Dana Sachs's books include The House on Dream Street: Memoir of an American Woman in Vietnam, If You Lived Here, and, most recently, The Secret of the Nightingale Palace. She has written for a variety of publications including National Geographic and The Boston Globe, and she lives in Wilmington, North Carolina.
Q: Vietnam has been a big part of your writing. What about
Vietnam has captured your imagination, and will you continue to write about it?
A: I fell in love with Vietnam when I first travelled there
in 1990, just as it was opening to Americans for the first time since the war
ended. Subsequently, I’ve been lucky enough to live there and visit many times
and it became the subject of my first book The House on Dream Street: Memoir of
an American Woman in Vietnam.
It first captured my imagination because I went there
thinking only of the place as a setting for a terrible war and discovered,
instead, a complex and thriving nation with a dramatic history and rich
culture. If a subject is fertile in your imagination, then the more you learn
about it, the more intriguing it will become to you.
Vietnam’s culture, history, language, and people have continually
inspired me, which is why I returned to it in my novel, If You Lived Here, and
my nonfiction book The Life We Were Given: Operation Babylift, International Adoption, and the Children of War in Vietnam.
My most recent novel, The Secret of the Nightingale Palace,
is not about Vietnam. In fact, I made a promise to myself that the word
“Vietnam” would not appear at all. I know, it’s a weird challenge! I wanted to
see how it felt to write about something else.
Happily, I found other things to
inspire me—Japanese printmaking, 1940s San Francisco, World War II, mid-20th
Century women’s fashion—so I discovered that I can find other subjects that
intrigue me.
I have to add, though, that I couldn’t stay away from
Vietnam for long. In my new novel (see below), one of the main characters is
Vietnamese and another one, an American, lives in Hanoi.
Q: You've also collaborated with your sister, Lynne Sachs,
on a film about Vietnam. How did that project come about, and what was it like
working with a family member?
A: I was living in Hanoi in 1992 and Lynne, who is a
documentary and experimental filmmaker, came to visit me. We never planned to
make a movie, but as we travelled together through the country, she shot film.
After she returned to the States, she called me and said
that she had all this evocative footage. Did I want to make a documentary with
her? So we started working long distance on the film that eventually became Which Way is East. I’d interview people and write sections of the narrative in Hanoi and
she’d work on editing the actual film in the United States. After I returned
home, we finished it.
It was really interesting to work with a family member. As a
writer, I mostly work alone. Filmmaking is more collaborative. The process
actually revealed a lot about our characters as human beings and there was a
natural tension between us (sometimes testy, but usually good-natured.)
I had more of a journalistic attitude, wanting to capture as
much as we could of people’s real-life experience. Lynne was more aesthetic.
She wanted to make sure the film looked and sounded beautiful. I hope that, when
people see it, they’ll feel that the creative tension was productive for the
film, and that it does both.
Q: What changes have you seen in Vietnam over the years that
you've been traveling there?
A: Oh, so many. The obvious are things like the increase of
motorbikes and cars on the streets (almost everyone rode bicycles when I first
went there in 1990), fancy new restaurants, fashionable clothes.
But I think that, in many ways, the most important changes
are less obvious. For example, people used to have so much free time (for
years, very few Vietnamese people had work that actually produced a viable
income). I learned to relax in Vietnam. I mean, really relax, like spending all
afternoon sitting on a front stoop watching the traffic pass by.
My friends
can’t do that any more. They’re really busy. When I go visit, they need to schedule
me in on their iPhones in order to make time to see me. It’s a good sign that
the economy has improved, but I do miss that time on the stoops. I notice that
sense of nostalgia in my friends as well.
Q: The Secret of the Nightingale Palace
centers on a difficult relationship between a grandmother and granddaughter.
How did you create these characters?
A: Well, the grandmother, Goldie, is based on my own
grandmother, Rose, who is 101 years old this year. As people can see when they
read the book, she’s a force of nature: tough, single-minded, outspoken, and
extremely well-dressed.
I started out writing the novel by thinking of my
grandmother and trying to imagine her youth, but the story itself quickly
evolved away from her actual story and into something very different. Goldie’s
personality comes from Rose, but her life story comes from my own imagination.
And, by the way, I did not base the character of the
granddaughter, Anna, on myself. I suppose, though, that all fictional
characters are, in some sense, the offspring of the authors who created them.
Q: What are you working on now?
A: A new novel, which is tentatively titled Happy in
Budapest. An American diplomat begins to show signs of a rare form of dementia,
and his two adult daughters try to figure out what to do to help him.
As you probably
guessed from the title, it takes place in Budapest, and it’s also about art
nouveau design, Raoul Wallenberg, tour guides, neo-Nazis, sperm donors, and an
exceedingly difficult piece of piano music, Franz Liszt’s transcription of
Richard Wagner’s Tannhauser Overture. I’ve been on a research binge to write
it, which has been quite glorious.
Q: Anything else we should know?
A: Since this is a conversation about books, and since I
have benefitted from so many great recommendations myself, let me suggest a few
terrific authors. One is the British novelist Jane Gardam, who has written
loads of books but seems to have only recently begun to achieve widespread
fame. I’ve just devoured the first two books in a three-book series, the first
of which is Old Filth.
I also, belatedly, just read my first novel by Wallace Stegner, Crossing to Safety, which is so wise and beautiful that, after reading
it, I felt I was seeing the world in an entirely new way.
Finally, since my own work has particular focus on Vietnam
and, more recently, Hungary, two really wonderful authors from those countries:
The Hungarian author Imre Kertesz, who won the Nobel Prize for Literature (his
novel Fatelessness is a profound and, oddly enough, often funny take on the
Holocaust) and the Vietnamese author Nguyen Huy Thiep (along with Nguyen Nguyet Cam, I edited Crossing the River, a collection of his short stories translated into English). Like Kertesz, Thiep has
a dry, funny tone that reveals so many layers of complicated humanity that I
find myself turning back to his stories again and again.
--Interview with Deborah Kalb. This interview can also be found on www.hauntinglegacy.com.
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