Wednesday, January 7, 2026

Q&A with Yannick Murphy

 

Photo by Clark Hsiao

 

 

Yannick Murphy is the author of the new novel Things That Are Funny on a Submarine But Not Really. Her other books include The Call. She lives in Vermont.

 

Q: What inspired you to write Things That Are Funny on a Submarine But Not Really, and how did you create your character Dead Man?

 

A: We have three children who all entered the Navy, and they’re all great storytellers. I was able to learn from them what submarine life was like, and I also learned what life could be like for submariners when they transition to the civilian world.  

 

Even though it’s peacetime, that transition can be rife with complications because a submarine is such an insular world where social interactions and responsibilities are on a different level than what civilians experience.  

 

Our children often relay submarine stories that are hysterically funny, but they’re also told in tandem with other anecdotes that can be serious and sad.

 

The bond of shared humor that sailors often have seems like a way to survive that pain as well as survive the tedium of endless drills, and the pressure of always having to be in a heightened state of operational readiness.

 

In the book, on the submarine, Doc asks Dead Man, the narrator, to spy on his friend Tintin because the ship’s brass suspect Tintin of being a spy for China. Dead Man is torn between doing what he's asked to do and facing the consequences of insubordination.  

 

The inner turmoil of Dead Man refusing to betray his friend, and the added tension when the submarine seriously engages with the Chinese near the South China Sea, which further escalates when another friend of Dead Man goes missing after a swim call off the side of the submarine, provides for a sequence of events that test Dead Man and give the reader the chance to see how he would react in such situations.  

 

Everything that happens on the submarine still haunts Dead Man even when he leaves the Navy and goes to college. 

 

The character Dead Man evolved because I wanted to explore a character who is still straddling these two worlds – a turbulent Navy life and a college life where he’s older than most of the other students and doesn’t fit in.  

 

I also wanted a character who was completely honest and whose speech was realistic. It gave me the chance to show, rather than tell, who he was, so the reader could decide for themselves what the effects of being on a submarine were on Dead Man, and how it shaped his relationships in the civilian world. 

 

Q: How was the novel’s title chosen, and what does it signify for you?

 

A: In the book, I focused on this irony of having a constant hum of humor even when there are serious life-altering situations and emotions taking place because I believe this provides for an inherent tension that is at the core of storytelling.

 

The title is also a window into who Dead Man is, a young male character whose experiences can be harsh, but who manages them with his constant sarcasm and wit. 

 

Q: How did you research the book, and what did you learn that especially surprised you?

 

A: I read a lot about submarines, and I’ve toured a couple, but more importantly I listened like the proverbial fly on the wall whenever my children started swapping submarine stories. 

 

Oftentimes, they speak using so many acronyms that their father and I have to interrupt to get clarification, although that is often met with eye rolls, and not direct answers. It’s the secret language of the deep, that not everyone is privy to.  

 

What I learned that was surprising is that there are more planes in the sea than there are in the sky, meaning that a pilot is more likely to be shot down than there is a risk of a submarine being attacked.

 

Submariners like reminding people of this fact anytime someone says they would never be caught dead on a submarine. 

 

Q: The Kirkus Review of the book described it as “[t]he rollicking, sometimes frightening, in-the-end surprisingly moving evolution of a submariner into a mensch.” What do you think of that description?

 

A: I think that’s an accurate description of how I wanted Dead Man to be perceived at the end of the novel; however, I strove for the character and actions to speak for themselves, without having the reader think that they were being told how to feel or react to the events and the plot.

 

I was miserly in terms of explaining Dead Man’s emotions, as I hoped the meagerness could be transferred into a sort of radiance that was evident throughout the book as a whole.

 

It’s accurate to say that it’s an evolution of a submariner, as it’s a coming-of-age story of a young man who goes straight from high school into the submarine force, and then when his time is up in the Navy he tries to navigate life as a college student.

 

The irony of it all is not lost on Dead Man, who realizes that almost everyone around him is younger than he is, but they’re also more adept at socializing with other college students than he is.  

 

The experience he gained while on his big steel tube of dumb proves to be irrelevant on a college campus, leaving him adrift, while at the same time he is haunted by his submarine buddies of the past whose troubles add to his own.

 

Q: What are you working on now?    


A: I wrote a corollary to an earlier book titled The Call. The Call is about a horse doctor in Vermont, which is written as entries into a call log.  

 

This new book, The Summer We Were Lost in Space, is the corollary to The Call and it will be published by the same publisher of Things That are Funny on a Submarine But Not Really.  

 

The Summer We Were Lost in Space revolves around the same family described in The Call, but it’s a different story. I loved the characters in The Call, and I wanted to spend more time with them.

 

The new book is based upon a murder that takes place in the town. The wife of the veterinarian becomes more of the central piece of the book, because now the log entries aren’t her husband’s, but hers. I felt like this wife has things to say.

 

I’ll soon be working on edits of The Summer We Were Lost in Space with my editor.

 

Q: Anything else we should know?

 

A: Thank you so much for the interview!

 

--Interview with Deborah Kalb 

Q&A with Sherry McAllister

 


 

Sherry McAllister is the author of the new book Adjusted Reality: Supercharge Your Whole-Being for Optimal Living and Longevity. She is a chiropractor, and is the president of the Foundation for Chiropractic Progress. 

 

Q: What inspired you to write Adjusted Reality?

 

A: What inspired me to write Adjusted Reality began long before the research, the travels, or the thousands of conversations.

 

It started when I was 19 years old and survived a car accident that changed the trajectory of my life. Suffering severe debilitating headaches with no relief created a last hope effort to find relief.

 

Losing hope and unable to cope awakened something profound: a realization that health, alignment, and the nervous system are not luxuries—they’re lifelines.

 

That experience introduced me to a new profound philosophy, chiropractic care, which didn’t just help me recover physically; it opened my eyes to an entirely different way of understanding the human body, human potential, and the power of alignment. It led me to a career in chiropractic, the care that instilled hope.

 

For 28 years, I’ve witnessed something beautiful: just as patients are about to leave, hand on the door, they pause and ask the question that truly matters. The one they’ve carried quietly. The one they never felt heard enough, safe enough, or unhurried enough to ask elsewhere.

 

This book was written for them and for our future generations. For every person who has ever walked out of an appointment wishing they had one more minute, one more explanation, one more answer about their health, their body or their whole-being.

 

Adjusted Reality is that extra moment—expanded, honored, and held with care.

 

Q: How was the book’s title chosen, and what does it signify for you?

 

A: The title Adjusted Reality was chosen to honor two truths: the transformative care that chiropractors provide and the profound agency each of us holds over our own life.

 

An adjustment isn’t just a physical correction, it’s a reminder that change is possible. Too many people believe they have no choice, no voice, no influence over their health or their future.

 

But that’s simply not reality.

 

Your body is your greatest gift—wise, resilient, beautifully designed to heal, adapt, and thrive. And you get to decide how deeply you honor it. Adjusted Reality is an invitation to reclaim your power, rewrite your narrative, and choose a life aligned with vitality, purpose, and whole-being care.

 

Q: How did you research the book, and what did you learn that especially surprised you?

 

A: During my triathlon training days, I learned something that became a profound inspiration for Adjusted Reality.

 

I remember a morning swim when I kept feeling an ache in my low back—not terrible, but persistent. My initial thought, even as a chiropractor, was that it was a back issue. But after a session with my chiropractor, we discovered it wasn’t my back at all. It was my ankle that was the cause.

 

I recalled the injury a few days before where I hit the curb wrong and felt my ankle roll in. The pain was sharp, but brief, so I continued my running the next few days.  That tiny misalignment created a ripple effect through my ankle, knee, hip, and finally my spine.

 

It was such a simple but powerful reminder: the body isn’t a collection of parts, it’s a connected, intelligent system. That close first-hand experience helped me realize that even when you know better, you still have to “do” better.

 

But what struck me most was what happened next. Once that alignment was corrected, not only did my back stop hurting—my breathing improved, my sleep deepened, my training stress dropped, and my confidence returned.

 

That experience stayed with me, because it mirrored what I heard over and over as I traveled: people are being treated segment by segment—as a bad knee, a tight back, a stiff neck—while their actual lives are telling a much bigger, interconnected story.

 

In my research, I had the extraordinary privilege of speaking with chiropractors across the world, listening to their triumphs, their heartbreaks, and the pure, unfiltered joy they feel when patients reclaim their lives through care.

 

At the same time, I was constantly traveling town to town, city to city, country to country, asking people what shapes their choices, both the ones that lift them up and the ones that hold them back. I felt compelled to gather these insights and present them in a way that could inspire others to choose differently, to live better, feel better and expect better.

 

Researching this book was a gift. The researchers I met were passionate, generous and eager to see their findings reach the public. Their commitment reminded me that healing is a mission, not a moment.

 

What surprised me most, though, was the kindness I received from people along the way. Strangers who shared their stories, encouraged the work and affirmed the human longing for hope, agency and whole-being health.

 

Adjusted Reality is the result of all the working parts coming together to tell a story.

 

Q: What do you hope readers take away from the book?

 

A: More than anything, I want readers to walk away with a completely new understanding of health—one that goes far beyond symptoms, diagnoses, or isolated body parts.

 

Adjusted Reality is a call to see ourselves through the lens of whole-being health, where everything is connected and nothing about our lives happens in isolation.

 

Most people have been taught to think in fragments: A back problem is a back problem. A headache is a headache. Stress is “just stress.”

 

But true health doesn’t work that way. A pain in your back might begin in your foot. A migraine might start with how you breathe.


And, as my dear friend Mitzi Perdue shared during the evening of our book launch, overwhelming stress can show up as very real, very physical pain that no scan or test can explain until someone asks about their whole life, not just their aching body.

 

I want readers to finally see the full picture: your nervous system, your alignment, your emotions, your environment, your habits—they’re all intertwined, influencing each other every moment of every day.

 

When readers turn the last page, my hope is that they feel empowered, not overwhelmed. Empowered to ask new questions, to look deeper, to consider connections they may have overlooked and to recognize that small shifts in alignment—physical, emotional, mental—can create profound changes in how they feel and how they live.

 

If they walk away with one truth, let it be this: health is not a single appointment, a single stretch, or a single adjustment. It’s a way of moving through life with awareness, alignment and agency.

 

And that is the heart of Adjusted Reality, helping people reclaim their capacity to understand themselves as whole-beings so they can live whole, aligned, intentional lives.

 

And I hope they feel encouraged to connect with a trusted healthcare practitioner who can guide them with wisdom, up-to-date knowledge, and a personalized approach that honors how and why the body heals.

 

Q: What are you working on now?

 

A: Right now, my work lives at the intersection of leadership, advocacy and whole-being transformation.

 

As president of the Foundation for Chiropractic Progress (F4CP)—one of the most influential organizations championing whole-being health—I spend each day advancing a simple but powerful truth: health is not fragmented, transactional, or symptom-based. It is interconnected. It is dynamic. And it is shaped by alignment in every aspect of our lives.

 

Each day, I have the privilege of leading national public-education campaigns, collaborating with state associations and chiropractic colleges, developing evidence-based resources and driving initiatives that elevate the role of alignment and nervous-system health in modern care.

 

With more than 39,000 chiropractors united behind this mission, dozens of corporate partners, and expanding global reach, the Foundation gives me a platform to shift how America understands whole-being health, movement, and holistic care.

 

At the same time, I’m deeply committed to sharing Adjusted Reality, not just as a book, but as a movement awakening people to their own potential. I’m working with practitioners, healthcare leaders, athletes, educators, and media voices to bring these concepts to as many people as possible.

 

From national TV appearances and keynote stages to university visits, corporate wellness events and the growing Adjusted Reality podcast, every platform becomes an opportunity to ignite change.

 

The goal is always the same: to give people a new framework for living healthier, clearer, more aligned lives—physically, emotionally, and purposefully.

 

The work of the Foundation and the mission of Adjusted Reality are deeply woven together; one amplifies the other. Both champion the understanding that true health requires connection, alignment, and agency—not fragmentation or quick fixes.

 

Every day, my commitment is to empower patients, equip practitioners, elevate chiropractic and transform how the world sees whole-being health. And as I share Adjusted Reality on stages around the globe, I have the extraordinary privilege of watching the movement unfold—seeing people light up with recognition, curiosity and renewed possibility.

 

We’re building momentum toward a global “I’m Adjusted” movement, one that inspires reflection, conversation, community, and meaningful action.

 

In short, I’m weaving storytelling, science, advocacy, and heart into a cultural wake-up call—ensuring that Adjusted Reality becomes far more than a book. It becomes a movement for whole-being care, alignment, and the empowered, intentional lives we are all capable of living.

 

Q: Anything else we should know?

 

A: May we all have the gift of living in the light of what makes us happy. The last chapter of the book is set to remind us that we can live with true intention and passion when we do what is in our hearts. Finding our true passion and living it daily is what creates true vitality!

 

--Interview with Deborah Kalb 

Jan. 7

 


 

ON THIS DAY IN HISTORY
Jan. 7, 1891: Zora Neale Hurston born.

Tuesday, January 6, 2026

Q&A with Sandra Freels

 


 

Sandra Freels is the author of the new novel Anneke Jans in the New World. She was the longtime head of the Russian program at Portland State University, and she lives in Portland, Oregon. 

 

Q: You write that your character Anneke was based on a historical figure--how did you learn about her and at what point did you decide to write this novel?

 

A: I came upon Anneke through genealogy; I believe she is my 11G grandmother. Her name at one time was fairly well known—until recently there was even an "Anneke Jans" restaurant in Kittery, Maine—not because of anything she did in her lifetime but because of litigation surrounding her estate and a subsequent scam aimed at her descendants.

 

There are numerous biographical sketches of her online, some of them authoritative and some quite fanciful, but none of them gave me a sense of Anneke as a living woman with joys and sorrows and 10 children to feed. I kept thinking about what her life must have been like until it became so real to me that I needed to write it down.

 

Q: What did you see as the right blend of fiction and history as you wrote the book?

 

A: Anneke Jans is a work of imagination. I have tried to be faithful to historical events and to the basic facts of Anneke's life, but everything else—personalities, relationships, motivations, reactions—is invented.

 

Q: How did you research the book, and did you learn anything that especially surprised you?

 

A: The biggest surprise is that detailed records of the council sessions of New Amsterdam still exist and are available online in English translation. Reading those records is like eavesdropping on people who lived 400 years ago.

 

I was also surprised to learn that the population of New Netherland was so diverse. People of many different nations came together there and created a vibrant society unlike anything the world had ever seen before.

 

I started by sifting through online records for references to Anneke, her family, and her friends, and then I read every book on New Netherland I could get my hands on. I pored over art books and even cookbooks, hoping to get a sense of what life was like in a 17th-century Dutch village.

 

I'm bound to have made mistakes, but I hope I have told Anneke's story as it really might have happened.

 

Q: What do you hope readers take away from the book?

 

A: Above all, I hope that readers perceive Anneke as a real person and that they identify with her as she makes her way through an unknown world. I hope they come to love her as much as I do.

 

Q: What are you working on now?

 

A: I'm working on a stand-alone sequel to Anneke Jans, a fictional biography of Anneke's daughter Sara Roelofs, which I hope in time will become the middle volume of a New Netherland trilogy.

 

Q: Anything else we should know?

 

A: Readers can contact me at www.sandrafreels.com. I'm always happy to meet with book clubs, both in person and virtually, and have posted discussion questions there that they might enjoy using.

 

--Interview with Deborah Kalb 

Q&A with Dale V. Atkins

 


 

 

Dale V. Atkins is the author of the new children's picture book The Turquoise Butterfly. Her other books include The Kindness Advantage. She is a psychologist and educator, and she lives in Connecticut. 

 

Q: What inspired you to write The Turquoise Butterfly, and how did you create your character Victoria?

 

A: I was inspired by my late mother, Sylvia Atkins--a caring and devoted mother, grandmother and great-grandmother, who created deep, loving bonds with each of her grandchildren and great-grandchildren. She also cherished friendships across generations enriching the lives of those around her just as they enriched hers. 

 

Since I became a grandmother 21 years ago, I discovered countless ways to connect with each of my six grandchildren by tuning into their personalities, interests, and the "season of life" they were navigating. 

 

A couple of them were a bit anxious about participating in activities. Whenever any of my grandchildren hesitated to try something new, I felt called to understand their worries and to help them through gently, in ways that honored who they were rather than what I might have expected.

 

Victoria is a composite of a few children, one of whom is my granddaughter. One of my granddaughters used to feel distressed when separated from her parents. Over time, however, she and I created a tradition of carving out one special week each year for our own adventure. We would climb into the car and set off on the road—but only after planning every detail together. And we would frequently be in touch with her parents.

 

Like Victoria, she liked to know what to expect; without a clear plan, she would get "butterflies in her tummy."  So, we would sit side by side, choosing hotels, looking at restaurants, and deciding which parks we would explore. Knowing the plan helped her feel grounded and far less anxious, and it became a comforting ritual that connected us more deeply. 

 

Over time the precision of our planning began to loosen, and we found ourselves able to include a bit more spontaneity in our adventures. As she grew more comfortable, our itineraries made space for surprises—a new trail to wander, an unexpected ice cream stop, a detour to explore something intriguing along the way.

 

This gentle shift not only broadened our experiences but also gave her a growing sense of confidence and adaptability and freedom, allowing her to trust herself and the world a little more with each passing year.

 

Q: How would you describe the relationship between Victoria and her grandmother? 

 

A: Their relationship is loving, close, and deeply respectful. Even though Grandma Sylvia is naturally adventurous and eager to take risks, she gently encourages Victoria to move at her own pace in her own time. She opens the door to the wider world without pushing it open too quickly.

 

And when plans change or fears arise, Grandma Sylvia meets Victoria's worries with compassion and empathy, guiding her through challenging moments despite her granddaughter’s hesitation or fear.

 

Grandma Sylvia becomes a role model for problem-solving; a steady presence who knows when to distract, when to comfort, and when simply to stand beside Victoria as a safe harbor in the storms of the anxiety. 

 

With patience and tenderness, she teaches Victoria ways to calm herself, to face difficulties with increasing confidence, and to view her feelings as part of the journey toward resilience.

 

They are each their authentic selves who, at different times, need encouragement and support from the other. Together, they are each reliable, vulnerable, and strong in different ways. They both understand the quiet importance of truly "being there" for oneself and for another, as life's unexpected moments unfold.

 

Q: What do you think Amelina Jones’s illustrations add to the book?

 

A: Amelina Jones's vibrant, soulful illustrations invite the reader into the world of Grandma Sylvia and her granddaughter, Victoria. Her art brings their relationship to life, capturing the tenderness, trust, and joy they share. 

 

Through luminous color, expressive body language and facial expressions, thoughtful clothing details, and the comforting, sometimes unexpected presence of nature, we feel the depth of their emotional connection.

 

The natural world around them seems to burst with life and energy—flowers in bloom, trees stretching toward the sky, butterflies in motion—all reflecting the beauty and vitality of their bond. 

 

The artwork wraps the reader in warmth, helping us experience the love, courage, and growth that define their journey together.

 

Q: What do you hope readers take away from the story?

 

A: At its heart, this story invites readers to witness the beautiful unique bond between a bold grandmother and her granddaughter who often feels anxious as they spend one meaningful week together each year.

 

Through their shared adventures, both planned and spontaneous, they learn from each other, and discover courage, patience, and the quiet strength that love makes possible.

 

The butterfly symbolizes the transformation that occurs within each of the characters and their relationship as well as their forever eternal connection.

 

I hope readers come away with a deeper appreciation for the enduring nature of love, the gentle signs that keep us connected even across time, and the lifelong lessons that pass between generations.

 

This book celebrates the tender, transformative bond between a grandparent and a grandchild – a bond that shapes us, steadies us, and stays with us always.

 

Q: What are you working on now?

 

A: I am finishing another children’s book, Dear Deer. It is a love letter to nature and forest animals, capturing the curiosity and excitement of two children as they explore, discover, and learn about the wonders of the wild.

 

As the children embark on their adventure, they come across a baby deer in distress, prompting them to find a way to help without causing any harm. Through their efforts, the children learn valuable lessons about compassion, patience, empathy, tuning into their senses, and the delicate balance of nature. 

 

Q: Anything else we should know?

 

A: My deep belief is that there is great power in intergenerational connection that can help us develop and grow in ways we did not know possible.

 

--Interview with Deborah Kalb 

Monday, January 5, 2026

Q&A with Amy Meyerson

 


 

Amy Meyerson is the author of the new novel The Water Lies. Her other books include The Bookshop of Yesterdays. She teaches at the University of Southern California. 

 

Q: What inspired you to write The Water Lies, and how did you create your characters Tessa and Barb?

 

A: When I get pregnant with my first child, I became more aware of the ways motherhood was displayed in the books that I read. In recent years, there have been a lot of novels about the challenges of motherhood. Specifically, I've read wonderful books about reluctant motherhood, troubled children, and postpartum.

 

While all of these are important stories to tell, I found that my experiences of motherhood weren't represented in these stories. I wanted to capture the daily challenges of motherhood, how hard it can be even when you want to be a parent.

 

Specifically, I was thinking a lot about the daily anxieties of early motherhood and the emotional journey of watching your child grow more and more independent of you. So, I knew thematically what I was interested in before a story came to me.

 

Then, when my son was starting to speak, I was really struck by how he acquired language and the gap between what he wanted to say to me and what he could. For him, it was frustrating, but I began to imagine a scenario where the inability of a young child to communicate wasn't just a struggle but was terrifying. From there, The Water Lies was born.

 

Since I wanted to write a book about early motherhood, Tessa's character came to me first. I put a lot of my experiences as a pregnant woman into her. She embodies that combination of the way the world treats you and the way, accurate or not, you assume you're being treated.

 

As I started to write Tessa's character, I realized that the novel was too narrow when told only from her perspective. As I was thinking how to expand the book, I was struck by a conversation I had with my mother-in-law about how she feels undervalued in society.

 

I began to realize that many of the ways I felt I was treated as a pregnant woman paralleled nicely with how older women in our society are treated. From there, Barb was born. 

 

Q: The novel is set along the Venice Canals in Los Angeles--why did you choose that setting, and how important is setting to you in your writing?

 

A: I've always written places I know well. I think it's difficult to write setting if you aren't familiar with the world your characters are embodying.

 

To me, setting is relative to the story you're trying to tell. In some of my novels, it was very important. In others, less so. In this, it was essential. I knew that I wanted the novel to take place along a body of water because it centers on a drowning.

 

I explored a lot of options--Echo Lake in Echo Park, LA, the fountain in Rittenhouse Square in Philadelphia--before settling on the canals. The other locales didn’t seem specific enough for Tessa, the mother of the boy who recognized the drowned woman, to think the death had something to do with her son. It needed to be literally outside their doorstep.

 

I also knew that I wanted the location to feel unique and cinematic. Once I thought of the canals, there was no turning back. While there have been a few movies featuring the canals, I couldn’t find any novels set there. That told me I’d landed on a pretty special setting.

 

Often, with writing, you make a choice intuitively and then later realize why it’s essential to the story. The setting of the canals organically gave the novel a voyeuristic quality that works really well with the paranoia of the plot.

 

Q: In the book’s acknowledgments, you write, “Every novel requires a leap of faith, but this one’s felt especially big. I was entering a new genre where I'd only ever been a reader.” What was it like to write this novel, and was your writing process different this time?

 

A: With every novel, I like to set up new challenges for myself. With this it was to see if I could write a thriller.

 

During the height of the pandemic, I started listening to a lot of thrillers and I was really impressed with the structure of so many of them. This gave me an inkling that I wanted to see if I could plot one too.

 

I think the biggest difference here was that plotting. I studied a lot of books I admired, breaking down how the story unfolded. And I learned a lot about leading the reader--and myself--astray in order to surprise.

 

Q: What do you think the novel says about motherhood?

 

A: Much of this book is about motherhood. The beginning and end. The anxieties. The instincts. It's also about pregnancy and the desire to be a mother. I don't want to give anything away, but my hope was that mothers with a range of experiences would feel seen in this book.

 

Q: What are you working on now?

 

A: I'm working on a new novel that's slated to come out next year. It's another thriller, this time about a school camping trip set on Santa Cruz, one of the Channel Islands off the coast of Ventura, California, and the most remote park in the National Parks system.

 

As you can imagine in a thriller set on an island, things start to go wrong. It's about the parents rather than the children, how they can't leave their secrets behind on the mainland.

 

Q: Anything else we should know?

 

A: If you read the novel and enjoy, please reach out! I love hearing from readers.

 

--Interview with Deborah Kalb. Here's a previous Q&A with Amy Meyerson. 

Q&A with Katie Bernet

 

Photo by Mae Haines

 

 

Katie Bernet is the author of the new young adult novel Beth Is Dead. It's an updated take on Louisa May Alcott's classic novel Little Women. Bernet lives in Dallas.

 

Q: What inspired you to write this updated YA murder mystery version of Little Women?

 

A: I’ve always been fascinated by Beth March’s literary death. As the oldest of three sisters, I’m a huge fan of Little Women, but Beth’s passing crushed me, and I never understood how she, herself, could accept it so peacefully.

 

I thought it would be interesting to transform her death into a murder that happens in chapter one, because it would give her sisters time to rage, grieve, and search for meaning. And since Beth’s perspective is included in flashback, she has a chance to find meaning as well. 

 

Q: What did you see as the right balance between Louisa May Alcott’s original March sisters and your own takes on the characters?

 

A: I wanted the heart and soul of each character to remain the same, but I had so much fun imagining who they would be in a modern setting.

 

I’m particularly interested in the way readers, including myself, have stereotyped the characters over time. Meg is romantic, Jo is ambitious, Amy is a brat, and Beth is, um…dead. I wanted to round them out again, to remind people that they’re multifaceted in the original work. 

 

Q: Why do you think Little Women still has such a hold on readers, more than 150 years after its publication?

 

A: I may be a little biased, but I think the story stays in our hearts, because it offers a window into sisterhood—a bond unlike any other. While reading Little Women, you live with the March family. For a time, you have sisters. And if you ask me, there’s nothing better. 

 

Q: Do you have a favorite March sister?

 

A: Before writing Beth Is Dead, I would have chosen Jo without thinking twice. She’s a writer, I share her temper, and I’ve always been inspired by her ambition.

 

But now—I choose Beth. She’s a homebody, she’s thoughtful, and even when she’s facing her own untimely, unfair death, she remains kind. I can’t imagine anything braver. 

 

Q: What are you working on now?

 

A: I’m working on turning another literary classic into a YA mystery/thriller. I’m going to leave people guessing, but here’s a hint—I almost share a last name with the original author.

 

Q: Anything else we should know?

 

A: I can’t wait for readers to get their hands on this book, partly because it’s just so gorgeous. My publisher, Sarah Barley Books (Simon & Schuster), did such an incredible job with the cover, the interior, and every little detail. It’s the kind of book I’d buy for the beauty alone, and I’m so grateful for that.

 

--Interview with Deborah Kalb