviews, essays to write, etc.
So I’m kind of harried and dragging around, when I wish I could just
relax and enjoy.
I
have to ask you about your website, which is one of the most creative,
hilarious ones I've seen, with a definite doll motif. Your idea?
I’m so glad you like it! When it came time to do a new website,
I talked to a few designers who all had the same idea, which was to use the
cover art as a starting point and go from there. I love my cover, but I was
itching for something weirder. One day, I was lounging on my seven year old
daughter’s bed, brainstorming, and she said, “You can use my dolls.” She handed
me a plastic doll whose hair was pulled back in an adult-sized hair elastic so
its pony-tail shot straight out.
“This can be you.” I
totally cracked up. And I thought,
“Hey, yeah, that can be me.” (It’s the doll on my bio page.) So Poppy and I worked together and
figured out how many different types of dolls she had, and then assigned them
to the various pages. Everything
you see on the website we already had around the house with the exception of
Bernadette’s fishing vest, which we bought on eBay. Poppy set up the dolls and I took the pictures. A wonderful graphic designer, Brian
Chonjowski, figured out the aesthetics and put it together.
What's
obsessing you now?
How I seem to be the only one alarmed by the
way writers are embracing Twitter.
What
question should I have asked that I completely forgot?
I showed this to my daughter who’s been hanging
on my desk, waiting for me to finish up.
She said, “What are you making for dinner?” I’m not sure the answer is going to be of broad interest,
but here it is: “A chopped salad
of parboiled green beans, yellow peppers, tomatoes and garbonza beans with
fresh mozzarella and a lemon basil vinaigrette.”
Thank you, Caroline. This was a blast.
I’m off to chop!
3 comments:
Thanks for a fabulous interview, Caroline and Maria. Love your thoguhts about social media! Why do we so easily fall into the trap of doing anything that feels unnatural to so many of us? Looking forward to reading "Bernadette" !!
Maria, you are not the only writer alarmed by the chatting away of our lives on Twitter and Facebook. You speak for many of us!
So I've joined a book club, somewhat reluctantly because all the women know each other for years and I'm the outsider. It was my turn last night to suggest a book for our meeting next month. Yep. You guessed it!
Social media is not so bad. As with many things, just consider portion control.
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