Tuesday, April 28, 2026

Q&A with Priya Parmar

  

Photo by J.D. Cohen

 

 

Priya Parmar is the author of the new novel The Original, which is based on the life of the actress Katharine Hepburn. Parmar's other books include Vanessa and Her Sister. She lives in Hawaii and in Connecticut. 

 

Q: What inspired you to write a novel based on the life of Katharine Hepburn (1907-2003)?

 

A: I was watching The Philadelphia Story with my mom, and she mentioned that it was Hepburn’s comeback movie. I thought, comeback from what? I had no idea Hepburn had ever had a moment when she was not on top. I fell down a research rabbit hole and never came back.

 

Q: Did you learn anything that especially surprised you as you researched the book?

 

A: So much! I thought I was familiar with their lives before I began this project, but I wasn’t. I had no idea both Hepburn and Grant came from such traumatic backgrounds.

 

Q: The author Christina Baker Kline called the book a “riveting and unputdownable journey through fame, rebellion, and the relentless pursuit of authenticity.” What do you think of that description?

 

A: I love Christina’s writing and so am utterly honored and thrilled that she enjoyed the novel. She also absolutely nailed the central thread of the story.

 

Q: Do you have a favorite among Hepburn’s films?

 

A: The Philadelphia Story is my all-time favorite, but I absolutely adore The Lion in Winter and Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner also.

 

Q: What are you working on now?

 

A: I am in that hopeful, secret, early part of my next novel when I do not yet know if it actually is a novel.

 

Q: Anything else we should know?

 

A: That you do not need to know anything about Hepburn or old Hollywood or film history to enjoy this novel!

 

--Interview with Deborah Kalb 

Q&A with Gregory Poirier

  

Photo by Karen Vaisman Photography

 

 

Gregory Poirier is the author of the new novel A Thousand Cuts. He is also a screenwriter, director, and producer, and he lives in Los Angeles. 

 

Q: What inspired you to write A Thousand Cuts, and how did you create your character Max Starkey?

 

A: The inspiration for the book came up when I was looking for my next movie idea. I like to give myself little challenges that help me develop ideas so I’m not just sitting around trying to come up with something out of thin air.

 

I’m a big fan of film noir, in fact my favorite of all the movies I’ve written, Knox Goes Away, is a noir. I was sitting there watching Out of the Past on Turner Classic Movies and I challenged myself to think of the movie that Humphrey Bogart or Robert Mitchum would make today, with modern sensibilities and action but firmly rooted in noir and the kinds of anti-hero characters they played in the 1940s and '50s.

 

I had this idea a while back about a dictator in a third world country who is about to be toppled in a coup and has a bunch of gold he needs to smuggle out of the country before his regime falls.

 

I had never been able to figure out how to use it, but once I started thinking about it in terms of the parameters I had set for myself, the idea for A Thousand Cuts formed relatively quickly.

 

The character of Max Starkey also came from that challenge, of wanting to write something that James Cagney or Dick Powell would play if they were alive now.

 

I wanted a noir setup, so the idea of this ex-CIA guy, who used to be part of the system but left because of betrayal and heartbreak and is now eking out a living working for the mob, and then gets sucked back in by the very people who betrayed him and broke his heart, fit that mold very well.

 

Then I started putting together the building blocks of the character. Wanting him to be able to use his CIA skills led to the idea that he is a recovery man, who gets things back that are stolen from the mobsters he works for, usually, but not always, money.

 

Of course he’s very good at the game, and needs to be able to move through these dark, morally ambiguous situations where everyone is trying to screw over everyone else.

 

The idea of needing to think a few moves ahead of other people led to him being a ranked chess player, and chess became an integral part of the book.

 

Even though he is working for the mob and does a lot of unsavory things with unsavory people, he needs to have a moral center, so I decided to give him three rules that he lives by and anything goes as long as he doesn’t break those three commandments.

 

They are: never kill someone that wouldn’t kill you first; never keep the money unless you earned it; and never take a woman to bed who doesn’t have a say in the matter. That last one is basically a “no sex workers” rule, and the reason it is important to him becomes clear early in the novel.

 

Lastly, I knew that he left the CIA over betrayal and heartbreak, so he needed to be a romantic. A jaded one, but still. His ex-lover in the book says that Max needs love the way other people need air, and although he would deny it, it’s ultimately true.

 

Once I put all of those things in and shook them together, a pretty intriguing character emerged. I really like this guy.

 

Q: As someone who has done both, how would you compare screenwriting to writing a novel?

 

A: There are many similarities, but even more ways in which they are different. As I mentioned earlier, I originally thought of A Thousand Cuts as a movie, but when I started writing it, I had several false starts. There was a specific tone and voice that I was aiming for, and they just weren’t getting across in the script.

 

Screenwriting has very limited tools; all you can put on the page is what you see, and what you hear. You have to find interesting visual ways to impart character, because there is no internal monologue. You can’t say “he’s a sad guy because…”, you have to show it somehow.

 

So after some inspiration from a couple of friends, I decided to try writing it as a novel, and I’m really glad I did. I loved the internal monologue, being able to delve into my characters’ pasts and the events that shaped them into who they are today.

 

Unless you are using flashbacks, you can’t do that in a movie, at least not this kind of movie. That goes for description and action too.

 

Movies are written as if they are happening right now, in the present tense. “He runs down the alley; he pulls his gun; he kisses her.” In a book, that can become three tense, exciting pages about what he was going through and how much he wanted to kiss her as he ran down the alley and pulled his gun.

 

You also have more freedom to play in a book. Things that might be a moment in a movie can become whole subplots in a novel, and characters who might be an extra in the movie can have a chapter written about them.

 

One of my favorite runners in the book was unplanned, it just kind of spontaneously happened, and now I can’t imagine the book existing without it. It would never have made it into a script.

 

Another way they differ is that in a book you have the advantage of speaking directly to your reader. Film is a collaborative art and your words go through a lot of other people before they reach the audience.

 

One of the first things they teach you in screenwriting school is, “don’t try to direct the movie on the page." Just write down what the characters do and say, and the director, actors, editors, and studio execs will take it from there. In a book you speak directly to your reader, for better or worse.

 

Finally, I love that you write a book, and there’s the book. When you write a script, even one a studio is paying you to write, there is no movie and maybe there never will be.

 

You’re not done when you finish writing, you’re at the beginning of a long process, waiting to see if you can get a movie star to read it, trying to attach a director. A finished script is a long, long way from a movie; it can take years.

 

My standard line is that when I’m in a movie theater and the lights go down and the studio logo comes up on the screen, I lean over to my wife and say, “You know, this movie might actually happen.”

 

You might sell a lot of copies of your novel or you might not, but hey, there’s your novel. It exists, exactly how you want it, simply because you made it.

 

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

 

A: A lot of the research during the actual writing process was technical, what I call guns, maps and vehicles. I did research things like the prison in Laos where some of the action takes place, and a lot about flora and fauna.

 

But some of the heavy research took place years before I wrote this. I have been to Langley and met with several CIA officers and Secret Service people, for a movie that I was working on that never got made. And I have traveled a lot in Southeast Asia, just for fun.

 

So in a way I had done most of the deep background work long before I wrote the book.

 

It’s funny how the little things sometimes stick with you; when I was at Langley I learned that there is a Starbucks in the lobby, but the baristas are not allowed to ask you your name or write it on a cup; it’s Langley, after all. For some reason I just thought that was cool and put it in the book.

 

Q: The novel is set in Southeast Asia--how important is setting to you in your writing?

 

A: It’s extremely important. A lot of my personal experiences from traveling in the region made it into the book, albeit in altered form.

 

I hate to use a cliché, but I do believe the setting is another character in your story and needs to be chosen carefully. It informs everything that happens. Hauling 4,000 pounds of gold through hot, wet, dangerous jungle is a lot different than hauling it through the desert, or over the Alps. I wanted that feeling of being suffocated, of everything closing in on Max from all sides, and that’s the jungle.

 

That being said, I ultimately decided to set the book in a fictional country and not a real one. I invented a tiny nation called Suryaka, wedged in somewhere between Thailand, Laos and Myanmar.

 

There are a lot of ugly political realities in Laos and particularly Myanmar that I didn’t want to deal with, and Thailand reveres their monarchy and I didn’t want to insult them by pretending they didn’t exist, so a fictional country was the best option.

 

Q: What are you working on now?

 

A: The sequel to A Thousand Cuts, also featuring Max Starkey and titled The Thirsty Sand, is with my publishers now. I have three or four movies in various stages of prep, but honestly I want to focus on novels as much as possible. This wasn’t a sidetrack for me, this was a career pivot.

 

Q: Anything else we should know?

 

A: Just that I really hope readers enjoy the experience. I’m an avid reader and often find myself thrilled, delighted, and bleary-eyed at three a.m., telling myself, “Just one more chapter.” If even one person has that experience with A Thousand Cuts then I have done my job.

 

The book is available wherever books are sold, including Amazon, Barnes & Noble, and indie bookstores. 

 

--Interview with Deborah Kalb 

Q&A with Elizabeth Rudnick

  


 

 

Elizabeth Rudnick is the author of the new children's picture book First Night at Dad's. She is also an editor and literary agent, and has adapted more than 30 books. She lives in Pinehurst, North Carolina.

 

Q: What inspired you to write First Night at Dad’s?

 

A: People always say “write what you know,” but in this case what inspired me to write First Night at Dad’s was the idea of writing something I wanted others to know.

 

When I went through my own divorce and began navigating these milestones I never imagined I would have to navigate, I realized there were not a lot of books out there to support my journey.

 

Divorce takes an emotional toll on every family member. And sometimes, I just wanted the language to get me through a situation—and I wanted my son to have the awareness that he wasn’t alone. That other children have been in his shoes. First Night at Dad’s was born out of all of that!

 

Q: What do you think Yaara Cellier’s illustrations add to the story?

 

A: Yaara Cellier did a wonderful job bringing the text to life. Her illustrations convey all the hidden emotions that I couldn’t necessarily reflect in the text, and I think she has beautifully captured all three of these characters.

 

I love the small details she has added—like the stuffy that Henry takes with him between houses and the way she shows the parents attempt at consistency by having the same picture on the wall at each home.

 

I particularly love the image she did of Henry and his dad looking up at the stars together. It makes me weepy every time I see it.

 

Q: How would you describe Henry’s relationships with each of his parents?

 

A: Great question! And sort of a complicated one. Because the relationship I imagine he has is a richly layered one, but with only had 32 pages to work with, I had to focus on this one moment.

 

But I hope I made it clear he loves both his parents. Mom is definitely the emotional anchor for him—it is why he ends up calling her during dinner. Dad is the fun one in many ways—he “plays with his food” and is out rolling in the yard. But he also has an emotional connection with Henry that gives Henry comfort when needed.

 

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

 

A: Kids are faced with so many challenges. I hate that decisions that are so far outside their control cause them emotional hurt.

 

I want young readers to see themselves and their story in these pages, and that in doing so, that it might offer them some comfort. And I want them to know how much we, as parents, are trying to do the right thing even when we might mess it up.

 

Life is messy. But I want children to know that divorce doesn’t mean that love has to shrink. It can multiply.

 

Q: What are you working on now?

 

A: I always have several things brewing at one time. I have a horse named Muffin who I like to take out to ride and dream up new ideas for books to come.

 

I’m currently writing a magical realism novel for middle grade about a girl and a horse, and I have been brainstorming other big “firsts” I can explore through picture books like this one.

 

And I’m working on a dragon story—something I’ve been wanting to do since I got into the world of publishing over 20 years ago.

 

Q: Anything else we should know?

 

A: Writing a book and putting it out in the world is super scary—especially when it touches upon something so emotional. I’m so glad that others in the same shoes as Henry and his parents will have a book to turn to in a way I didn’t.

 

Of course, this is just one version of one story. Everyone’s moment will look different because, well, we are all different people. But there are moments that connect us, no matter how they look.

 

--Interview with Deborah Kalb 

April 28

 


 

ON THIS DAY IN HISTORY
April 28, 1926: Harper Lee born.

Monday, April 27, 2026

Q&A with Jane Ward

  

Photo by Jason Grow

 

 

 

Jane Ward is the author of the new novel Should Have Told You Sooner. Her other books include In the Aftermath. She lives in Ipswich, Massachusetts. 

 

Q: What inspired you to write Should Have Told You Sooner, and how did you create your character Noel?

 

A: I began reading a book of Welsh folk tales while I was largely stuck in the house during the pandemic year of 2020. This child’s book – One Moonlit Night by T. Llew Jones – caught my eye the year before when I was browsing a used bookstore, and I bought it. I had loved folk tales and mythologies when I was a child, and there it was in my TBR pile when I needed some escapism!

 

The Welsh have a rich tradition of folklore, much of it centering around special places across the land where humans and otherworldly beings may meet and interact.

 

In one story, “The Lady of Llyn Y Fan Fach,” a young farmer named Gwyn visits such a place, the lake named in the title, and while he is there, a most beautiful fairy rises from the water and speaks to him. In that instant they fall in love with each other.

 

The fairy, Nelferch, agrees to marry Gwyn, although she seems to realize right from the start their union will end in disappointment and pain. And of course it does. 

 

Long after finishing the story, I kept thinking about Nelferch and Gwyn and all the ways we might harm those we profess to love. From there, on my early morning dog walks, I began imagining a more contemporary pair and how such a love might play out between them.

 

These two became Noel and Bryn. As I conceived them, I realized they both brought a lot of unresolved childhood pain to their early relationship.

 

When Noel was a child, Noel’s mother died. And because she never knew her father, she was left to be raised by her grandmother. She grew into someone who desperately wanted a family of her own, but she was haunted by the idea that she might be left again. All the assumptions and then mistakes she made as she navigated all her adult relationships had their seed in this fear.

 

Q: How would you describe the dynamic between Noel and Bryn?

 

A: When they first come together in their 20s, they are two young people of similar backgrounds–Bryn, too, had suffered a lot of loss in childhood and was raised by a loving grandfather although deeply affected by being abandoned by his mother. I think these scars are what they recognize in each other early on.

 

They also share an idealized image of what life together will look like, as if they both crave family and stability to know they’re worthy of people sticking around for them. When it all falls apart, there’s a sense of that center disappearing and both lose their way as individuals. 

 

But the wonderful thing about growing up and growing older is the space we might give ourselves for self-reflection. When they find themselves in each other’s orbit 30 years after their first love story, they are trying to be profoundly different people together. The connection is still there, but it plays out much differently with courage, forgiveness, and a real willingness to do the work.

 

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

 

A: A few things, I think. There are many ways to make a family–adoption, stepparenting, mentoring among them–and the common denominators are love and intention.

 

Even then, with all that going for us, motherhood is hard and we all second guess ourselves. Sometimes, our relationships with our children are hampered by our own childhood experiences and it takes a great deal of self-awareness to overcome that.

 

Regarding the adoption that forms the central mothering experience in the book, every adoption story will play out differently, every reason for the adoption is different, but what can’t change is that every adoption begins with an abandonment of some kind.

 

Giving that space to be understood rather than ignoring it might be one of the biggest challenges facing adoptees, adoptive parents, and the parents who relinquished the child. 

 

Q: Why did you decide to focus on the art world in the novel?

 

A: I love to travel and I’m a dual US/UK citizen. I love walking in the outdoors when I’m in England and Wales, but I also love visiting London museums.

 

However, at the time I started writing during pandemic isolation, I wasn’t traveling anywhere. So I decided to travel in my imagination, replaying some pre-pandemic trips.

 

I had been in October 2019 and saw the wonderful William Blake show at Tate Britain, and I started thinking, What if I set this new book in the art world? 

 

That led me to imagining Noel and Bryn meeting in a London university in the 1990s. Their studies of art history and studio art would give them a common interest and a common world. They would “get” each other.

 

So, the setting took off from there, and I have to say, I really enjoyed letting myself write about a place I know and love so well while I was essentially housebound. Talk about armchair travel!

 

Q: What are you working on now?

 

A: I am working on a sequel to Should Have Told You Sooner, and I’m about three-fourths through the first draft.

 

I am also taking notes on the book that follows that, which will be a contemporary Gothic-style novel set in French-speaking Switzerland. It’s a fish-out-of-water story, the kind that leaves the main character unsure of what’s going on around her, but also uniquely positioned to see that the strangeness she feels might actually be a product of something bigger and darker.

 

Q: Anything else we should know?

 

A: I’m not a visual artist, but I knew I had to understand how the pieces of art featured in the novel were made. I had a specific technique in mind for Henry’s work but I had no idea how to accomplish it.

 

By sheer luck, I met a Massachusetts artist, Sue Fontaine, who uses a similar technique in her work. She let me spend a day with her in her studio. I watched and asked questions to make sure I was getting all the details right.

 

--Interview with Deborah Kalb. Here's a previous Q&A with Jane Ward. 

Q&A with Jonathan Crawford

  

 


 

 

 

Jonathan Crawford is the author of the new book Surviving Jonathan: The 360 Degrees of Resilience. He is a keynote speaker and resilience strategist.

 

Q: What inspired you to write Surviving Jonathan?

 

A: My life didn’t follow a straight line. It was filled with dysfunction, addiction, homelessness, trauma, and hard lessons. But what changed everything was a shift in mindset. That shift didn’t just change my circumstances, it changed who I became.

 

As I started to experience personal and professional success, I realized something surprising: success didn’t automatically bring purpose. I was still searching.

 

Writing Surviving Jonathan became that search. It’s my way of turning pain into perspective and perspective into something that can impact others across a wide spectrum of life experiences.

 

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

 

A: The original title was Crack Life to CEO Life, which told part of the story, but not the truth of it. Over six years of writing, I evolved. I had to confront something deeper: I wasn’t just a product of my environment; I was also contributing to my own cycles. That realization changed everything.

 

Surviving Jonathan came from that truth. It means learning to face yourself, take accountability, and break the patterns that are holding you back.

 

For me, the title represents growth, self-awareness, and transformation. It invites curiosity. Not just about my life, but about your own.

 

It’s also the foundation of what I now call the 360 Degrees of Resilience—the understanding that transformational resilience isn’t one-dimensional. It’s emotional, mental, relational, and identity-based resilience.

 

Q: What role has resilience played in your life?

 

A: Resilience didn’t just help me—it saved my life. It gave me the ability to endure when quitting would’ve been easier. It built strength in places nobody could see. It kept me moving when everything in me wanted to stop.

 

But resilience changed meaning for me over time. It transformed into evolution. It’s who you become because of what you’ve been through.

 

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

 

A: Writing this book took my healing to another level. It forced me to revisit parts of my life I had buried and to finally make sense of them. Even now, I still catch myself slipping into survival mode. But the difference is awareness. I can recognize it, challenge it, and choose differently.

 

What I want readers to take away is this: You can’t heal what you won’t face. And you can’t grow if you’re still running from yourself. This book is about confronting your truth so you can finally live beyond survival.

 

Q: What are you working on now?

 

A: Right now, I’m building a community around the idea of surviving yourself. That’s where real transformation starts.

 

I’m also developing a companion framework to Surviving Jonathan that provides practical tools people can use in their personal and professional lives.

 

And I’m focused on speaking, working with organizations, educators, and individuals to close the resilience gap across generations. Because the world is moving fast, and people aren’t just struggling with change, they’re struggling with who they need to become to navigate it.

 

Q: Anything else we should know?

 

A: Here’s the truth I stand on: You don’t just overcome your story, you learn how to use it. Resilience isn’t circling back to what was, it’s becoming someone new. The hardest person you’ll ever have to face is yourself. Growth starts the moment you stop blaming and take ownership of your crap. You can’t build a new life with an old mindset. 

 

--Interview with Deborah Kalb 

Q&A with Gabbie Benda

  


 

 

Gabbie Benda is the author and illustrator of the new middle grade graphic novel Serendipity. She is also an educator.

 

Q: What inspired you to create Serendipity?

 

When I was a kid, I really struggled with perfectionism. I was really used to being seen as “smart.” I didn’t really need to study for tests, but I always had good grades.

 

However, as time went on, courses got harder and I never really learned how to apply myself to something I wasn’t naturally good at. My spark for learning was gone, and I fell into this all-or-nothing mentality.

 

When I started writing Serendipity, I really wanted to create something that spoke to that experience. I wish I had internalized the lesson Serendipity aims to share at an earlier age--that there’s more to life than how others grade you.

 

Q: Did you work on the text first or the illustrations first--or both simultaneously?

 

A: I worked on both at the same time, actually! I started by writing a story outline, and then worked on the drawings and text by writing all the speech bubbles by hand. Then later I created a script with all the final, more edited text. 

 

Q: The Kirkus Review of the book called it a “humorous story that will help tweens gain self-awareness and set healthy boundaries.” What do you think of that description?

 

A: I love it! It’s nice to know that someone other than me thinks I’m humorous, haha!

 

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

 

A: I always feel like I struggle the most with the ending. The hardest scene was probably when Basil and Serendipity are on stage. I feel like I rewrote that about 100 times!

 

It was hard to find a balance between Serendipity really doing something that Basil would understand as apologetic, while still letting Basil keep her spotlight moment. I’m really happy with what I ended up with, though!

 

Q: What are you working on now?

 

A: Everything! I’m always working on something fun, whether it’s keeping up with my sketchbook practice or making more risograph prints! I’m possibly working on some new stories now too, hopefully things I’ll be able to share more about soon.

 

Q: Anything else we should know?

 

A: Never stop drawing! That’s pretty much it, thanks so much for chatting with me!

 

--Interview with Deborah Kalb