Wendy Gordon is the author of the new novel Wrong Highway. A longtime journalist, she lives in Portland, Oregon.
Q: How did you come up with the idea for
Wrong Highway, and for your main character, Erica?
A: I’d written several short stories, and
they all seemed to be, in some fashion, about wayward teenagers and drugs. So I
decided I was going to write a story about adults. I wrote the first draft of a
story about two (adult) sisters who had a good girl/bad girl dynamic going
on.
The “bad” sister, however, was more
spirited and ultimately a better survivor than the passive “good” sister. I
envisioned the bad girl interfering with the good girl’s life in an attempt to
rescue her from her dangerous passivity, an attempt with unintended
consequences. I wondered if one flawed individual could save another flawed
individual’s life, or if they should even try.
I gave the good girl a teenage son
(Jared), the plot took off, and I ended up writing about…wayward teenagers and
drugs, but also another one of my subconscious themes, the wavering line where
adolescence ends and adulthood begins.
I’m a believer in writing what you know,
in spirit if not necessarily in fact. Having been a stay-at-home mother of
three young children in a Long Island suburb, I knew that milieu and that job
intimately. Erica became an alter ego of sorts during the time I inhabited her
character.
The title “Wrong Highway” was inspired by
the Talking Heads song “Once in a
Lifetime,” which to me is the iconic ‘80s song.
Q: Why did you decide to set the novel in
the 1980s, and why did you also include a prologue set in 1964?
A: I am fascinated by the 1980s. There
was something about that decade that made me feel like an observer even while I
was living through it. It was a very singular time, unlike the decade that
preceded it, and unlike any that followed.
There was so much artifice, in the
fashions, in the music, in its very essence. At the same time, there existed a
cheesy optimism, a wide-open sense of possibility. I felt like I was going
along for the ride—very much present—yet all that time awaiting the inevitable
moment when the whole wild ride would self-destruct. Which happened, right on
schedule.
Plot-wise, I included the prologue to
introduce the dichotomy of Erica and Debbie’s characters. My parents took me to
the New York World’s Fair in 1964 and it made a huge impression. What a whole
big shiny future!
That summer, I read about two young boys
who ran away from home and lived for three days at the fair, paying for food
with coins they fished from the fountains. I write very visually, and one of
the images I had from the start was Erica, looking at all that colored light
through a curtain of water.
Q: Did you need to do a lot of research
to recreate the music and culture of the '80s in such detail?
A: I didn’t do any research at all. I
just wrote, and then fact-checked. I
checked to make sure the songs I referenced had indeed been released by 1986,
and I verified my baseball details.
I researched the domestic violence laws
in New York in 1986, and ran the police procedural details by a retired cop who
was in my writing critique group. I verified the medical effects of Coumadin.
I read several first-person accounts of
“boot camps” for wayward teenagers, and to my shock, they were way worse than
I’d imagined! So I adjusted my description of the Pritima Center to reflect
that reality.
Q: Did you know how the novel would end
before you started writing, or did you make many changes as you went along?
A: As I mentioned, I write visually. I
had an image in my mind of baby Sophia escaping her stroller and petting all
the dogs. I wanted an ambiguous ending. I did not want a pat ending, whether it
be heartwarming or tragic.
I wanted a degree of redemption for
Erica. I wanted her to be a survivor.
But I did not want her to get a “comeuppance” or experience some huge
epiphany, so she could be safely packaged away in the reader’s mind. I left it
to the reader’s speculation what the future might bring, because that is real
life.
So I knew how the novel would start
(Erica, in the fountain) and how it would end (Erica, with Sophia and the
dogs). The big challenge was getting from here to there. I made many changes
along the way. It was a twisty highway, with plenty of side trips.
Q: What are you working on now?
A: I am working on a novel set in the
very near future, in California, where virtually every action in the world is
done through a technological interface, and the documentation of every moment
of existence has become even more pervasive than it is now.
I see it on the model of Michael Faber’s The Book of Strange New
Things, in that while it’s speculative fiction, the personal drama is way more
important than the technological details. Again, I have a 30-something
mother as a protagonist, and again I deal with the lure of both safety and
danger.
Q: Anything else we should know?
A: I grew up in Bethesda, Maryland! I’ve
been a political junkie all my life and have definitely heard your father on
the news. I’ve probably read your articles too. Thank you for including me in
your blog.
--Interview with Deborah Kalb
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