Monday, June 15, 2026

Q&A with André Narbonne

  


 

 

André Narbonne is the author of the new novel Those Are Pearls. His other books include the novel Lucien & Olivia. He teaches at the University of Windsor in Ontario, Canada.

 

Q: How much was your new novel based on your own family history?

 

A: Those Are Pearls began as a series of emails to my mother. I asked her about her history growing up during the Great Depression and decided to distill that information into a short work of fiction that I would present to her.

 

The story “Margaret’s Great Depression” turned out to be the second chapter of a novel I did not yet know that I was writing. The work is almost entirely true.

 

In fact, at the end, I quote one of my mother’s emails verbatim:

Just before my mother died, I told her how lucky we were to admire rather than fear a storm, and I recalled our wait in the old Ford. I didn’t think my mother ever lied to me. She was hard at times, but I thought she would never lie. She looked me straight in the eye and said, “I was afraid.”

 

I didn’t think I could say it better, and I wanted the voice of the story to sound like hers.

 

Contrast that with the anecdote about the tart that dirties her pinafore, which is an invention. She told me about how she’d gone to see her grandmother, hopeful that everything she’d heard about loving and fun grandmothers would be true of hers, and later learned she was forbidden to visit again because she was too dirty.

 

When I sent my mother the finished story, she replied that her mother would never have wasted money on tarts. That led to a long discussion about the demands of narrative. “If I’m going to write this as a truthful fiction,” I told her, “you’ll have to put up with my lies.” She agreed and what followed was a compromise between history and fiction.

 

Here’s why I invented the tart: when first drafting the story, I was concerned that it lacked the sense of immediacy one gets from the ephemeral. I asked her what smell she most associated with Winnipeg in the 1930s, which is why the story opens with

Winnipeg is the Honeysuckle Bakery on the north side of Notre Dame. It’s the last years of the Depression and the smell of baked bread, doughnuts fills my childhood.

 

And that’s also why I invented the tart that leads to her ostracization. It was an invisible stitch.

 

At some point during our correspondence, my mother forwarded an email from my great-uncle Harry Short Jr, who’d passed not long after writing.

 

I include some of his email below:

My mother fell down the stairs while she was at boarding school. Fearing repercussion from her father, the head mistress kept it from her father until it was too late.to set her back in place. She was fitted with a very uncomfortable girdle but the curvature could not be corrected and she was left with a permanent hump in her back. She was not able to get rid of the girdle until she married and at that time she vowed never to wear it again. Her husband fell at work and hurt his head  and had to move to a cold climate. Mom said he had a tropical disease and at first they tried to medicate it with hot spices but soon told him he would have to move to a colder climate and at the time the coldest English settlement was in Winnipeg. Margaret's parents didn't want her to move. Her husband was too proud to ask for help. They sailed for Canada in 1910.

 

After I received this and another email he’d written, I decided to write a multi-generational novel. Because the majority of the book would now be about people long deceased, it would necessarily side with fiction, with narrative flow—invisible stitches—over fact.

 

Q: How did you research the book, and did you learn anything that especially surprised you?

 

A: I wanted to get it right. My research included reading death certificates, baptismal records, wedding licenses etc.

 

Harry Sr. fights in Jameson’s Raid, the misguided “excursion” that led to the Boer War. He was captured and ransomed back to the English. My research included reading the court transcripts from Jameson’s trial. I consulted the state environmental agency in South Africa about weather patterns and clouds, looked through 19th-C photographs of Cape Town and wrote Harry Sr. into the pictures.

 

To accurately describe the arrival of the family in Manitoba, I emailed the Winnipeg Railroad Museum and asked where they would arrive in 1910 and what would have been visible from the train.

 

What surprised me was how helpful everyone was. Almost all of my emails were answered.

 

Q: Can you say more about how you balanced fiction and history, especially as a family member, as you wrote the book?

 

A: So, I think I probably answered this above, but I’ll speak to the philosophical aspect of “getting it right.”

 

I wanted to avoid what I see as the pitfalls of presentism. I didn’t want my four protagonists to be heroically like us while their antagonists behave like they belong with a vengeance to their historical era. I clothed them all—protagonists and antagonists—in a world that existed in history without being dishonest in the way of, say, Dances with Wolves.

 

A more honest movie on a similar theme that came out around the same time is Black Robe. My ancestors went through astonishing calamities without losing their religion. I lost mine reading the papers and watching the news. I wanted to treat their beliefs with respect, not turn them into ahistorical cut-ups whose political sensibilities are informed by the Summer of Love—my complaint about Dances with Wolves.

 

What they share with this generation is that their beliefs are complicated. Not just characters in conflict, they are conflicted characters in conflict. My hope is that other members of my family who read Those Are Pearls see integrity in my fictions even if our adjectives differ.

 

Q: The novel took you about 25 years to complete--what was your writing process like?

 

A: As a rule, I don’t go to a blank computer screen looking for inspiration. I’m a plotter. I walk around with things before I write.

 

Once I understood that the novel would be primarily about four people I decided on a framework. The principle of construction was that of Matryoshka dolls. One character would be the inner doll that you arrive at last, but because it was a novel, not something constructed and tactile, the outside frames would be akin to the inner dolls. Perhaps none of this makes sense visually, but it’s how I imagined the overall story.

 

For about 20 years, my mother’s story was the inner doll/outer frame. Then Harry, Nan, and Frank in that order. I would write complete chapters that had their own dramatic arc. When writing a chapter, I generally completed the first draft quickly, spending more time on revisions. I wouldn’t walk from the work until I was content that the chapter was complete—fit to print.

 

When I did leave, I might leave for a very long time. During the course of writing Those Are Pearls I completed a Ph.D. dissertation, published a poetry and a short story collection, and a novel. I also published numerous articles on Canadian literature while raising four children. I could be gone from the manuscript for very long periods – maybe even a year.

 

I always knew that I would finish it. The characters kept me coming back. I also had solid encouragement. Alistair MacLeod read the first five chapters before writing the letter that helped me get my present job. Terry Griggs when she was writer-in-residence at UWindsor was very supportive, as was my writing group.

 

Perhaps more importantly, my family were onboard. They liked what they read. Some of the chapters I published in Nashwaak Review, Carte Blanche, The Prairie Journal, The Windsor Review. All of this encouraged me to return to the manuscript, and when I did, I was always happy to go back to that world in which my characters lived.

 

Q: What are you working on now?

 

A: I’m currently working on The Selected Criticism of Archibald MacMechan. It’s another of my 25-year projects.

 

Q: Anything else we should know?

 

A: I’ve completed a second collection of short stories, which I’m “pearling” for publication.

 

--Interview with Deborah Kalb 

Q&A with Talya Jankovits

  

Photo by Leah G. Photography

 

 

Talya Jankovits is the author of the new novel The Very Unremarkable Life of Mrs. Etty Bloom. She also has written the poetry collection girl woman wife mother. She lives in Chicago. 

 

Q: What inspired you to write The Very Unremarkable Life of Mrs. Etty Bloom, and how did you create your character Etty?

 

A: The idea of the mundane and the stories that lie inside the ordinary has always interested me.

 

I am also fascinated by unlikeable characters, not just fictional ones, but the individuals who come into our lives, whether on the periphery or the epicenter, that cause chaos.

 

It always begs the question of what is motivating that individual to make particular choices that might seem reprehensible to us, and what experiences transpired along the way that shaped them into unlikable people. Thus, the life of Mrs. Etty Bloom. 

 

The character of Etty Bloom materialized out of nowhere one day as nearly a whole person — a very ordinary and unlikeable whole person. She became this manifestation of a conglomerate of unlikeable and problematic traits in people and of my observant lifestyle.

 

It was a snowball effect. She grew fuller and fuller so that by the time I sat down to write, she took the lead. What struck me as I followed her were the moments of profundity and existential struggles she faces, which facilitate empathy in the unlikable. 

 

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

 

A: The title and the character were a package deal. They appeared to me together. One informed the other. I knew I wanted to tell the story of this woman’s life from beginning to end, and I understood her life to be prosaic.

 

The title encourages us to find the remarkable in the unremarkable. Most of us will live ordinary and forgettable lives, but to live at all is remarkable in and of itself.

 

Q: The author Sarah Yahm called the book a “beautifully sad and unexpectedly funny representation of the myriad ways women retain a sense of self in the midst of a patriarchal society.” What do you think of that description?

 

A: I think it is an attentive and insightful examination of a component of this book. Etty frequents the fringe of her community, and though she very much loves her observant lifestyle, she is also a strong-spirited woman who challenges the status quo.

 

I took advantage of Etty’s character to explore many of my own qualms within observant Judaism, but I also wanted to share much of the beauty found in this way of life as well. Her character definitely elicits a cognitive dissonance.

 

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

 

A: Though I am an Orthodox Jew with Hasidic lineage, I was not raised in the same community with the same customs as Etty. There are many nuances in traditions and customs within Orthodox Judaism, and I had to familiarize myself with the ones specific to Etty’s community.

 

Many people were generous with their knowledge, specifically my husband’s cousins, who observe Hasidic Judaism in the same way Etty does. 

 

There is also a tremendous amount of Yiddish in this novel. My father speaks Yiddish fluently, but he never spoke it to my siblings and me, so I had to do a lot of consulting to do on the Yiddish.

 

Many Yiddish-speaking family members helped me with this, but one brother-in-law in particular proved instrumental, taking the time to check each word and phrase and assist with the transliteration. I learned there are different dialects of Yiddish, and no one way to transliterate. 

 

I am not sure anything particularly surprised me during my research since the world of Etty is not as foreign to me as it might be to most. I grew up visiting Hasidic communities in New York, specifically Borough Park, and my father and father-in-law both wear shtreimels. 

 

Perhaps the most surprising outcome was that I fell in love with the deeply flawed character of Etty.

 

Q: What are you working on now?

 

A: I am always in the middle of multiple projects. Right now, I am primarily focused on completing the final draft of another novel. This one deals with memory and has a bit of a sci-fi component to it.

 

Though it is a wildly different novel from The Very Unremarkable Life of Mrs. Etty Bloom, it still begs the reader to ask similar questions: How do experiences shape who we are? What does it mean to live authentically?

 

Q: Anything else we should know?

 

A: This book faced a tremendous amount of rejection, hundreds in fact. Its publication is a testament to perseverance. I hope this serves as encouragement to anyone who is currently facing any kind of rejection.

 

--Interview with Deborah Kalb 

June 15

 


 

ON THIS DAY IN HISTORY
June 15, 1914: Saul Steinberg born.

Friday, June 12, 2026

Q&A with Lisa K. Friedman

  

 


 

 

Lisa K. Friedman is the author of the novel Hello Wife. Her work has appeared in a variety of publications, including The New York Times, and she teaches creative writing at American University. She lives in Washington, D.C. 

 

 Q: In your book’s acknowledgments, you write that you lost your sister to drugs in 2015. First of all, I'm so sorry for your loss. How did that experience inspire you to write Hello Wife?  

 

A: After she died, I stumbled around for about five years, wondering what had happened. How could this possibly have happened - to us? To me? I simply could not get my mind around it.  

 

One day, staring at the quote taped to the wall above my desk: “How do I know what I think until I see what I say?” by E.M. Forster, I realized what I needed. I needed to write about what happened, so I could understand what happened.  

 

One of the hardest realities was hearing the knee-jerk reactions from friends and family members. People seem to think that addiction is connected to weakness, neglect, or plain stupidity. Assigning a flaw or a personality trait to something as terrifying as addiction helps people feel safe. Exempt. As if, as long as their loved ones did not exhibit any of those preconceived traits, addiction would not touch them.  

 

My very first exposure to this mindset came from my closest family member: a cousin who, on the day after my sister’s death, blurted: “Well, she never did take care of herself.”  

 

I was shocked by her reaction, but not for long. The shame of addiction, the stigma associated with drug use, is so widespread. And it is devastating. It furthers the erroneous and very dangerous notion that drug use does not happen to good people. Like us. Like me.  

 

Q: How did you create your character Charlotte?  

 

A: I heard her voice. A low smoker’s rasp with a surprising vein of authority. She sounded like a tour guide. I was happy to follow her around, noting the scenery and the sights.  

 

Charlotte was in complete command of the story from the beginning, peppering her thoughts with sideways connotations and quirky humor. Whenever I got tangled in the story, when the scenes or moments seemed unclear, I closed my eyes and waited for her voice to reemerge.  

 

I like the concept of being the reporter of a story, not the conductor. I used to pretend I was lying on a chaise lounge in her back yard, listening while she chattered on while pulling weeds and philosophizing. Those were my favorite times, when her personality flooded the space between us, unfiltered and without any noise from me.  

 

My input came later, when I directed attention to Charlotte’s other addictions, namely cigarettes and food. She did not challenge my judgments, nor did she fight to present herself in any glorified way. She was content with who she was, and that made it easy on me.  

 

Q: How would you describe the dynamic between Charlotte and her family?  

 

A: Charlotte is a free spirit born to traditional parents, and I imagined plenty of tension in their earlier years. In the span of this story, however, they’ve established a seemingly respectful rapport despite their lifestyle differences.  

 

This is a good and devoted family with strong ties to one another. They stand behind Charlotte throughout her numerous missteps, ready to catch her from falling, supporting her even as she continually makes poor choices and suffers infinite damage to her sense of self.  

 

This sturdy, loving family is entirely helpless to prevent Charlotte’s fateful downfall. They are, ultimately, impotent against addiction.  

 

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

 

A: The title of the book is an homage to my sister. After she’d married, we were on the phone together when her husband came home and I heard him greet her with: “Hello wife.” I still remember the warmth that filled my body when I heard those words. It’s a reminder to me that she got what she wanted after all. Despite what came later.  

 

Q: What are you working on now?  

 

A: My next book is about dementia and it’s a hoot. Really, it’s hilarious. Based on a series of humor essays, like this one published in the New York Times Magazine, https://www.lisakfriedman.com/blog/fear-and-laughing  

 

The story follows a modest family of do-gooders and well-wishers who refuse to accept that their very own matriarch, the bossiest, most difficult member of the family, isn’t functioning on all cylinders. It’s presented as a series of increasingly serious, and increasingly hilarious catastrophes that catch everyone unaware. And yes, in case you were wondering, dementia can be funny.  

 

Q: Anything else we should know?  

 

A: I like to tackle serious things through the lens of humor. Humor, like a spoonful of sugar, helps everything go down easier. My humor essays were published in the Huffington Post for several years, and it’s still my favorite mode of communication. I hope people will read my work on the web and write to me. Lisakfriedman.com

 

--Interview with Deborah Kalb 

Q&A with Rebecca Atanassova

  


 

 

Rebecca Atanassova is the author of the new children's picture book George the Mouse in a Log Pile House. Her many other books include Your Heart Can Hold the Whole Universe

 

Q: What inspired you to write George the Mouse in a Log Pile House, and how did you create your character George?

 

A: Actually, Simon Dell, a wildlife photographer in Sheffield, England, is the creator behind George The Mouse. He had a real-life encounter with a wild mouse after mowing his lawn one day in 2018. As Simon sat drinking lemonade, the little mouse curiously peeked through the grass at him.

 

Simon is very aware and caring of the world around him, and he noticed the mouse with a small notch in his ear. He offered the mouse a peanut. This happened every day for a few days, and Simon named him George. He realized George was there to stay.

 

Simon built George a house with a coconut shell door in a log pile in his backyard - or, as they say in England, his back garden.

 

Soon, word got out in the mouse community, and many mice arrived. The village grew and grew, and it is still growing and changing everyday thanks to Simon’s skilled handiwork and imagination. He has created little scenes that the mice interact with and it is so, so darling!

 

Simon shared his photographs and videos on social media, and George The Mouse now has fans around the world. The village has been featured in People magazine and in all sorts of media outlets.

 

Alissa Hansen, a fine artist, was drawn to the adorableness of mouse village life and began painting George for enjoyment. She shared her paintings with Simon, and they struck up a friendship of their own, collaborating on calendars and other projects.

 

Simon told Alissa that his dream was to have a children’s book about George The Mouse for his grandchildren one day, and he would love for her to illustrate it. Alissa and Simon had just discussed the book project when I happened to call Alissa about illustrating one of my books.

 

Alissa and I had met through a co-op group our children belonged to. We were friendly, but not close friends, and she wasn’t aware that I write. When I approached her about working together, she said, “You write books? Remember George The Mouse? I was just tasked with finding an author for a book about him.”

 

I said, “I’m happy to give it a go and see if I’m a good fit for the project.” And here we are, more than three years later. Years of fun and collaboration. Hard work, effort, and learning.

 

We had the opportunity to team up with wonderful editors and a fabulous book designer/art director, Christine Kettner. Christine designed a few of my kids’ favorite books like The Doll People and Percy Jackson and the Lightning Thief. We didn’t dream it would become this big when it started.

 

The other day, we watched a video of Simon’s granddaughter seeing the book for the first time. It was a very fulfilling moment. Very full circle.

 

Q: How would you describe the relationship between George and Mr. Tographer?

 

A: The relationship in the story is a creative take on Simon’s role in real life.

 

In reality, Simon cares for and provides for George and his friends. Simon goes out into the forests and fields near his home, gathering seeds and berries the mice would like. He makes them peanut butter and works to keep their little homes snug and safe.

 

Simon is the basis for the character of Mr. Tographer, which is mouse-speak for “Mr. Photographer.” So, Mr. Tographer is a mouse-whisperer of sorts. He is in tune with nature and the small living things around him, and he treats them respectfully and with care.

 

Mr. Tographer is almost like a grandfatherly figure, a faithful friend, and someone George and the mice can always rely on. George is safe with this “hooman.” George recognizes this soon after meeting Mr. Tographer and knows this is the place where he belongs.

 

Q: What do you think Alissa Hansen’s illustrations add to the story?

 

A: Alissa’s illustrations give the book a rich, classic look that you can only achieve with traditional watercolor technique. She has a heart for what is good and gentle, and that is reflected in her work. Other artists and readers have said it has a “Beatrix Potter-esque” look to it. I would agree with that assessment. It was what drew me to her artwork in the first place.

 

Alissa’s whimsical and detailed illustrations truly draw a reader into the world of George The Mouse and the Log Pile Village.

 

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

 

A: We hope to reach readers on several levels with George The Mouse in a Log Pile House. First, it is exposure to beautiful art and language.

 

Beyond that, curious and brave little George shares the message, “Follow your whiskers. Your whiskers will lead you home.” We think following your intuition - your heart - is important. Caring for the humblest of creatures and their habitats, and noticing the world around you, are also valuable ideas for children.

 

Taking a step into a peaceful place of kindness? It’s a retreat for the mind and imagination. Kids can build onto the story in their own ways and in their own play.

 

Q: What are you working on now? Will there be more stories about George?

 

A: So far, I have written nine books for a George The Mouse in a Log Pile House series. The world Simon has created gives me a multitude of wonderful angles and ideas to draw from. There are so many new friends to meet and adventures yet to come!

 

I have also written over 100 treatments, or complete story ideas with heart, that, in the right hands, would make the most beautiful animated series focusing on kindness, creativity, and community. The Log Pile Village also has its own newspaper, which we will be sharing, among other surprises.

 

I have other books that are entering the educational market. That really makes my heart happy - to reach children through the written word.

 

Alissa is illustrating a truly lovely and sensitive picture book right now for families experiencing the NICU.

 

Q: Anything else we should know?

 

A: We hope readers especially enjoy the village map. It was a joy working on the details - the street names, the homes. I had written several George books before we got to the map, so we planned the village map with the future in mind. The Log Pile Village is truly where kindness grows.

 

The world of George The Mouse welcomes everyone. (Unless you’re a cat, of course.)

 

We hope to see you all there!

 

--Interview with Deborah Kalb 

Q&A with G.P. Gottlieb

  

 


 

 

 

G.P. Gottlieb is the author of the new novel Charred, the third in her Whipped and Sipped mystery series. She also hosts the podcast New Books in Literature on the New Books Network.

 

Q: Charred is the third in your Whipped and Sipped mystery series--do you think your character Alene has changed over the course of the series?

 

A: Yes, Alene has changed. The first time she’s confronted with a murder, in Battered (Book 1), Alene suspects everyone, including neighbors, employees, and her ex-husband.

 

Once she starts dating Frank Shaw, a Chicago homicide detective, she learns to focus more on evidence and less on gut feelings. The biggest change over the course of the first three books in the series is that she is happier being in a healthy relationship.

 

Q: What inspired the plot of this new novel?

 

A: I was familiar with the story of an apartment building that was under construction in a city I’m not at liberty to name. A close relative’s company was involved in the project, and after the building burned to the ground under suspicious circumstances, nobody ever determined the cause of the fire, and it took years for the insurance and lawsuits to be resolved.  

 

I couldn’t stop thinking how much worse it would have been had someone found a body in the ashes, as happens in Charred: A Whipped & Sipped Mystery. The pastry chef’s husband builds and manages affordable housing and understands the wrath of neighbors  who fear a decline in property values.

 

Q: Do you usually know how your novels will end before you start writing them, or do you make many changes along the way?

 

A: I write a vague outline that starts with a triggering event and ends with the unveiling of who committed the crime and why. When I’m about halfway through a first draft, I show it to my editor, and if she guesses who the villain is, I rework the story! I’ll do that several times, continuously rewriting so you’ll never guess who did it.

 

And I make tons of other changes along the way; just last week, a “beta reader” noticed that in Book #4, Pounded, which I thought was completely polished, the protagonist, Alene Baron, comes home to find her children’s shoes scattered in front of the door. But they only come home a few pages later.

 

I fixed it by having her father say that the kids ran across the hall for a snack with the neighbors. I like the challenge of making changes along the way.

 

Q: How do you choose the recipes to include in your books?

 

A: I’ve always loved inventing recipes, and I choose the ones that get the most positive feedback from family and friends. I took serious baking classes but must have skipped the one about how to write a recipe (A friend once called to ask if there was any chocolate in my chocolate cake.).

 

This morning I’m reworking a recipe for the peanut butter balls (PB, milk powder, and honey) my children loved when they were young. I’ve replaced the powder with almond flour and the honey with maple syrup, plus I’ve added a little vanilla extract. They’re easy to pull together with ingredients I always have on hand, and they don’t require baking. Plus, they’re fun to mold into shapes.

 

Not sure if the finished recipe will be included in Book #5.  I can always include it in a guest post or simply add it to the Recipes-To-Die-For Section of my website. Along with healthy desserts, I especially enjoy inventing dips and sauces.

 

Q: What are you working on now?

 

A: I’m about 15,000 words into a first draft of Book #5 in the Series: Grilled. It involves the Whipped & Sipped pastry chef’s husband, who is seeking investment money for another affordable housing project. Everything changes when his main investor is suddenly murdered.

 

Because I always change the situation and characters from anything in real life,  you’d never connect my antagonist to the villain whose attempts to cheat my father led to a heart attack and the dissolution of my father’s company.

 

Q: Anything else we should know?

 

A: My degrees are in music and I still sit at the piano most afternoons to play through a little Bach or Chopin.

 

Also, although I write murder mysteries, I dislike reading about violence, gratuitous pain, and suffering. My passion is for solving the puzzle of a crime and my goal is to give readers all the necessary clues while simultaneously distracting them with red herrings and a whole community of potential bad guys. I challenge you to figure out who did it!

 

--Interview with Deborah Kalb 

June 12

 


 

ON THIS DAY IN HISTORY

June 12, 1929: Anne Frank born.