Amy Gottlieb, photo by Nina Subin |
Amy Gottlieb is the author of the new novel The Beautiful Possible. Her work has appeared in a variety of publications, including Other Voices and Lilith. She lives in New York City.
Q: How did you come up with the ideas for your characters
Walter, Sol, and Rosalie, and for the dynamic that exists among them?
A: The novel began with Walter, a traumatized German-Jewish
refugee caught between worlds. I was compelled by his poetic sensibility and
plowed through early drafts to uncover his story.
Along the way, I stumbled upon the characters of Sol and
Rosalie, who are struggling to make their way as a rabbinic couple in a postwar
suburban synagogue.
The character of Rosalie was influenced by my mother and her
friends, who were pushing against their traditional roles as suburban Jewish
wives and mothers in the 1960's and '70s. I grew up listening to their stories
and Rosalie's voice was very familiar to me.
Sol was my most elusive character, but I recognized his
situation. For 14 years I worked as an editor for rabbis, and heard many
accounts of religious doubt, professional ambivalence, and the inherent
dissonance between a spiritual leader’s love of tradition and a community that
may not understand that passion.
This is Sol’s plight, yet I had to write many drafts to
understand how he loved both Walter and Rosalie. Each character is marked by
vulnerability; they respond to each other’s desires in unexpected ways that
shift throughout the novel.
Q: The book takes place over 70 years. Did you research the
different time periods, and why did you opt to include such a long time span in
the novel?
A: The novel begins with Walter’s unfulfilled promise to
Sonia that they will build a future in Palestine -- he as an historian of
religions and she as a singer. Sonia is murdered along with Walter’s father,
yet the full arc of the novel needs to extend to Maya, the inheritor and
interpreter of her parents’ story.
I love how the immense canvas of a novel can suggest the
passage of time, including generational shifts and spiritual realignments.
I researched quite a bit, but mostly I let my characters
guide the narrative, and then checked in with several scholars to make sure the
details were historically plausible.
Walter’s journey to India was inspired by the journey of
Alex Aronson, a German Jew who fled Nazi Germany and found his way to Tagore’s
ashram. I loved researching this section, and now I want to visit Shantiniketan
and see it for myself.
Q: How would you describe the role of religion in the book?
A: There’s a quote by Rabbi Nachman that I love: “The
essence of faith lies in the power of the imagination.” In obvious ways, The
Beautiful Possible is fueled by Jewish ideas and theological musings.
Yet in the process of writing and revising, I realized that
writing fiction and studying Jewish texts have much in common. Both demand a
degree of faith in order to surrender to a kind of fictive truth. Both fulfill
the yearning to connect to a larger narrative. And both invite us to play with
language and engage in imaginative possibility.
In the prologue Maya writes, “I once believed all the words
of the Torah were true, just as I once assumed that my mother and father
belonged to each other in the way of ordinary married people.”
As a girl she accepts the a priori “once upon a time” story,
but she grows up to transcend that fallacy and write the book of her parents.
The religious and narrative motifs are intertwined in the enigmatic encounter
between faith and imagination.
Q: How was the book’s title selected, and what does it
signify for you?
A: The book was originally titled “The Mountain of Spices”
(from the Song of Songs) and my agent asked if I wanted to find a stronger
title.
I combed through the manuscript and discovered three
different instances of the phrase “the beautiful possible” and each instance
was significant. The Beautiful Possible refers to the unfolding story that
always lies ahead.
Q: What are you working on now?
A: I’m finishing up a work of nonfiction – an extended
meditation on finding beauty in a Persian garden, in the spirit of Anne Morrow
Lindbergh’s A Gift from the Sea.
I’m also delving into a new novel, which is in a very
nascent stage of drafting. I can’t say much about it yet, except to reveal that
one of my characters is a bike racer. It took me 10 years to write The
Beautiful Possible; I’m summoning velocity this time around.
--Interview with Deborah Kalb
No comments:
Post a Comment