Kate Christensen is the author of the new novel Good Company. Her other books include the memoir Blue Plate Special. She lives in New Mexico.
Q: You’ve said of Good Company that it “isn’t a screed or manifesto, it’s a fictional expression of my own recent deep dive into the sources of my own internalized misogyny and my complicity in the way certain men have treated me all my life.” Can you say more about that, and about how you created your character Julia?
A: Looking back at my 2013 memoir, Blue Plate Special, a decade after its publication, I found myself regretting all the things I couldn’t say due to the constraints of memoir, while enduring the repercussions of all the things I did due to the risks of memoir. I felt an unresolved itch to delve into it all again, this time without holding anything back.
One of the things I wanted to get at was the anger I was finally letting myself feel at all the ways in which I’d been treated by men I’d been entangled with, not only romantically but also professionally. I wanted to get into it all: their behavior, and my own complicity in it. But I had no interest in exposing myself or anyone else in memoir ever again; that felt too raw, too potentially fraught. It had to be fiction.
In Good Company, I merged the “I” of a memoir with the “I” of a novel. But I also let my imagination transform this “I” into a purely fictional one.
Q: The writer Jessica Anthony said of the book, “This is a memoir disguised as a novel, starring a protagonist who has written a memoir—a super-sharp postmodern experiment in memory and narrative subjectivity.” What do you think of that description?
A: To write Good Company the way it demanded to be written, I had to invent a new form. In order to show Julia’s memoir informing the present-day action of the novel, I embedded excerpts within the present-day action.
Crucially, all of the events and characters in the novel had to be fictional and fictionalized, no matter how closely they hewed to the particulars of my own life. This book was the sturdy container for the hardest and truest things I needed to explore.
Q: How was the novel’s title chosen, and what does it signify for you?
A: In my mid-40s, after a lifetime of trying to be “good company” for men, a compliment I took as a badge of honor, everything started to change.
I finally left my first marriage. I fell in love with a man 20 years younger than I was, and our surprisingly equal footing allowed me to move beyond the old male-female dynamic. I went through menopause and got sober after 25 years of hard drinking.
During these years, I went through a long reckoning, a full accounting of all the ways in which I’d failed myself, failed other women, by dedicating myself to the impossible and unfulfilling quest for male approval.
I realized that being called “good company” by men was not a compliment, but a means of control. The title came from this shifting perception as I woke up to the truth.
Q: What do you hope readers take away from the book, especially given current news headlines?
A: I hope anyone else who’s ever enabled destructive male behavior out of fear or insecurity will take heart from Julia’s experiences and maybe even feel compelled to take action.
As women’s hard-won rights are steadily eroded in this country, as oppression and abuse of women becomes a global epidemic, I hope we come together to fight for ourselves and one another regardless of race, politics, nationality, or religion. We’re all in this together along with all the planet’s living things.
Q: What are you working on now?
A: I’m about to start a new novel set in Berkeley, California, in 1968. It’s about female friendship, the connection between art and activism, domestic and political violence, and romantic love.
Q: Anything else we should know?
A: I think I’ve said it all! Thank you so much for your thoughtful questions.
--Interview with Deborah Kalb. Here's a previous Q&A with Kate Christensen.






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