Elyse Durham is the author of the new novel Maya & Natasha. Her work has appeared in a variety of publications, including Cincinnati Review. She lives in Kalamazoo, Michigan.
Q: What inspired you to write Maya & Natasha?
A: I fell in love with ballet as an adult after one of my favorite musicians, Sufjan Stevens, collaborated with New York City Ballet. Seeing his music transformed into movement fascinated me, and I soon became obsessed with ballet—attending performances, taking dance classes myself, reading everything I could about dance.
Learning about Soviet dancers who defected to the West really piqued my interest. I wanted to know what it would look like to sacrifice everything you knew, everything you loved, for your art.
Q: How did you create your twin protagonists, and how would you describe their relationship?
A: Maya and Natasha are inseparable: they're all the family each other has. I like to think of them as one person split into two bodies—Maya is anxious and compassionate, and Natasha has all the grit and ambition.
Each of them has something the other can't live without—but as the novel opens, they learn they're going to have to choose between everything they've worked for and staying loyal to each other. Who could make a choice like that?
Q: How did you research the novel, and did you learn anything that especially surprised you?
A: I studied ballet extensively, both at the barre and in the theater, and I read countless biographies, memoirs, histories, and other books about the psychology of dance, dance injuries, et cetera. I interviewed academics, dancers, accompanists, doctors, and even got fitted for pointe shoes.
One of the most astonishing parts of my research was visiting the Jerome Robbins Dance Collection at the New York Public Library for the Performing Arts. I got to leaf through a dozen boxes of Soviet dance ephemera—programs, photographs—and watch home movies from Mikhail Baryshnikov's personal archive.
In one of the videos, a Soviet dance student slipped and fell—and she started laughing. That's when it hit me: for all the strained circumstances this student was facing, at heart, she was still just a girl.
Q: The writer David Haynes said that the book “[e]xplores the impossible choices at the intersection where love and obligation collide with a gifted artist’s hunger to reach the heights of success...” What do you think of that description, and what do you hope readers take away from the story?
A: One of the things that inspired this novel was George Balanchine's haunting
ballet La Valse, which features a young woman being seduced by the figure
of death. In the ballet, Death wins the woman over by appealing to her
vanity—and it's hard to separate ambition from vanity.
I wanted to explore what it would look like for someone to be completely seduced by their own ambition, and then live with the aftermath.
Q: What are you working on now?
A: I'm one of those people who always has multiple projects swirling around. I'm not sure who's going to reach the finish line first, but I know that whatever I'm working on, it has to stretch me to the limits of my ability. That's what makes it worth doing.
Q: Anything else we should know?
A: This book is about a lot of things—art, ambition, sisterhood—but it's also about navigating impossible choices under an authoritarian government. Maya and Natasha's story is about the moral ambiguity of trying to forge a good life in the midst of circumstances totally out of your control. I hope it's a story that gives people courage.
--Interview with Deborah Kalb