Hazel Gaynor |
Hazel Gaynor and Heather Webb are the authors of Last Christmas in Paris, an epistolary novel that takes place during World War I. Hazel Gaynor's other books include The Cottingly Secret and The Girl Who Came Home. Heather Webb's other books include Becoming Josephine and Rodin's Lover. Gaynor lives in Ireland, and Webb lives in New England.
Q: What are some of the differences between writing a novel
on your own and writing one with a co-author?
A: For both of us, this was a whole new experience. Of
course, writing a novel alone is a very solitary process. Even with the help of
crit partners and editors, it feels very much like your own work and you feel
the highs and lows alone. Writing solo, you are in charge of the novel
entirely.
Heather Webb |
With a writing partner, there is another opinion to take
into account at every step of the way: plot, characters, story structure, and
other things as well. The title, the book description on the cover flap, and
even the cover. We learned to create plans together for promotion as well. In
other words, it’s very different!
Like anything, there are pros and cons to both methods, but
we really enjoyed working on this together. In fact, we didn’t realize how much
fun it was going to be sharing in true inspiration for a concept we both truly
loved, in sharing the hard work, and in seeing it all come to fruition.
Q: Did you plot out the novel before writing it, or was it
more spontaneous?
A: We had an overall idea for the narrative arc, and we knew
we wanted to tell the story through a series of letters and telegrams that
spanned the four years of the war.
We also had some direction for each of our main
protagonists’ development, but a lot of the emotional elements, the secondary
characters, and also which historical tidbits to include emerged organically as
we exchanged letters between us while writing that first draft.
In other words, we did both. We plotted a general outline
and explored the basics of our main characters ahead of time, but there were
many surprises along the way that we didn’t expect.
Q: What are some of your favorite epistolary novels?
A: The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society by Mary
Ann Shaffer and Annie Barrows
Dangerous Liaisons by Choderlos de Laclos
Letters from Skye by Jessica Brockmole
Q: Why did you decide to include World War I journalism as one of
the book's topics?
A: We researched newspaper headlines and the printing
presses behind them because we knew we wanted Tom Harding to be involved in the
newspaper business very early on. It made sense for our story since we wanted to
incorporate different mediums of text: letters, telegrams, and newspaper
articles.
When we realized Evie was going to be a journalist as well,
we dug much deeper into the ways in which the news played a part in the war.
Even more fascinating and disturbing was the way in which the public was
informed. What happened on the battlefield versus what the people back home
were told in both the letters they received and in the papers they read, were
starkly different.
The issue of propaganda and fake news is as relevant now as
it was then, and it struck us how little progress we have really made in a
hundred years.
We decided to give Evie a prominent role that differed from
the others most expect to read about in fiction: the nurses at the Front, or
the women back home waiting on their beau. To make Evie an aspiring journalist
meant we could shine a light on the women in so many other positions during
this tumultuous time. We could give them a voice.
Q: Will you write more books together in the future? What are
some upcoming projects for you both?
A: Yes! We would love to work together again. Watch this
space! *Insert evil laugh*
As for Hazel, she is working on her fifth solo novel, a
re-imagining of Victorian lighthouse keeper Grace Darling, and the forgotten
lives of female light keepers of the early 20th century. The book will be
released in fall 2018.
Heather is gearing up to release a historical suspense novel
titled The Phantom’s Apprentice, a re-imagining of Phantom of the Opera told
from Christine Daae’s point of view, on February 6, 2018. She’s also working
diligently on an immigration story set in 1901 in the U.S.
Q: Anything else we should know?
A: For anyone who hasn’t previously read an epistolary
novel, we would encourage you to do so! A novel written in letters certainly
makes for a different reading experience to a traditionally written novel, and
we are so thrilled that reviewers have remarked on how deeply they cared about
Tom and Evie and the other characters, and how the letters made for a very
intimate reading experience.
We are also delighted to hear that the novel reads
seamlessly and although readers are always guessing which of us wrote which
characters, they are unable to detect a change in the writing. We love this! And
the answer is, we both worked on all of the characters and shaped the entire
narrative together over many drafts.
--Interview with Deborah Kalb. Here's a previous Q&A with Hazel Gaynor.
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