Tell Me How It Ends: SPOILER WARNING

Let me tell you the two most common questions I’ve heard in the three weeks since Fierce Kingdom was released: 1) What’s the deal with the movie? 2) What happens at the end of the story?


So here goes: First of all, as for the movie, it is not an actual thing yet. There have been movie rights sold, and there’s a screenplay in process, but that does not equate to a real, buy-your-tickets movie. There are lots of steps still to go in the process. We’ll see.


But about the ending. Endings are, of course, hard to talk about in a public way. Spoilers and all. But it’s been really interesting to me that what was an intentionally open-ended, multi-layered ending has driven some people crazy. It’s a matter of perspective, I guess. As a reader, it drives ME crazy when writers overstate their themes and act as if I’m not smart enough to make my own conclusions…to fill in the gaps myself. I do assume that a reader is smart and thoughtful, and I’ve always loved the idea that the reader comes to a book and joins with the author, and between the two of them, they make this new thing. The book is different for every reader. (For all you English majors out there, it’s reader response theory in action.)


So I like that the reader can decide for themselves what happens. There are two (I think ) different ways you can read the ending of Fierce Kingdom. Joan either _______ or ___________ . (I’m not sure if my code is too obvious there or not.) In ways I didn’t intend, I think the ending has turned out as a litmus test for how people view the world. My husband read the first draft of the book and stalked into the room saying, “I can’t believe you_________!” And I said, “I didn’t!”


I might say that he’s a pessimist and I’m an optimist, and that’s the difference in the way we see the ending.  I like that he can have a different ending than I did. That you can have a different ending than I did. So that’s one reason for the content of the last few pages. The other is that, in as much as the book is about parenting, the truth is that–in the best of circumstances–you leave your child behind.  You go and they stay. So the ending can’t be all smiley faces and rainbows. That’s not life.


And another thing about life:  we don’t get everything tied up neatly. We don’t KNOW how our actions effect everyone down the line. Joan can’t know the end result for everyone at the end of the night.


But, for what it’s worth, I always veer towards light instead of dark. Good does not always triumph in real life, but if this is my story, I want good to conquer.


 


 


 


The post Tell Me How It Ends: SPOILER WARNING appeared first on Gin Phillips.

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Published on August 16, 2017 21:52
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message 1: by Jeana (new)

Jeana I like the idea of the reader response theory but also find it so frustrating that I have to make my own thoughts on the end. :-) But I would only be happy with your ending if it was what I wanted. In my version she triumphs so any other version would have not made me happy.


message 2: by Ginny (new)

Ginny Phillips That's another good reason for an ending with possibilities...we are opinionated creatures. :) We all like to have things our way.


message 3: by Jeana (new)

Jeana So true! Either way I LOVED this book. I read it so fast and felt like I had to catch my breath while reading. I have a child very close to the age of the child in the book and the reality of the situation and trying to keep a four-year old quiet but not overly frightened is a challenge I couldn't imagine. There were so many things that the narrator thought that I felt I had written myself. You took the words right out of my head. I rented this from the library but there is so much more here than just a the main story line and will end up buying it because I really connected with it. Thanks for writing!


message 4: by Ginny (new)

Ginny Phillips Thank you! I still see it more as a book about motherhood than a thriller, so I'm glad the mother/child angle hit so close to home.
Best,
Gin


message 5: by Jeana (new)

Jeana Definitely agree it's more about motherhood than a thriller. Did your inspiration come from personal experience?


message 6: by Karen (new)

Karen For those of us that like black and white endings, with a clear cut answer, this is a hard pill to swallow! I get it, and I kinda like that it is open-ended, and I kinda don't like that, that probably doesn't make sense, but either way I loved this book and it gave me all the feels!!!


message 7: by Ginny (new)

Ginny Phillips Jeana wrote: "Definitely agree it's more about motherhood than a thriller. Did your inspiration come from personal experience?"

Jeana--Somehow I missed this question until today. To answer...I'd been wanting to write about motherhood for a while, and I was in the zoo one day with my son and thought, "What if someone with a gun came in here right now...? And so, in that specific way, the original idea was based on personal experience. And there's plenty of my son in Lincoln--the motherhood bits all feel very personal. But in terms of shootings and violence, no, happily, I have no actual experience with that scenario.


message 8: by Ginny (new)

Ginny Phillips Karen wrote: "For those of us that like black and white endings, with a clear cut answer, this is a hard pill to swallow! I get it, and I kinda like that it is open-ended, and I kinda don't like that, that proba..."

Oh, I can completely understand liking and not liking it. For me, there are plenty of books I love--Age of Innocence comes to mind--where I wish the ending had been different, and I'm frustrated by it, but I can accept that it was the RIGHT ending. Glad you liked the book despite the hard pill to swallow. :)


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