Dana Czapnik, photo by Susan Stripling |
Dana Czapnik is the author of the new novel The Falconer. She has worked for ESPN: the Magazine, the United States Tennis Association, and the Arena Football League. She lives in Manhattan.
Q:
How did you come up with the idea for The Falconer, and for your character
Lucy?
A:
I’ve always known I wanted to write a bildungsroman about a young woman like
Lucy. I’d never read about a female athlete in literary fiction and I think the
experience of being a woman in a space that’s been traditionally occupied by
men is a way to open the door to writing about gender and navigating womanhood.
I
also knew I wanted her to be a young woman who is open to the world, even as
she’s often times questioning it. My favorite young male characters are ones
who are searching for their own philosophy and grappling with the injustices of
the world. I wanted to write a book that creates the space for a young woman to
have that same experience.
I
also was interested in writing about New York in the early ‘90s, just before
the money started to take over, and the lives of a group of young people at the
time – young people who grew up in the shadow of their parents’ generation and
are both envious and skeptical of their contributions.
Q:
The novel has been compared to The Catcher in the Rye. What do you think of
that comparison?
A:
I’m deeply flattered to be mentioned in the same breath as Salinger, who
remains one of the greats of literature. And of course, I thought a lot about Holden
while conceiving of this novel – specifically Salinger’s mastery of teenage
speech and expression.
But
though there are echoes of Holden in Lucy, in many ways she is the antithesis
of him. They do not share the same worldview. At this point though, it has come
up so much, I really hope potential readers know that my book isn’t Catcher in
the Rye with a Girl.
Catcher
in the Rye has already been written and it’s been written brilliantly and it
will always remain a masterpiece of American Literature. I hope readers will
find that The Falconer is actually a very different book and that Lucy is a
very different character.
Q:
Can you say more about why you chose to set the novel in 1993-4, and do you
think Lucy's story would have been any different if it were set today?
A:
Oh, the story would be entirely different if it took place today because of
cell phones and the ubiquity of the internet and sexting and pornography and
social media – not to mention the current political situation and the fact that
kids keep dying in school shootings and apparently America is okay with it,
which must send a message to children and teenagers they are not valuable at
all.
I
can’t imagine writing about young kids in America right now and not writing
about all these things.
I
set it in that time period because I was interested in writing about kids
during the last moment before the internet took over our lives, who were the
products of baby boomer parents, and about New York before it became the
playground of the rich instead of the young and scrappy.
I’m
in the same generation as Lucy, though slightly younger than her, and we’re
this small generation sandwiched between two of the largest most influential
generations on Earth – the Boomers and the Millennials – and we are the first
generation of women to have been born into a country where we have total
theoretical access and autonomy. And with that has come many growing pains.
Q:
New York City is almost like another character in the book. How important is a
sense of place in your writing?
A:
Having only written one novel so far, I really can’t say what I will do with
place as my career progresses. But for this novel in particular, place was
extraordinarily important to me.
I
grew up in Manhattan and still live here, and The Falconer is both a love
letter to the New York I grew up in as well as a critique of it. It’s a
beautiful, flawed, angry, unpredictable, alive city and those are all the
traits I love to find in actual characters in a novel.
New
York is seen entirely through Lucy’s eyes, though, so even when you’re seeing
New York in the novel, what you’re really seeing is Lucy.
Q:
What are you working on now?
A:
I have a few things I’m working on, but not quite ready to talk about them yet.
Hopefully soon!
Q:
Anything else we should know?
A:
Just want to say thank you for the interview. I’m extremely flattered and
excited that people like you are taking notice of my book. I hope your readers
enjoy it!
--Interview with Deborah Kalb
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