Deborah Kalb is the author of the new novel Everything She Most Admired. Her other books include the novel Off to Join the Circus. She is the host of this blog, and she lives in the D.C. area.
Q: What inspired you to write Everything She Most Admired, and how did you create your character Lauren Green?
A: Well, Deborah, you know the answers to all of this, but since you’re asking…I (or should I say we?) started working on this manuscript more than three decades ago. We were a lot younger then, and we had always wanted to write fiction, and for some reason we thought writing a mystery novel would be easier than writing some other kind of novel, because it had a built-in plot. Something awful happens, maybe something else awful happens, our protagonist has to figure out what happened, and the miscreant is unmasked. Well, we were so wrong! Writing a mystery novel is incredibly hard.
So we put the manuscript away for years. On a floppy disk, no doubt. On large piles of printer paper tucked away in a drawer. And then years later, things happened in our life and we thought, why not have our protagonist have something like that happen to her? (Okay, it was a horrible broken engagement, and why would we wish that on poor Lauren Green? But we did.) And then we put the manuscript away again, and the process continued for many more years. Of course, we were doing a lot of other writing in the meantime, weren’t we.
Q: Yes.
A: But you also wanted to know about Lauren, right?
Q: Yes.
A: Okay, so back in our 20s we created a character named Jennifer Greenberg who was a lot like us, and we wrote a few mystery novel manuscripts about her. But then we decided, wait! Jennifer Greenberg is just a little too much like us. We need a little distance. So let’s write about her sister! Her sister was named Karen Greenberg. Karen Greenberg became an only child, and her name eventually was changed to Lauren Green. We had to change a lot of our characters’ first names because naming fashions changed over the course of three decades.
Q: Why did you decide to set the novel at a magazine in Washington, D.C., and how important is setting to you in your writing?
A: Well, I think you know the answer to that. Back in our 20s, we worked at a magazine in Washington, D.C. Not that our fictional magazine, Lens, has anything to do with that magazine. And we worked at lots of other news organizations in D.C. during the years we pulled the manuscript out and put it away in the drawer/floppy disk/computer. So a magazine seemed like a good place to set the novel. And yes, setting is important. As you know, description has never been our strong point when we write. We prefer dialogue. We wish we were a more poetic writer who could conjure up beautiful scenes with just the perfect words. But we are not. Still, we do like to write about places we’ve spent a lot of time. It makes us feel more secure.
Q: What are you working on now?
A: It feels really strange talking to you, you know.
Q: I agree.
A: And yet somewhat therapeutic.
Q: Yes.
A: So we have a couple more novels in the works. Our wonderful publisher, Apprentice House, is going to publish two more of our novels over the next year or two. One is a sequel to Everything She Most Admired. The other is a young adult novel set at a summer camp in the Adirondacks in 1952. We are currently updating a reference book called Elections A to Z.
Q: Why do you write in so many genres?
A: We have very eclectic tastes.
Q: True. So this has been fun! Can we do it again sometime?
A: Absolutely. Thanks, Deborah!
--Interview with Deborah Kalb

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