ABOUT THE BOOK
Would you rather be flattered or told something in brutal honesty?
One of my favorite sayings is, “The truth will set you free but first it will make you miserable.” Maybe that’s why I don’t trust flattery as much as I do criticism? Though I do enjoy flattery, too.
It is so much easier to trust criticism.
What point in history would you like to live through?
That’s such a hard question because our understanding of historical times is so very limited because it’s all conjecture. I think I’d like to hopscotch through a bunch of eras, less to experience say the Jazz Age or Enlightenment than to test the hypothesis I’ve developed while writing books with historical elements that people are people are people, with similar desires and traits and flaws, no matter where and when they live.
I like the idea of going to different eras. I would love to travel to Regency England or Renaissance Italy.
What is a fond memory of your grandparent?
My grandparents all died by the time I was a teenager, and I deeply regret that I didn’t get to know them as fully-rounded people, which is maybe why I set my latest novel Not Nothing, in an assisted-living facility and chose a 107-year-old man to narrate it. The memories I do have tend to be small moments: having Shake-and-Bake chicken and Pepperidge Farm cake for Shabbat Dinner at my grandparents’ Hollywood apartment or the news clippings my grandmother would send to me.
Ha! My grandmother would cut out articles of my accomplishments. She created a photo album for me. Some of those are in there. It was very sweet. I had very fond memories of my grandparents.
What is your best thing you've accomplished?
My family first. Next is something I don’t talk about publicly, which is maybe what makes it the most profound. Sorry to be so vague but to quote Taylor Swift, “I’m only cryptic and Machiavellian because I care.”
Ha! You will tell everyone if the time is right. It's a very important question and makes me want to be a better person.
If you could interview anyone - who would it be and why?
My grandparents. I have befriended and interviewed several elderly people throughout the years—I think I’m drawn to old folks to fill my grandparent gap—and the stories they tell, the history they’ve lived through, blows my mind. But so does the realization that even though things were very different in, say, the 1930s or 1950s, the human experience was very much the same. I take comfort in that.
Yes! You capture this beautifully in the book!
4 comments:
Great interview with Gayle. And this sounds like a must read for me from reading your review. I can't wait for it to come out.
Your insights into this book have me putting it on the top of my list or future books to read. Thanks for the fun interview and Happy MMGM!
I definitely want to read this book. Thanks for telling me about it. Nice interview.
This sounds ike an awesome book!
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