Susan Coll is the author most recently of the novel The Stager. Her other novels are Beach Week, Acceptance, Rockville Pike, and karlmarx.com. She works at Politics & Prose bookstore, and she lives in Washington, D.C.
Q: Why did you choose a home stager as
one of your main characters in The Stager?
A: I’ve long been obsessed with trying
to capture the way we live in contemporary suburbia, and the idea of home
staging seemed especially rich with metaphor. The Stager’s goal is to create
illusions about the way we live---or more accurately perhaps, the way we want
to envision ourselves living.
I also love the symbolism of neat
exteriors masking messy interior lives. Essentially a stranger comes into the
home to strip it of personality, to symbolically declare that the house is no
longer the emotional property of the homeowner.
Add to this already volatile emotional
situation the fact that the Stager is presumably a complete stranger who has
access to the very private realm that is one’s home.
When I had my own home staged at the
behest of a Realtor, my admittedly dark imagination began to churn: what if the
Stager was not a stranger? What if she had her own agenda? What if she was a person
with no boundaries? What if she was an unreliable narrator, to boot? It seemed
a delicious set up.
Q: Do you know how your novels will end
before you start writing, or do you make many changes as you go along?
A:
I don’t know where I’m going as I write, and that includes the end. I usually
have a general sense of how it will all wrap up, but I can’t articulate the
details until I get there.
That
means I revise and revise endlessly. Some days when I sit down to write it’s a
struggle to not start at the very beginning again; I feel like I need to have
every detail right before I move forward. It’s not the most efficient process,
needless to say.
Q: Another important character is a
rabbit. How did you come to write about him?
A: Oh Dominique! The rabbit really
began as a comedic sidebar. There was a bad smell in the house, and it was
caused by the rabbit chewing through the electrical cord of the freezer. This had
happened to a friend, who had a destructive pet rabbit who kept chewing on
things, including the carpet.
But as I wrote, the rabbit took on an
increasingly important role. By the time I got to the end of the book this
rabbit just inserted himself into the narrative. He wanted to tell his story. I
stepped aside and let him do his thing.
Q: You wrote the book from the
perspectives of some--but not all--of your protagonists. Why did you pick those
particular perspectives?
A: I struggled with the point of view
in this book through many drafts. Originally Elsa, the 10-year-old, did not
have a speaking part. She was just a child in the room, sitting on the floor
playing with her dolls.
I had written part of the narrative
from Bella’s point of view, but at some point I decided I was less interested
in what in what she had to say. I didn’t want to pass judgment on Bella, and in
some ways I didn’t even want to know what was going on in her head, I was
simply more interested in her as an archetype, and in the destruction she was
wreaking on others.
But once I dropped Bella’s POV, I lost
my way into certain important elements of the narrative. This led to one of the
key comic conceits of the novel---Lars’ omniscient point of view, which is
caused by mixing too many medications with the letters x, y, and z. I invented
this side effect in order to get the reader into Bella’s head to tell us what
was happening in real time.
Q: What about the D.C. area makes it a good
setting for your novels?
A:
Every novel I’ve published has been set in the Washington, D.C., area, which is
surprising even to me since I am not from the area. I suppose I began writing
about D.C. and Montgomery County because I was viewing it through the lens of
an outsider, and everything seemed fresh and interesting.
But
part of what continues to fascinate me about Bethesda in particular is the
ideal nature of the place. There’s an unusually high level of affluence and
education among the residents, and they are all trying to live examined lives.
In
my mind I often equate Bethesda with Plato’s republic—how do you set about
creating a perfect society? And then once you have achieved that, just sit back
and see what happens.
Q: Which authors have inspired you?
A: At times I feel I am nothing more
than the sum of what I have read: Everything I’ve ever read is lodged inside me
somewhere, which is part of why I can’t give any of my books away, and my house
may soon buckle from the weight.
But the simpler answer is that I love
to read dark comedy. William Boyd’s A Good Man in Africa, Graham Greene’s Our
Man in Havana, George Orwell’s Burmese Days, Zoe Heller’s Notes on a Scandal. I’m
a huge fan of Cathleen Schine, who writes very smart but accessible fiction, so
I was honored to have her write a blurb for the book.
Q: Anything else we should know?
A: I feel quite fortunate right now to
have a life and a job where I’m surrounded by books.
--Interview with Deborah Kalb. Susan Coll will be appearing at the Bethesda Literary Festival, which runs from April 17-19, 2015. For a previous version of this Q&A, please click here.
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