What inspired you to write The Romeo and Juliet Code?
Sometimes a first chapter will just sort of flow out of me and I can’t say I decided to write it, it just sort of happened. I am tempted to say what others have said, that a first chapter comes as a gift from the unknown. But that sounds bewildering and it isn’t at all bewildering. Maybe another way to say it is that I have a canoe and I know how to drop that canoe in the river and jump in. After that, the current takes me away and all I have to do is ride and keep the balance. I just know where the river is. I think my mother showed me.
On another level I know I wrote The Romeo and Juliet Code because I
wanted to be transported to Maine on the coast, to live in a big old complicated
house with odd relatives and secrets abounding. It filled a longing and a need in me!! I had also been
looking for a story in which I could explore my love of England and my
childhood memories there. And at
the time I wrote The Romeo and Juliet
Code I was reading a lot non-fiction about spies and World War II and
somehow the story just rolled out of all that. Writing a novel takes a bit of good faith, good faith that the
words you write and the steps you take will eventually bring you to the
clearing in the woods called “the end.”
How
long did it take you to write The Romeo
and Juliet Code? Did the sequel, Romeo Blue, take longer to write or was it
easier to write after completing the first one?
Actually the first draft of The Romeo and Juliet Code took about four months. Yes, it was
easier and quicker to write than the sequel Romeo Blue. I wanted to write very short, plot driven chapters. And once I had the “voice” of Flissy
down, it went pretty quickly. The
revising was perhaps slower. Going
back and cutting out and adding new parts is technically challenging. It’s like building a house and then
removing porches and adding third floors and back staircases. The house can’t then be a mish
mash. It still has to look as if
all of it is just where it should be! I have grown to be pretty clever at
revising. It may be like ice-skating. You can’t tell someone how to do a triple
jump. It’s just something you can
do after so many years of practice.
You
write books of different genres. You must do a lot of research for your
historical fiction books. What was your research process like for The Romeo
Code and Romeo Blue? Was there any aspect of your research that was the most
interesting?
I did tons of research for both books. I visited Maine for long weekends and went to every museum, every historical society, every beach and cliff walk I could find. I even visited a bed and breakfast that had once been a Coast Guard station. I talked to people in Maine who had been around Portland during the war and joyously wrote everything down. My husband and I were staying at a B&B on the water and one of the other guests told me at breakfast about a spy whom he had seen arrested when he was a boy. The woman spy had been hanging her colorful laundry in a certain way (sideways or upside down) on the clothesline creating a code for a U-boat off shore. I got very interested in all sorts of codes when I was writing the story. And began to build my book as a kind of box within a box within a box, everything connected. Writing a book is like forming a puzzle anyway with interlocking pieces…Each piece fits into the following piece and in the end you either have a nice smooth finished object or you don’t. If you don’t, you won’t have to buy kindling for your fire in the fireplace for a while!
Where did you come up with the characters: Flissy and Gideon?
I was in school for a year in England and I had a very charming fifth grade teacher named Mr. James who teased me about my American accent. He was terribly funny and very British. I can still remember his stories and his funny delivery. I adored him and he was good to me, giving me special attention and helping me relearn how to write, calculate and think in British English! Uncle Gideon is most definitely based on Mr. James, his humor and his warmth. I still have my notebooks from those days with pages of addition, subtraction and division all done with pen and nib dipped in a pot of ink! Oh but Mr. James is lost to me now. I went back to England to my old school in Sidlesham, West Sussex a few years ago and no one could tell me who he was or where he went. There are some teachers in your life that you will always love and be grateful for. Mr. James illuminated and transformed the world for me and I wish I could thank him.
I did tons of research for both books. I visited Maine for long weekends and went to every museum, every historical society, every beach and cliff walk I could find. I even visited a bed and breakfast that had once been a Coast Guard station. I talked to people in Maine who had been around Portland during the war and joyously wrote everything down. My husband and I were staying at a B&B on the water and one of the other guests told me at breakfast about a spy whom he had seen arrested when he was a boy. The woman spy had been hanging her colorful laundry in a certain way (sideways or upside down) on the clothesline creating a code for a U-boat off shore. I got very interested in all sorts of codes when I was writing the story. And began to build my book as a kind of box within a box within a box, everything connected. Writing a book is like forming a puzzle anyway with interlocking pieces…Each piece fits into the following piece and in the end you either have a nice smooth finished object or you don’t. If you don’t, you won’t have to buy kindling for your fire in the fireplace for a while!
Where did you come up with the characters: Flissy and Gideon?
I was in school for a year in England and I had a very charming fifth grade teacher named Mr. James who teased me about my American accent. He was terribly funny and very British. I can still remember his stories and his funny delivery. I adored him and he was good to me, giving me special attention and helping me relearn how to write, calculate and think in British English! Uncle Gideon is most definitely based on Mr. James, his humor and his warmth. I still have my notebooks from those days with pages of addition, subtraction and division all done with pen and nib dipped in a pot of ink! Oh but Mr. James is lost to me now. I went back to England to my old school in Sidlesham, West Sussex a few years ago and no one could tell me who he was or where he went. There are some teachers in your life that you will always love and be grateful for. Mr. James illuminated and transformed the world for me and I wish I could thank him.
Bronte Parsonage |
Well, when I was in England as a child I read
all of E. Nesbit’s books. She was a very big deal then and there. I remember
sitting by our little coal fireplace in Cambridge and reading those books. Of
course I also loved The Secret Garden
too and meant for The Romeo and Juliet
Code and Romeo Blue to be a kind
of tribute to that wonderful book. I also loved the Bronte sisters (Jane
Eyre and Wuthering Heights etc.) when
I was a little older. I went back to see their house in Northern England when I
was there recently. I love to visit the houses of authors and artists. There is no better way to sense a
writer’s spirit. Houses are such entire works of art, whole worlds, vessels for
a life!! I just love houses!!! Can’t
you tell from my books?
If
you could live during any time period in history, when would it be? Why?
Well, I am pretty much in love with France
during the late 1800s when art was so incredibly important that people would
come in droves to big exhibitions. I love the décor and style in general from that era. I am obviously a
complete romantic!!
Oh but then I love England too. I got to experience England in the late 1950’s as a child and I feel so lucky to have been there then. It was so very English then. That was before people used airplanes for general travel and the ocean was a huge divider. Thatched cottages were very common. Businessmen still wore bowler hats in London. The place was unspoiled. It wasn’t at all like America. Now we’ve just mixed up everything and we’re all the same. It’s not as much fun!
If
you could befriend a character from any of your books, who would you befriend?
Why?
Hmm, that’s a tough question. That’s kind of like having to pick your
favorite child. I guess I like Granddaddy from Deep Down Popular because he was so fiercely loving and honest and
willing to fight against big corporations even though it proved hopeless. I like Flissy Bathburn’s (The Romeo and Juliet Code) ability to
love at all costs too. She’s a
meddler and she can’t contain her own enthusiasm even though she’s been taught
otherwise and she keeps breaking her own inner rules. She can’t stay inside her borders, and I find that appealing.
If
you could live anywhere in the world, where would it be? Why?
I want to live on the ocean. I think that’s why I wrote The Romeo and Juliet Code and Romeo Blue. I want to hear the ocean
roaring and crashing. I don’t want
to live near a quiet ocean. I want
to live near a noisy, wild, dramatic ocean! I don’t want to swim in the water. I’m not a swimmer or a sunbather. I just want to hear it and see it
and feel it. It’s a little bit scary and it reminds me of what is
important. Perhaps I would like to
be living on the ocean in England or France. Then I could truly get lost in another culture as well. I
guess I am ready to lose myself again!
Are
you currently working on a book? If so, can you tell us a little bit about it?
Well, yes I am always working on a book. And um,
I guess I can’t say much about it. If I talked about it now, it would pop the magic bubble! I have to wait
until the first draft is done…So until then, mums the word! Hmm, I wonder where
that saying came from. I should look up its origin. But that’s another story!
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I love England and France...and research is amazing. I remember going through the many bindup volumes of old magazines in my college library. So fascinating.
ReplyDeleteIt was great reading more about this author.
Thanks for stopping by, Medeia! I would love to visit England and France, too! Old magazines are fascinating. :)
DeleteIt is interesting to read about this author. Your blog always reminds me my studying literature in college and university times. I feel fascinated to read your post. so very well written.
ReplyDeleteKiran- I am glad you enjoyed learning more about Phoebe. I am so happy to hear that you love reading our posts. Thanks so much! :)
DeleteSuch a beautiful and enjoyable post.....fantastic to read about this wonderful author! And fabulous blog by the way! Shine on!
ReplyDeleteVictoria
Thanks for stopping by Victoria! So glad you enjoyed the interview and blog. :)
DeleteWhat a fun interview. Thanks for sharing this, both of you. It really intrigues me and I have to say that I've just added another book to my reading list. It sounds really enjoyable.
ReplyDeleteRachel- Thanks for visiting! Phoebe is so interesting and The Romeo and Juliet Code has beautiful descriptions. :)
DeleteLove Phoebe's author photo. It's so romantic, just like her book sounds. Love it. Best of luck!
ReplyDeleteElizabeth- I love her author photo too! It fits her personality and writing style perfectly. :)
DeleteI love when authors take research to the next level. It's always so interesting to read about! And I have a thing for houses too, especially big, old ones. This book is new to me, but I will be sure to check it out now. Thanks for sharing! :)
ReplyDeleteSam- I am always fascinated by the research that authors do! Glad to introduce you to a new author. Thanks for visiting. :)
DeleteNice interview and yes, she sounds like a complete and utter romantic!
ReplyDeleteThe Desert Rocks and Intangible Hearts- I am glad you enjoyed it. Phoebe is awesome and so sweet. :)
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