Friday, May 15, 2026

Q&A with JoAnn McCaig

  


 

JoAnn McCaig is the author of the new novel Beneficiary. Her other books include An Honest Woman. She taught for 20 years at the University of Calgary, and she owns the independent bookstore Shelf Life Books in Calgary, Alberta. 

 

Q: What inspired you to write Beneficiary, and how did you create your character Seren?

 

A: My inspiration for writing the novel is that this character and her life story just kept pestering me and refused to stay in the drawer.

 

I wrote the early drafts of the first two sections of the novel, "The Vigo Reaction" and "Family Fugue," in the 1990s when I was a beleaguered single mom in grad school. (Which is a good thing, because now that I’m a grandmother, I barely remember what it was like to be the mother of a bunch of little kids, but those two sections fortunately captured it.)

 

Over the ensuing years as I worked on the novel, the central character’s name changed many times. First it was Sarah, then it was Sally. It was even Ramona for a while. 

 

But then, during Covid, when I made the commitment to complete the novel, “Seren” floated up out of the ether, so fresh and unfamiliar that I thought I’d invented it. And I loved the resonant suggestion that her life’s journey is one that moves toward serenity. 

 

However, I later learned Seren is in fact a fairly common Welsh name, AND just last year (and this is weird) I also stumbled upon a very early version of the novel in which my central character was named, you guessed it, Seren! So I guess the name was just meant to be.

 

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

 

A: The original title was The Venus Hum, which comes up in an early draft (since deleted) when Seren’s young son is diagnosed with a venous hum, but she immediately imagines the word as referring to the goddess of love and not a body part.

 

And to me, this mixup was indicative of how Seren’s ambivalence and confusion about romance was like a barely detectable hum or murmur in her heart.

 

However, in 2004, Calgary author Suzette Mayr published a novel called Venous Hum, and I realized that I needed to find a new title. Still, my early plan was to name each section after a misheard or misspelled medical condition, like Venus Hum for Venous Hum.

 

Hence "The Vigo Reaction," which is what Seren hears her doctor say in the delivery room when he’s actually saying vasovagal reaction. And also "Family Fugue" which suggests a fugue state as well as a game show.  

 

I settled on the current title very late in the game when I finally began to see how Seren is the beneficiary not only of her father’s estate but also of all of her life experiences: every up, every down, every crazy-making and impossible situation, they all push her toward becoming the woman she was always meant to be.

 

Q: Did you know how the novel would end before you started writing it, or did you make many changes along the way?

 

A: I never know how a book is going to end when I start writing. I am a meanderer. I just kind of wander around in the material and see what happens. I’m also something of a magpie, gathering shiny beads and bits of string and bringing them all back to the nest to weave into some kind of cohesive whole. 

 

For me, writing is a process of discovery, not the working through of a pre-set plan or idea.

 

Q: The author Barbara Joan Scott said of the book, “The book is structurally brilliant, but it’s Seren who will captivate: witty, complex, flawed, shining in her uniqueness.” What do you think of that assessment?

 

A: It’s gratifying to hear such a generous statement.

 

Let me put it this way: I’ve loved fiction since I was a child. And though I adored the work of Charles Dickens, one thing that always bothered me was his utterly flat depictions of female characters: they were either impossibly saintly (Agnes, Little Nell) or implacably evil (Estella, Miss Havisham). 

 

I want to read about characters who are fully rounded and puzzling human beings. I would rather that Seren be seen as interesting than as likeable or “relatable.”

 

Q: What are you working on now? 

 

A: There’s no new fiction on the horizon at the moment. (Well maybe a story or two -- which, come to think of it, is actually how all three of my novels started out….) 

 

But I’ve published a few essays in anthologies lately, one in a collection about infertility called Barren, and another about my mom in a collection about family secrets. 

 

So my current plan is to gather together these nonfiction pieces, and add some new ones about various topics that interest and/or obsess me these days -- like the hideous decline in literacy (spelling errors in The Guardian! A punctuation error in The New Yorker! A misplaced modifier in a national newspaper!) and perhaps publish a collection of personal essays.

 

Q: Anything else we should know?

 

A: I’m active in several areas of the book world.  For 20 years, I taught English at the University of Calgary. I co-founded and still own Shelf Life Books, an independent bookstore in my hometown of Calgary, Alberta. 

 

I was the co-founder of the literary press Freehand Books, and am currently the owner of a Saskatchewan based literary publishing company called Thistledown Press.

 

Thanks so much for your interest in my work, Deborah. I appreciate it.

 

--Interview with Deborah Kalb 

Q&A with Evelina Ruimy

  


 

 

Evelina Ruimy is the author of the new children's picture book The Kind Bunny. She lives in Los Angeles. 

 

Q: What inspired you to write The Kind Bunny, and how did you create your character Hop?

 

A: This story came to me during a very emotional time, when I felt an instinctive need to protect my children—not just physically, but emotionally. I think every parent understands that feeling. Words can stay with us, and I wanted to create something that could help children process those moments when something doesn’t feel right.

 

Hop came from that place. He isn’t perfect, and he doesn’t always know what to do—but he feels things deeply. That was important to me. I wanted him to reflect how children actually experience the world: quietly, internally, and often without the tools to fully understand what they’re feeling.

 

His growth is gentle, not dramatic. He doesn’t “win” or overpower anyone—he learns to return to himself. And from that place, he’s able to respond with kindness and empathy. To me, that’s real strength.

 

Q: How would you describe the dynamic between Hop and Ruff?

 

A: Hop and Ruff represent something very real. Ruff isn’t simply “the unkind character”—he’s a reflection of how hurt can sometimes show up in behavior. Their dynamic isn’t about good versus bad. It’s about misunderstanding, emotion, and the quiet choice of how to respond.

 

What matters most to me is that Hop doesn’t try to defeat Ruff. He recognizes that something deeper may be going on, and he chooses empathy without losing himself. That balance of staying kind while also staying grounded in who you are and is at the heart of their relationship.

 

Q: What do you think Siski Kalla’s illustrations add to the story?

 

A: Siski brought a softness to the story that words alone can’t fully capture.

 

The emotional tone, the quiet moments, the hesitation, the warmth—lives so beautifully in the illustrations. Children often feel things before they can articulate them, and her artwork helps bridge that gap.

 

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

 

A: More than anything, I hope children walk away with the understanding that kindness starts within.

 

It’s not just about being kind to others. It’s about being kind to yourself in moments that feel confusing, hurtful, or uncertain.

 

I hope they see that they don’t have to react to unkindness with more unkindness. They can pause, understand, and choose a different response.

 

Q: What are you working on now?

 

A: Right now, I’m continuing to explore stories that help children understand their inner world—emotions, identity, and the quieter moments that shape how they see themselves.

 

Q: Anything else we should know?

 

A: I don’t approach stories as lessons to teach. I approach them as feelings to understand.

 

Everything I write comes from a very real place, often as a mother trying to give my children something I wish I had when I was younger.

 

--Interview with Deborah Kalb. This Q&A was conducted in partnership with Evelina Ruimy. Readers who join us on this virtual book tour will have the chance to win a hardcover copy of Hop's Tales: The Kind Bunny by Evelina Ruimy.  

Q&A with Joan Schoettler

  

Photo by Dennis Krug

 

 

Joan Schoettler is the author of the new children's picture book A Doctor at Heart: The Story of Groundbreaking Scientist and Teacher Vivien Thomas. Her other books include Books Travel the World. She lives in Fresno, California. 

 

Q: What inspired you to write this picture book biography of scientist Vivien Thomas (1910-1985)?

 

A: The HBO drama Something the Lord Made became my inspiration for this picture book. A friend suggested that I watch it, and I’m so pleased she recommended the documentary. It was my initial introduction to Vivien Thomas.

 

Motivated by the beginning of his story, I began taking notes while watching the documentary. The next day. I watched it again. That was the beginning of researching for a story that would become A Doctor at Heart: The Story of Groundbreaking Scientist and Educator Vivien Thomas, a picture book for young readers.

 

Q: How did you research his life, and what did you learn that especially surprised you?

 

A: After viewing the HBO film, I turned to the internet, where I felt the admiration each writer had for Vivien. Vivien’s autobiography Partners of the Heart: Vivien Thomas and his Work with Dr. Alfred Blalock provided insights into his home life, his early years, and working with Dr. Blalock and future cardiologists.

 

Vivien’s determination to learn, create, teach, and encourage others to set their goals high, like the former elevator operator who became a physician assistant, demonstrates the amazing scientist and teacher he was.

 

How Vivien touched so many people’s lives astonished me. I’m so pleased to have spent time researching, writing, and now sharing his story with students of all ages.

 

Q: What do you think Steffi Walthall’s illustrations add to the book?

 

A: Steffi Walthall’s illustrations brought Vivien’s story to life in ways that surpassed my expectations. Her research into the time period of Vivien’s life, studying illustrations of the characters in the story and making their portraits so lifelike, creating pages of disputes, anger, healing, surprise, satisfaction, and joy brought this story to life.

 

Pages where patterns, wooden shapes, and tools showing Vivien’s imagination floated off the page, the tools in his father’s carpentry workshop, and the instruments he created for the intricate cardiac surgery for “blue baby syndrome” are just some of the illustrations moving the story into warm, heartfelt, and engaging pages.

 

When he comforts the baby in the hospital, I feel his love and warmth and compassion.

 

Q: The Booklist review of the book says, “This attractive picture-book biography encourages students to aim high, work hard, and keep moving toward their goals.” What do you think of that description?

 

A: I haven’t thought of A Doctor at Heart that way, but reflecting on the Booklist review, it is an accurate description. Vivien’s determination to do his best, whether in school, working as a carpenter, learning in Dr. Blalock’s laboratory, solving complicated cardiac issues, or teaching future cardiologists, was reflected throughout his life.

 

Vivien grew up in a family where “[o]ur parents took time to let us know, in no uncertain terms, what was expected of us, and we in turn made every effort to live up to their expectations.” (Partners of the Heart: Vivien Thomas. 1985.) Vivien always kept working toward his goals.

 

Q: What are you working on now?

 

A: “Joan, your books traverse the world,” an agent once told me. I had never reflected about the setting of my work in that way, but as I look back on my books, my stories are set in Korea, Armenia, the United States. and, in the case of Books Travel the World (Bushel & Peck, July 2025), countries throughout the world. My current manuscripts are set in Japan, Italy, and Guatemala.

 

Art and nature play an important part in my life, so the stories I write hold themes centered around creativity and the natural world. 

 

Q: Anything else we should know?

 

A: Thank you for the opportunity to share information about A Doctor at Heart: The Story of Groundbreaking Scientist and Educator Vivien Thomas.

 

--Interview with Deborah Kalb 

May 15

 


 

ON THIS DAY IN HISTORY

May 15, 1890: Katherine Anne Porter born. 

Thursday, May 14, 2026

Q&A with Lori Carlson-Hijuelos

  


 

Lori Carlson-Hijuelos is the author of the new memoir A Writing Marriage. It focuses on her marriage to the late writer Oscar Hijuelos. Her other books include the novel The Sunday Tertulia

 

Q: Why did you decide to write this memoir?

 

A: In December 2013, my church, The Riverside Church in New York City, held a beautiful memorial service for Oscar. It was given two months after his death.

 

Following the service, an old friend of ours, Philip Graham, said to me, “You have to write about your life together, Lori.” In that moment, I knew I would. The marriage that Oscar and I created and cherished needed to be concretized for me on the page.

 

I wanted to leave behind our story so that Oscar’s readers could add to their understanding of his art and, also, his persona. And for purely selfish reasons, I needed to be able to hold our marriage in my hands. Not just remember it but touch it.

 

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

 

A: I did not really choose the title. The title resounded within me. And I liked it. I heard in my heart: Right. Write.

 

I suppose the title signifies two things. It refers to a marriage of writers who spent their days composing books. And, of course, it alludes to the unusual blending of fiction and nonfiction in memoir form, Oscar’s words from his unfinished novel and certain memories of mine--prompted by a cathedral workspace--of our life together.

 

Q: Why did you decide to incorporate excerpts from your husband’s novel Blue Antiquity into the memoir?

 

A: The scholar in me, the trained academic reader who was nurtured formally in a graduate school program years ago, wanted to try an approach to writing about marriage in a distinctive way.

 

I was amazed by Oscar’s pages of Blue Antiquity when I found them among the many boxes of materials in his studio, and I just knew they had to be published some way. Well, at least a selection of them, as the manuscript is about 2,000 pages long.

 

I began to analyze the manuscript as I read it, and it was during my emotional reading of the work that I understood I could comment in writing on the story he had been composing.

 

While I was pondering this idea, so too was my editor. We didn’t know we were thinking alike until we had a phone conversation about my proposal.

 

Q: What impact did it have on you to write the book, and what do you hope readers take away from it?

 

A: Writing this book had a religious impact on me as well as a forward-moving thrust upon me.

 

It has been more than a decade since Oscar’s sudden death from a heart attack in New York City’s Riverside Park, but the passing of those years did little to heal my spirit. Time was useless in lessening my pain. I have used the word “broken” to describe how I often felt after Oscar’s passing.

 

Writing my memoir in a cathedral library was an incredibly sacred experience. The subject matter of Oscar’s novel—often deeply spiritual and sometimes biblical—did not escape me as I wandered around in my soul, looking for connections to him, hoping to find him anew.

 

Oscar was SO present with me in First Lutheran Church in Jamestown, New York. God, Oscar, and I were making this book, I felt. I have found a certain peace in the writing of this memoir. I have moved forward. Finally.

 

I hope my readers are stirred by the faith, hope, and love in my book. Mainly, love.

 

Q: What are you working on now?

 

A: I am collaborating with a marvelous director, Andy Señor, Jr. on a musical of The Mambo Kings Play Songs of Love.

 

Q: Anything else we should know?

 

A: I am hoping to teach a college course, somewhere, that explores the grandeur of Oscar’s fiction—using the newly released paperbacks published by Grand Central/Hachette Book Group. I really want to teach an in-depth seminar that honors my husband’s literature.

 

--Interview with Deborah Kalb 

Q&A with T. Alex Blum

  

Photo by Suzanne Strong

 

T. Alex Blum is the author of the new memoir An Accident of Birth: A Story of Adoption & Identity. It focuses on his adoption and the discovery of his biological family. He has worked in marketing, advertising, and feature film production.

 

Q: Why did you decide to write this memoir?

 

A: When I was connected with my brothers in late 2019, we started to have Zoom calls on a regular basis. On these calls, we would share stories, histories (theirs and mine) and shared experiences, and it became a study of parallel lives, nature versus nurture, and the power of luck and coincidence.

 

I had always thought about writing a book, and it became clear to me that this was the book I should write. Once I had their blessing to pursue it, I started working on it, and the first draft was completed in about four years.

 

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

 

A: The expression “an accident of birth” refers to something that someone acquires or experiences purely as a result of their birth, which to me describes exactly the experience of adoption, with an extra layer of irony.

 

As an adoptee, the circumstances of your life are entirely determined by not only genetics and DNA but by a series of choices made by other people over which you have no influence or control.

 

Q: You include excerpts of reminiscences from your brothers in the book--why did you decide to do that?

 

A: As we shared our stories on our Zoom calls, I often asked my brothers to jot down their reminiscences and send them to me, and it became obvious to me that in the interests of authenticity, those stories should be included in the book and told by them in their own words.

 

In fact, when we recorded the audiobook, I had them record each of their sections so the listener would hear those stories in their own voices.

 

Q: What impact did it have on you to write this book, and what do you hope people take away from it?

 

A: Writing this book became a voyage of discovery for me, first in terms of my feelings about my own experience and about adoption in general and then in terms of all the people and all the stories I have encountered since I began this process.

 

I didn’t realize how many people’s lives are touched by the adoption experience, whether they are adoptees, birth parents and siblings, adoptive families and siblings, children and spouses of adoptees, and others.

 

I would like people to understand that adoption is far more complicated than most people realize, and the emotional landscape can be challenging in lots of ways, and it’s helpful for adoptees to understand that most likely they share issues in common with many other adoptees, and they should feel free to own their story and explore the issues.

 

Q: What are you working on now?

 

A: I am working on my next book, which strictly speaking is not a memoir, although it does deal with memory and the different forms it takes as it morphs over the years and perspectives change.

 

Q: Anything else we should know?

 

A: I thought writing the book would be the hard part. I had no idea how many things there are to figure out and do once the book is written!

 

--Interview with Deborah Kalb 

Q&A with Steven M. Rubin

  


 

 

Steven M. Rubin is the author of the new novel The Unraveling of Michael Galler. He lives in Weston, Connecticut. 

 

Q: What inspired you to write The Unraveling of Michael Galler, and how did you create your character Michael?

A: I had already decided I wanted to write a novel, but the ideas I was contemplated just didn’t resonate with me.

 

We often use the expression that something can “spread like a cancer.” One day I had that same thought about something specific that was continuing to frustrate me, which was then immediately followed by, “What if that thing really WAS cancer, just in another form other than the malignant cellular growth we typically associate with cancer?”

 

The concept that cancer could be some type of malevolent force that could manifest itself within us in different forms, or “disguises,” was intriguing to me.

 

And as an antagonist, I think it’s fair to say that we all fear cancer could be unwittingly growing and spreading within any one of us. And once we discover it is there, it is typically too late to survive it. The concept of having our worst fear growing inside us without our knowledge was frightening to me.

But to build this idea into a story, I had to reverse-engineer a character who could come to believe that the thing I had flippantly identified as comparable to a cancer, actually was Cancer; as some type of clever, sinister form that had set out to destroy him and his family.

 

I took some unrelated events from my early childhood and wondered how someone else might have been shaped differently if he came to believe they actually were related. That person became my protagonist, Michael Galler.

 

Q: Did you know how the novel would end before you started writing it, or did you make many changes along the way?

 

A: I knew exactly how it would end and the whole plot is a straight line from Michael’s inciting incident to its fated conclusion.

 

I won’t say it wasn’t without its challenges. I had to carefully develop the antagonist in a way that kept the reader guessing as to if, and how, Cancer might reveal itself to Michael, particularly when Michael was acutely aware of its potential existence.

 

It took some time to find where to begin, but the end was never in doubt. I also knew many of the places I had to get to along the way, but I still had much to fill in as the story developed.

I additionally needed another character who would become meaningful much later in the story, but introducing him later risked seeming too contrived.

 

So, I introduced Tremont early and we follow his separate path while observing how his traits are forged. But for Tremont, I never knew what his next episode was until I sat down to write a new chapter about him. I hope Tremont’s unflinching history also propels readers’ interest forward as they contemplate how these two disparate worlds will eventually intersect.

 

Q: The writer Jacqueline Friedland called the book a “thoughtful and emotionally charged exploration of endurance, obsession, and the fragile line between control and collapse...” What do you think of that description?

 

A: I thank Jacqueline for reading the book and sharing her perspective, and I feel she got it exactly right. The story only works if there is emotional resonance among the characters, and then they have to navigate a challenging, yet delicate landscape.

 

When I read the words she surely chose carefully, I felt they very well described all the mechanics I worked so hard to inject into every scene, and her description is evidence she comprehended all the subtle themes that were moving in tandem to get to its inevitable conclusion.

 

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

A: First and foremost, I hope readers are entertained by it; that is why we read fiction after all. I also hope they find some emotional attachment to the characters and become vested in their stories.

 

But ultimately, what I am trying to convey is that each of us lives in our own mind, and in that very private place we can create and nurture thoughts and ideas that can grow into something unexpectedly both harmful or hopeful.

 

Q: What are you working on now?

A: I used to make up silly five-minute stories when I put my young daughter to bed. One night, I decided to create a story I would continue each night to keep her continually engaged in the same characters, and that went on for well over a month before I brought it to its conclusion.

 

When I was finished, I thought the ideas I had created might be worth fleshing out into a true novel. I’m working on bringing those characters and that tale to life. It should come as no surprise that it is a coming-of-age story centered around the relationship between a father and his daughter.

 

Q: Anything else we should know?

A: Thank you for the opportunity to share my experiences with your audience.

 

One of the key plot lines is Michael training arduously to participate in the Boston Marathon as part of his obsession with strengthening his body to defend against Cancer. Having run three marathons myself, many years apart, they are filled with an overpowering anxiety of not knowing if you will finish.

 

If you’ve ever run a marathon, and you should, there is an overwhelming sense of unease of not knowing the outcome after investing so much time and effort to train, and I did my best to write that disquietude into that arc.

 

At the age of 50, for reasons I can’t explain, I had decided to run a third marathon and I had a heart attack at the halfway point. But I did not want to be defined as that person you inevitably read about who had a heart attack during a marathon; I wanted to be defined as the person who went back to finish.

 

Five years later (with approval from my doctor and wife), I started over with a one-mile run and after a year and a half, successfully completed what I had set out to do.

 

--Interview with Deborah Kalb