Dara Horn, photo by Michael B. Priest |
Dara Horn's most recent novel is A Guide for the Perplexed. Her other books include All Other Nights, The World to Come, and In the Image. She lives in New Jersey.
Q: How did you come up with the concept for this novel, and
for telling the story in three different time periods?
A: My previous novel was about Jewish spies during the Civil
War, and people sometimes showed up at my readings in costume. I developed a
bit of musket burnout, and I decided I would write a completely contemporary
novel this time around.
I started writing a story about a woman who creates a
software app that records everything its users do, and about her acrimonious
relationship with her envious sister. But that app—which promises to eliminate
the need for personal memory—also becomes a kind of character in the novel,
almost like a child of its creator. And like the actual child of its creator,
it goes off the rails and disappoints its creator by not being quite what she
had hoped for.
The creator’s sister, meanwhile, exploits her pride and weaknesses
to usurp her life, and by the end of the novel the reader’s sympathies have
tipped so much that it is no longer clear who is the “good” sister or who is
the “bad” sister, or whose version of the past is the most true.
But soon I saw that I was writing a book about memory—and
not merely about memory, but about the difference between how we remember
things and how those things actually occurred, and the profound ways that that
difference influences our lives and our choices. I needed to test those ideas
about memory against something more consequential than merely one person’s
childhood.
That’s when I began to work my way back in time to an
earlier form of data-dumping: the Cairo Genizah, a medieval stash of 190,000 manuscripts
that could resurrect an entire thousand-year-old community, if anyone would
bother to read through it.
The Genizah is the medieval Facebook, and that
opened up the question of data storage then and now, what we save and why we
save it. Later the book tests even that layer of memories by going back into
the time of the medieval people who created it. And of course nothing is as it
seems.
Q: You note that your husband encouraged you to work on a modern retelling of the Joseph story. Was it something that took a long time to write, or did it come together fairly easily?
A: Nothing comes easily in writing a novel. Like my other
novels, this one started with about a hundred pages that I threw away. I then
started working on something about two women who worked together, and how envy
was altering their lives in ways they could never have anticipated. My husband
suggested the Joseph idea at that point, and I made these women sisters—which
of course changed everything.
Q: Sibling relationships play a major role in the book, especially the dynamic between Josie and Judith. How would you describe their relationship, especially compared with those of the other sets of siblings in the novel?
A: There are several sets of siblings in the novel (actually
even more than there appear to be, but explaining that would mean revealing a
few key plot points at the book’s end), and they each illustrate that braid of
love, loyalty and envy.
In most of the sibling pairs, one is more successful than
the other (whether financially or in terms of esteem), and that unfair
imbalance of success and failure is one that haunts a relationship where two
people have presumably started their lives with all the same possibilities.
I’ve always been interested in the biblical Joseph story,
because Joseph is truly talented but also truly arrogant, and his brothers are
truly cruel but also truly aware of a genuine injustice, and the human emotions
in the story are so raw and real.
But what’s most amazing about that story to me is that
everything in it appears to be foretold (through Joseph’s undeniably prophetic
dreams)—and yet everything in it also appears to happen entirely through human
agency. You can’t read the story without appreciating the interlocking presence
of both free will and destiny.
That dynamic of free will versus fate seems embedded, to me,
in everything in our lives—not necessarily from a religious point of view, but
from a secular one. Religious people may believe in predestination through God,
but secular people may believe in predestination through genetics, brain
chemistry, laws of evolution.
The question of free will and destiny is also embedded in
the nature-versus-nurture debate, which makes the relationships between
siblings an amazing way to explore this question of how much responsibility we
have for who we are.
Q: Can you explain more about the role of memory in the book?
A: The book questions whether or not there is such a thing
as an objective reflection on the past. Our lives are now so saturated with
digital recording that it’s possible to imagine that we can look back at the
past with more evidence than we ever had.
My main character exploits that technological ability to
create a complete system that records every aspect of our lives. It’s a fantasy
I’ve had for a long time. But now, of course, social media has turned my dream
into a nightmare where every idiotic thing you do is recorded forever.
In the novel, that question of how we remember the past is
turned on its head, as historical evidence, whether digital or otherwise, ends
up interfering with the way we actually control our past—not by recording
everything, but by curating our memories, by selecting, out of that bottomless
well of trivialities, what’s worth remembering.
And it’s that act of choosing
what’s worth remembering that turns a lifetime’s worth of memories into a story
that gives our lives meaning.
Q: What are you working on now?
A: Did I mention how I always start with a hundred pages I end
up throwing away?
Q: Anything else we should know?
A: I have an 8 year old, a 6 year old, a 4 year old, and a 1
year old—which means this is all the time I can give to this interview right
now. Thanks for understanding.
--Interview with Deborah Kalb
No comments:
Post a Comment