Thursday, March 25, 2010

Once Upon A Place

Update: Both Amazon and Barnes and Noble have, fortuitously, discounted the book. 28% off...

I have something a little different today: an interview! I like interviews. You never know what sort of interesting nugget might pop up in an interview. And if you haven't read them, I'd fully recommend taking a peek at the four volumes of collected Paris Review Interviews. A gold mine for any writer.

But today! An interview with a friend of mine, Renee Goudeau. She has a book just out, Once Upon a Place, and I had the pleasure of being a part of the revision process. It's a historical novel set in Louisiana in 1922. In the story, Giselle, a young WWI widow, writes a weekly column for her local paper in which she skewers all the things she sees as unjust (or simply inane) within the town of Lake Badin, and chief among these is Rabbit Cotton, the Captain of the Krewe of the Corsairs. Rabbit will take on anything that smells of money... including blackmail, as Giselle discovers when her aunt, in desperation, heads off to murder Rabbit. To protect her family, Giselle decides to fight fire with fire, never dreaming she'll be caught in the firestorm herself.



Ink: First off, could you tell us a little about yourself, Renee?

Renee: Well, I’m 82 years old, born and bred in south-western Louisiana, and of strong French heritage. My maternal grandfather was so French that my mother and her siblings were not allowed to speak English at the dinner table. This was long before I was born, but I heard about it enough! So when some people have said OUAP has a lot of French in it (even though it’s easy to figure out) I’ve been astounded because to me it has very little. I don’t even speak but a few words of French myself.

Ink: Where did the idea for this book first come from? Is there a point of genesis?

Renee: Actually, no, not a conscious one. As they say, it stands on the shoulders of several unfinished books before it.

Ink: This isn’t an “easy” book. It can be funny, but it’s not light. You don’t pull any punches. Is that an important part of this book’s identity?

Renee: Being outspoken is a part of me [some would argue a not-so-good part], so I guess it’s a part of OUAP as well.

Ink: One of the things that struck me about the novel is a sense of historical integrity. It’s an honest portrayal, an attempt to recapture a time and a place. I love that your heroine is progressive, but progressive in 1922 terms and not in 2010 terms. I find it frustrating, sometimes, when basically modern characters are thrown into historical novels just to make things politically correct, to make them more relatable and easier to understand. This, I think, does a disservice to history. Your heroine, Giselle, is alive within her own period, struggling within and against the mores and strictures of the little world of Lake Badin in 1922. Was this a conscious choice, or more of an unconscious process rooted in trying to discover the character and place? And how important is that sense of historical integrity to you?

Renee: I’ll answer the last question first. Historical integrity means a tremendous amount to me, because I love nothing better than tweaking “beliefs” of any kind with true –as far as it’s possible to find—facts. Debunking, I guess. Most of my writing has started from that. OUAP is no exception, except that it only springs from the book that it originally was.

I stumble upon some historical situation then kill myself to run it down. And character and place are simply an off-spring of that. I do, however, try to be accurate, as in the case of the dialogue. It drove me nuts! Giselle’s slang especially. To make it sound normal and not “cutesy” and a part of her feisty character.

Ink: One of the things you don’t shy away from is race. You handle characters from many backgrounds, and show how they live and operate within this world. What was your approach to this? Were you worried about a backlash as you tried to portray these characters in a way honest to your vision?

Renee: Again, I’ll answer last, first. Yes, absolutely—I still am worried. In this time of political correctness that you mentioned above. And with the Rev. Sharpton ready to jump on Louisiana at any time. One character (as you know its set in 1922) uses “nigger.” I did my best to keep it to a minimum, but it’s true to his character so I used it.

If I again may tell a little story: my mother had a maid, Pearl Carter (Mrs. R. E. Carter—I stress that because she did so at a time when Black women were never called “Mrs.”) for about 30 years and one time when I was grown I asked her—she being almost a charter member of the NAACP—how she could stand working for my Daddy who said “nigger” all the time and was hardly a liberal, and she took out on me!! “Don’t you dare let me hear you say nothing bad about your daddy to me!” My mouth must’ve fallen open, because she went on to add: “When my husband died, your Daddy was the first one at my front door and he said, ‘Pearl, here’s $300. And if you need more, you just let me know.’”

That must’ve been in the late 1940s or so. (Remember I go back a looong way!) It was that strong memory that helped me shape my characters and their situations with what I hope is truth. But yes, again, of course I worry. I’m white. So I can hear it: what do you know about the Black experience? So that, and instances like it, are all I know. It’s something I never hesitated to explore when I could. And I don’t want to hurt anyone even unintentionally. Including my book, I have to add.

Ink: The book’s title is Once Upon a Place… so how important is that place in regards to the artistic goals of the novel? How important was the setting and location to your vision of the story?

Renee: Again, because of the story and its mélange of skin colors and characters, there was nowhere else I could set it. Making it vital to the story. It’s an area I know. I guess also because it’s unique, I couldn’t visualize it anywhere else. Although I hope its theme is universal. It’s not a local color story, as I think you’ll agree.

Ink: The marshes play a role in the story. What are your feelings about the marshes? Are there important reasons for including them?

Renee: Definitely. The chenier [French for “oak”] marshes are an unknown—mostly—part of the U.S. There are only two other areas like it in the entire world. Of course that was before Hurricane Rita, and a whole lot of oil drilling, got to it! But it recovered from Audrey back in 1957, and slowly it’s recovering now—although Hurricane Ike did damage as well. There are several relatively new books now on the marsh and its importance. And let me add, New Orleans doesn’t have any connection with the SW Louisiana marshes! Texas does, some, but the chenier marshes don’t go but about half way across Louisiana from west to east. I guess it’s territorial—my feeling for it. It’s ours!

Ink: Talk a bit about your writing process. How do you do work? Research? How do you go about blending fact and fiction, history and the imagination?

Renee: Haphazardly, without an editor to keep my feet to the fire!  I love research and often I truly think that’s why I write—to have an excuse to dig around in things. I can’t truthfully answer the second part of your question. I don’t honestly know. It just happens, I guess.

Ink: A book’s journey, from conception to completion, is usually a long one. What sort of journey has Once Upon a Place been on?

Renee: A very long one. Some parts of it were written 30 years ago. And there’ve been fits and starts and a complete turnaround in some [most?] parts of it. Such as when I had one ending in mind, and it simply refused to move until I changed direction.

Ink: You chose to take a self-publishing route for your novel. Could you talk a bit about your choice and your reasons for it?

Renee: My age. I’d never fully completed a book before—almost didn’t finish OUAP! Life and its troubles kept getting in the way. Things that all people face, I guess, but anyway…
I knew it was now or never. What I didn’t know was how very difficult it would turn out to be!

Ink: Talk a little about the process. What are the steps to publication, to finally having that printed book in hand?

Renee: You don’t have the space for it! For some it’s no problem. For finicky me it was really tough. So much that I didn’t know—had never heard—that a book had to be designed inside and out. I had to try to learn printing terms and all kinds of things. I kid when I say I mostly learned not to do it again! What I really learned is that people are great about helping. Most of them, anyway. There’re always a few bad apples.

Ink: What are some of the satisfactions and frustrations on this path? Was it satisfying to have control of the artistic process? The design, the cover, the font? And the frustrations? The risk and the reward?

Renee: Again it’s really too long to go into. And sometimes too unpleasant, because for a time I lost control to someone who had started out trying to help me. Someone else probably wouldn’t have gotten caught in that trap. The risk: failure. The rewards: to have your characters live and to give a reader enjoyment and maybe a little extra knowledge along the way. And it’s really nice when someone says “I really liked your book!” Kind of a “Sally Fields” moment.

Ink: How does the reality of a book compare to the dream, the image we have in our heads when we first begin to write?

Renee: Well, I’m not like that—having an image of a dream. It would take a movie to do that. To really see it. I hope that I’ve done a good enough job that my reader can see it in their imagination. That would be great. And having to wear so many hats to get it out there has dimmed any unbridled delight. Although my first sale was a real rush! Too bad many more haven’t followed. YET…

Ink: And now your book is heading out into the world on its own… any thoughts?

Renee: Unfortunately, it’s not ever on its own. What we as writers don’t understand or think about is that the actual writing pales in comparison to getting it to a publishing standard we can be proud of, in self-publishing at least. In major houses I’ve heard that’s out of your hands. But one thing that’s a constant to all published writers except those on Olympia is promotion and marketing. Now that is tough!! Especially for someone as old as I. Younger folks, such as you, know blogs and FB and My Space and Twitter and You Tube and trailers and websites and all the rest of it, but for me it’s just a jungle and I don’t have a machete.

And that’s one reason I can say Thank You, Bryan, for giving me this boost. God bless you and us all. To paraphrase Dickens. And you can look for it on Amazon.com: ONCE UPON A PLACE. Stop by even if you don’t want to buy. In about six weeks it’ll be available for your local library to order if you request it, if you’d prefer that route.

Okay, I stole a little promo here. (you can always edit it out!)



Editor's Note: Ink actually knows diddly about FB (Facebook?), My Space and Twitter. This is probably a good thing.

12 comments:

Renee said...

You're too modest, Bryan! Without you, OUAP might just have been another mss. in a box on the shelf!
Renee

sarahjayne smythe said...

Really great interview. Thanks.

Unknown said...

The self publsihing route is popular tonight.
It is fascinating to read about other's life experiences and the reasons they feel compelled to write.

dolorah said...

Very well written interview.

Renee I really liked that you didn't give in to "politically correctness" in writing the language and cultural diversity of the era.

I have to say too that I agree with Bryan about putting modern views in historical novels. When I read a historical, I get a sense of the time and place through the characters; and if they too closely resemble todays views, then it is just the same old story in a distant setting.

The movie Avatar hit me that way; it was cowboys and indians on an exotic world. Very beautifully done, but the tale itself was nothing new. I'm fascinated by your subject matter, and the saucy voice I'm imagining its written in.

Your adventure in self publishing sounds intriguing. I think I may have to hold out for an agent until I'm 82 also though, and I don't have the time or self promotion skills it would take to get published that route. It sounds like the hundreds of details in the publication process are even more frustrating than the query/rejection cycle.

Good luck with the sales, Renee, and congratulations on completing such an excellent sounding novel.

Thanks Ink for sharing the author and her novel. It was a delight to read.

........dhole

Matthew MacNish said...

Great read. Thanks for sharing Ink, and Renee.

D.G. Hudson said...

Bryan, excellent interview. I love that this woman is still writing at her regal age.

That's the trouble (the dilemma about being true to the time or to current conventions) with writing books about a bygone age -- someone always seems to get offended. That was then, this is now -- sometimes I think there are too many 'bleeding hearts'.

I'm interested in her book, and will check it out. I also plan to check out the Paris Reviews again. Thanks for reminding me about them!

Mira said...

Renee you sound like a really interesting - and brave - person. I bet that's reflected in your book!

Bryan, great interview, and that's so cool that you worked with Renee.

Hope everything goes splendidly for the launch! :)

Anonymous said...
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Renee said...

I want to thank you all for the great comments, but especially D.G. Hudson for the "regal age." Love it! So much better than "elderly" that I loathe. With your permission, I'm going to adopt it.

I hope if you check it out, and like what you see, you'll help me spread the word. I need all the help I can get. That's one reason I'm so grateful to Bryan.

Renee said...
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
Anonymous said...

Awesome interview. Very inspired by Renee's enthusiasm, intelligence and example. If the book is any match to her personality, it will sure be a winner. I know this book will be treasured by many people. Pieces like this epitomize the best potential of the internet. Thank you very much. Rennee, we may never meet, but you have just made a lasting positive impact on my life and dreams. Thank you. One day when I need the name for an inspirational character, I will use Renee in honor of you. I am going to recommend this book to my wife who loves this type of genre and suggest her to use it as a title for her book club.

Renee Goudeau said...

Anonymous, although I thank you for the effusive post, if I am an inspiration to anyone, it's news to me how! :)

However, I appreciate your kindness. And should your wife's bookclub decide to buy OUAP, I'll really appreciate it if they post a review on Amazon.

It has moved into a lot of places for sale now--vast differences in price!--as you can see if you Google FetchBook. But it's not on store shelves. Indies rarely are! It can however be ordered by a store.

Again my thanks to all of you who posted and even those who just browsed!
Renee G.