Leah Kaminsky is the author most recently of the novel The Waiting Room. Her other books include Stitching Things Together and Writer, M.D. She is a physician, and is Poetry & Fiction Editor at the Medical Journal of Australia.
Q: How did you come up with the idea for The Waiting Room, and for
your main character, Dina?
A: The book has been with me for many years. In my 20s I
wanted to write a book about my mother’s war experiences as a teenager in the
Lodz ghetto, Auschwitz and finally, Bergen Belsen. She was the sole survivor of
her entire family.
After she died I only remembered a handful of the stories
she had told me and, sadly, there was no one left to ask.
It took me a long time to build on those snippets of my
mother’s narrative via fiction. I wanted to create a character who, like me,
had been a reluctant listener in her youth. She is named after Dina’s cat in
Alice in Wonderland, who waited behind patiently.
Q: How would you describe the relationship between Dina and
her mother?
A: Dina is haunted by her mother, who implores her to bear
witness. Hers is a metaphorical ghost who cannot rest until her daughter
acknowledges her stories and stops running from the past and her own heritage.
She is a quintessential Jewish mother, driving her daughter
to distraction by popping up from beyond the grave when she is least wanted,
but in a twist at the end of the novel, actually ends up saving her daughter’s
life.
Q: The book's present-day action takes place mostly on one
day. How did that affect the book's structure and organization?
A: It was important for me to compress the story. This is
one day in Dina’s life that will change everything. And the internal pressure
and implosion inside Dina’s head, reflects the external threat of a terror
attack, in a city hitherto renowned for co-existence within a region embroiled
in conflict.
It made the book necessarily shorter, but tighter, the
tension building with each chapter until the climax. The opening chapter starts
with an explosion that occurs at the end of the day. The rest of the book takes
the reader on a journey that begins earlier that morning.
Q: How did you pick the book's title, and what does it
signify for you?
A: The trope of waiting is woven throughout the novel. We
are all born waiting – to grow up, get a job, find a partner – and ultimately,
to die. It is what we do with this waiting that makes a difference; do we wait
passively, or wait with intentionality?
The waiting room is a unique place where disparate people
are thrown together, feeling anxious and vulnerable, and I also saw it as a
microcosm for Israel, which is made up of people of so many cultural
backgrounds.
I also think that the way we wait reveals a lot about who we
are and our worldview. I’m a very impatient person and hate being kept waiting,
so the irony of taking 10 years to write a novel about waiting doesn’t pass me
by.
Q: What are you working on now?
A: I am working on my next novel, called The Hollow Bones,
about a very unusual scientific expedition that took place in the 1930s.
In parallel, I’m writing a hybrid memoir/non-fiction book
about the poet Melekh Ravitch, who came to Australia in 1933 in search of a
homeland for Jewish German refugees. He was the father of Yosl Bergner, who was
a dear friend of my father and became my mentor when I lived in Israel for 10
years.
Q: Anything else we should know?
A: I also love to read and write poetry – without the poets,
we’d be dust.
--Interview with Deborah Kalb
No comments:
Post a Comment