I admit it. I stalked Jane Bernstein years ago after I read
her book Departures, which I was obsessed with. And I tracked her down and
wrote to her, and we became friends. Real life friends! She put me at her
gorgeous home in Pittsburgh, we've visited here in NYC and if we followed each
other's careers any closer, we'd be the same person.
I've loved all her books, and this new one THE FACE TELLS
THE SECRET is one of her best. About how responsible we should be to the ones
we love, about disability seen from a very different lens, and about love and
place and family, it's page-turning and gorgeously written. And I'm not the
only one to say so. Take a look here:
“Reverberating with vivid characters, tempestuous bonds, and
poignant moments, The Face Tells the Secret is a contemporary page-turner as
haunting as it is humane.”
Rachel Simon, New
York Times bestselling author of Riding The Bus With My Sister and The Story of
Beautiful Girl
“Jane Bernstein’s novel is a beautiful, almost balletic
exploration of the role of repression across generations. This book asks many
questions—about knowledge, forgiveness, disability, the slippery shapes of fear
and love—but always through the lived life of its narrator. Her journey into
the past and attempts to chart a future had me hooked.”
Elizabeth Graver, author of The End of the Point
“The characters in Jane Bernstein’s expansive and beautiful
novel, “The Face Tells the Secret,” are exquisite, complex, real creations.
From Pittsburgh to Tel Aviv, they bring us into their lives with depth and
honesty. A wonderful book.”
Karen E. Bender, author of Refund, a finalist for the
National Book Award
“Who should we care for?” asks Roxanne, the narrator of The
Face Tells the Secret. “How much of our lives should we spend looking after
others? When do we turn away to protect ourselves?” Jane Bernstein delivers no
easy answers in this heartbreaking and, ultimately, heart-mending novel. Rather
she explores the complications of human relations in many variations – between
mother and child, siblings, man and woman, over long-distances, and in close
quarters. This book is about love and life, and absolutely worth reading.
Suzanne Kamata, author of Losing Kei and Indigo Girl
Suzanne Kamata, author of Losing Kei and Indigo Girl
Jane writes fiction, memoir, essays, and screenplays, and in 2018, a picture book, cowritten with her daughter, Charlotte Glynn. Jane’s books include Bereft – A Sister’s Story, and two memoirs about raising a daughter with intellectual disabilities, Loving Rachel and Rachel in the World. Jane’s awards include a Fulbright Fellowship and two National Endowment for the Arts Fellowships in Creative Writing. She’s a professor of English and member of the Creative Writing Program at Carnegie Mellon University and lives in Pittsburgh, PA and New York City with Jeff, the man, and Rozzie, the dog, both of whom travel well.
Thanks so much for being here, Jane! Only thing better would
be sitting across a table from you!
I always think writers are haunted into writing their
novels. What was haunting you about this particular one?
This book is very much about ghosts and what it’s like to
grow up with parents who cannot talk about the tragedies of the past but who
are deeply wounded by these unseen disasters.
Although the events in The Face Tells the Secret are not
autobiographical, the themes are ones I can’t escape as a writer. Like my protagonist, Roxanne, I grew up in a
house full of shadows. In my case, it
was the death of my sister, when I was seventeen. After her murder, my parents did not – could
not -- talk about her.
So much of this astonishing novel is about the ways we
love—or don’t love, and how loss amplifies that. Could you talk about that
please?
There are two kinds of “love” that Roxanne wrestles with. One has to do with caregiving and
responsibility for one’s kin. How much
should she give to the wounded people in her life? Then there’s romantic love. To paraphrase a
question Roxanne asks herself late in the novel: how can you love when you have
never been loved yourself? Roxanne is
tender-hearted, but at the start of the novel has been unable to form a
romantic relationship with an emotionally stable man. Her mother, who rarely touched her, rarely
had a kind word, was too wounded to love her the way a baby and child should be
loved. In the course of the book, she has to learn how to open herself to love
and to trust that she can be loved in return.
You’ve written so many gorgeous books, from memoirs to
novels. Do you feel that you are able to build on each previous novel, or is
every work a new one?
Oh, I wish I could build on what I’ve written, but I seem
unable to fully do that. I know more
about craft than I did when I did as a beginning writer, but that knowledge
doesn’t always help in creating a coherent work. Sometimes it even hinders. But as you say, we are haunted into writing
our books, and so I bumble along.
What’s obsessing you now and why?
I’m finishing a first draft set in in 1972, which begins
with the disappearances of a charismatic middle-aged man. He’s left three women behind – his very young
wife, Lindy, who’s the protagonist, his eccentric best friend, and a girl he
picked up hitchhiking, who’s pregnant with his child. For a year, the three live together in Maine.
Although I know it’s a tough story to write at this particular period of time,
I’m trying to write a nuanced portrait of a charming, immoral, kind of awful
man, who also, in major ways transformed the course of my protagonist’s life.
The story is framed by Lindy at the present time. (And I loved Cruel, Beautiful
World, which is this book’s beautiful stepsister…)
What question didn’t I ask that I should have?
Who am I reading?
Apart from Caroline Leavitt? I loved The Friend, The Body in Question,
The Mars Room. I’ve been teaching lit courses of late and read widely all
summer long for whatever theme I choose.
This year it was “Brooklyn.” My
students – men, women, of all ethnicities, mostly computer science or tech
majors, all fell in love with A Tree Grows in Brooklyn. I can’t tell you how surprised and delighted
I was. They are hungry for great stories.
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