Oprah's Book Club (Official) discussion

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The Twelve Tribes of Hattie
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Q&A with Ayana Mathis; TODAY from 11am-1pmEST.

Out of all the characters Bell has stayed with me long after I finished the book. Do you think you would write another book about one of the children from "Hattie?"
In the early stages of your writing process, which tribe member or child was first to set the tone for the development of Hattie’s character? What were the qualities of this initial relationship that sparked your desire to continue to write and eventually complete your novel?
In my opinion, Hattie’s character is portrayed as being a resilient fighter and survivor. There is a lot of sadness, hurt, anger and disappointment that seems to engulf her life. Did you develop her character with the rationale that it was more important for Hattie to be a survivor then a happy woman? If so why?
In the last chapter titled ‘Sala: 1980’ it states that Hattie didn’t know how to save her granddaughter “she felt overwhelmed and unprepared as she had when she was a young mother at seventeen”. As the author of this novel, do you believe that in Hattie’s heart and mind that she developed into a woman?
In the beginning of your novel, Hattie’s character is introduced as being a seventeen year-old ‘little thing’. How important was age in the development of her character? Do you think that Hattie’s life journey would have been the same if she was an adult in her 20’s?
The structure of your novel focus’ on the tribes of Hattie. Is it fair to say that her true partner in life were her children and that her husband August was an after thought? Why? or why not?




Hattie's character had me cheering for her one moment then upset with her the next. She is a very complex woman did you create her intentionally like this or did it unfold due to character development of her children?

Hello, I am Catherine. I live in Milan, Italy and will be presenting this book February 26 to my local book club.
My question to Ms Mathis:
Why did you chose to dedicate the last chapter to the granddaughter and gloss over the details of some of the children in the end?

What's next fr A Ayana Mathis? are you writing now?
Do you have any advice for aspiring writers?

My question is this: Is Sala you? You wrote about Cassie's mental illness as if you yourself have lived through that kind of situation. I thought both Cassie's and Sala's chapters were beautifully written.
I look forward to your future novels!!


I would like to know the answer to this question too.


I hope more books will follow Hattie, long before anything is turned into film! :)
Thank you very much for this glimpse into the lives of the Tribe!


Ms. Ayana Mathis:
The year is 1981- what did you learn from Hattie Shepherd?
The year is 1981- what did you learn from Hattie Shepherd?

Who was your favourite character to write?
Where do you write your stories, from home/library/coffee shop?
I loved the book,could feel each character in their struggles, excellent book. Thank you. :)




Hi Tracy,
Thanks for your question! The work is purely fictional. there are some very loose correlations to my extended family, my own grandmother was a pretty stoic character, but the Shepherds are an imagined family.

SPOILER
Another great question! I don't think Hattie is nearly as hard at the end, I think that the book moves toward hopefulness, and Hattie's decision to intervene on Sala/s behalf is a sign of that hopefulness, and of a kind of possibility for tenderness that Hattie didn't have earlier in her life.
Ms. Ayana Mathis:
Currently, what are you reading? (fiction, non-fiction, trade, self-help...etc.)
Currently, what are you reading? (fiction, non-fiction, trade, self-help...etc.)

Thank you for the compliment! Bell is my favorite character as well! I don't know, my sense right now is that these characters and I have parted ways. But never say never!

Hi Rebecca,
Bell and Floyd were my favorites. Both are very complex people, both are extraordinarily self aware at that same time that they are self-sabotaging. I know people like that, I think we all do. The ways in which they shoot themselves in the foot made them interesting to write.

They were more or less written in the order that they occurred to me, with a few exceptions. I knew that Bell and Sala were set more contemporarily, for example. The chapters were put into order later.

Great question! Both Hattie and Sala appeared early on, in a kind of prototype of what are now the first and last chapters.But then I veered away from both of them and began writing the rest of the tribes. Their stories were very interesting to me, and they were each so unique and so rich as characters. That's was kept me going.

That's an interesting question. Hattie is absolutely a fighter and a survivor. She's a pretty complicated character. It never occurred to me that she could be any different than the way she is. That is to say that it wasn't an option-- Hattie is very real to me, and I could no more suddenly change her personality than I could my own.

Sure, I think that she's certainly very much a woman. Her comment about feeling overwhelmed has to do with how difficult it is to save her children from sadness or trouble in life, how difficult it has been for her to address their needs in ways beyond feeding or clothing them. I don't think it has to do with maturity, it has to do with how hard it is to move through the world, and how hard it is for a mother to guide her children's movement through the world.

Hi Dianne!
So pleased to hear that they resonated with you! My idea with the book was that I, along with the reader, would meet each character at some critical moment in his or her life, and then, when the moment was over, we would move away. It isn't my intention at the moment to revisit them in another novel -- but I guess you can never say never!

Hi Monise!
Thanks so much for your question. The Great Migration certainly isn't talked about nearly enough, that movement of 6 million people changed this country, demographically, intellectually, artistically, in all ways. Isabel Wilkerson's incredible book, "The Warmth of Other Suns" is the source for information on the Migration, incredible researched and beautifully written. It was a great help to me, both in terms of information and inspiration.

Thanks, Anne! No offense taken! In fact, I tend to agree with you. Thanks for reading.

Hattie caused the same reaction in me as I was writing her! She's an extraordinarily complicated woman, I think that trying to simplify her -- to make her wholly likeable or wholly unlikeable would have been a real disservice to her character.

Hello, I am Catherine. I live in Milan, Italy and will be presenting this book February 26 to my local bo..."
Hi Catherine,
How wonderful about your book club-- I'm honored!I used to live in Italy, in Florence.
As far as the last chapter, I wanted to show the promise and possibility of the generation after Hattie's children (thus the chapter about her granddaughter)-- and I was interested in how Hattie might understand/interact with that potential.

What's next fr A Ayana Mathis? are you writing now?
Do you have any advice for aspiring writers?"
Thanks for your question! I suppose the best advice I can give is just to write, even when you don't have the time or the stamina, especially then, just keep writing. So often writing is discussed as though it sort of comes to people, like the muse or something, but really it's also hard work, and like anything else, requires a discipline of practice. Best of luck to you!

Hi David,
Thanks so much for your question! Nope, no theater background -- though I am something of a ham! For me, the shifting POVs were absolutely necessary to the telling of this particular story. I knew there would be lots of characters and I was interested in getting as close to those characters' experience as I possibly could, a kind of immediacy was necessary. I couldn't see any other way to do that than to write each chapter from the protagonist's POV.
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