Nancy Horan |
Q: How did you come upon
Mamah's story, and why did you decide to write it as a novel rather than a
biography?
A: I learned of the story
while living in Oak Park, IL, which was where Frank Lloyd Wright lived with his
wife and children, and opened his architectural practice. Among his clients
were Mamah and Edwin Cheney, who had him design a house, which was built on
East Avenue in Oak Park. At the time I began the book, I lived about five
blocks south of that house, and had often walked past it. When I discovered the
little-known chapter of Wright’s life that involved Mamah--they left their
respective families to go away together to Europe, creating a huge newspaper
scandal at the time--I became obsessed with telling that story.
Little was known about Mamah.
I found fiction to be an appropriate way to explore the questions raised by
their relationship and the choices they made.
Mamah Cheney |
Q: The work-family dilemma
was part of Mamah's life a century ago, and still factors into many women's
lives today. What has changed since Mamah's time, and what do you think remains
the same?
A: Obviously much has changed
in terms of women’s opportunities since the early 20th century. Women today can
realize their potential in ways that Mamah and her contemporaries only dreamed
of. That said, we still struggle with where the right to “realize our
personalities” ends and the rights and needs of our children begin.
Q: Loving Frank has become a
huge bestseller. Did you expect that, and what is it about Mamah's story that
has struck a chord with so many people?
Frank Lloyd Wright |
A: When I wrote the book, I
did not know if it would even get published, though I had high hopes. I wrote
the story from Mamah’s point of view, choosing not to judge her but to tell it
as she might have. This approach made some readers uncomfortable, but it
sparked intense book club discussions, I’m happy to report. Mamah is a likable
character, yet she did something that most women today find as unacceptable as
they did then: she left her children for a lover. The difference between 1909 and
today is that women can divorce much more easily now and without the same
social stigma, they can retain custody or arrange joint custody, and so on.
Readers tend to ask, What would I have done then?
Q: T.C. Boyle's novel The Women, published a couple of years after your book, also features Wright and
Mamah, although he looks at a broader section of Wright's life than you do. Did
you read his book, and if so, what did you think of it?
A: No, I didn’t read the
book.
Q: What are you working on
now?
A: I just completed a book,
which will be published in September 2013. It is set in the 19th century and
explores the lives and relationship of two extraordinary people. I’m excited
about it.
Q: Anything else we should
know?
A: Soon enough I will be
tweeting. That seems to be part of the book tour experience these days.
--Interview with Deborah Kalb
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