Kim
asked
Maggie Shipstead:
As a reader, I can get awfully wrapped up a book and its characters and sometimes find it difficult to let them go when the story ends. (That happened to me when I read Seating Arrangements.) As a writer, do you have this same difficulty? Some authors seem to explore a similar theme in a very different storyline but is it the theme or certain character traits the author wants to revisit?
Maggie Shipstead
It's funny--once I'm done with a piece, either a novel or a story, I'm so DONE. I don't think about the characters anymore at all. I was surprised, when I first started doing readings for Seating Arrangements, when people would ask what happened to the characters afterward, and I had no idea! I remember one woman wanted to be assured that Livia is okay, and I realized I had the power to be like, "Oh, sorry, she got eaten by a shark." As a writer, I'm just so happy when something's done because that means I can move on to something different. But, of course, when I'm a reader, I get that feeling too, like the book is just one small window into a much vaster, complete whole.
You're so right about how authors have pet themes. I think, to a degree, you don't always see how you're repeating yourself in your fiction, although I do feel self-conscious about what I reveal about myself and my preoccupations, even inadvertently. I had someone ask what my deal was with May-December relationships in my books, and I didn't have an answer except that I think that particular power dynamic is interesting. (Much more so on the page than in life, btw.) I do like to attack a wide range of settings and subcultures in my work, though. Part of the fun, for me, is learning about new worlds.
You're so right about how authors have pet themes. I think, to a degree, you don't always see how you're repeating yourself in your fiction, although I do feel self-conscious about what I reveal about myself and my preoccupations, even inadvertently. I had someone ask what my deal was with May-December relationships in my books, and I didn't have an answer except that I think that particular power dynamic is interesting. (Much more so on the page than in life, btw.) I do like to attack a wide range of settings and subcultures in my work, though. Part of the fun, for me, is learning about new worlds.
More Answered Questions
Whitney
asked
Maggie Shipstead:
This question contains spoilers…
(view spoiler)[
I loved Astonish Me and was blown away by the ending. Throughout the novel, I wondered whether we would learn the reason why Arslan picked Joan to help him defect or if you would leave it to the reader to speculate. How important was it for you to share Arslan's reasoning from his point of view? Did you consider leaving that part unspoken?
(hide spoiler)]
Susanna
asked
Maggie Shipstead:
I love your novels, thanks for writing! I would like to know how you come up with the characters? When reading your books, it seems like you can describe what men and women of different ages are thinking and feeling so incredibly well. How did you gain the ability to imagine this? Is it something that you just understand or is it something you deliberately studied?
Maggie Shipstead
1,912 followers
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