Lauren Acampora, photo by Sarah Landis |
Lauren Acampora is the author of the new novel The Paper Wasp. She also has written the story collection The Wonder Garden, and her work has appeared in a variety of publications, including The Paris Review and Guernica. She lives in Westchester County, New York.
Q:
How did you come up with the idea for The Paper Wasp, and for your characters
Abby and Elise?
A:
I first came up with these characters about 10 years ago, standing in the
checkout line at my local supermarket in Brooklyn. I was struck with the
contrast of unloading my sad groceries onto a grimy conveyor belt in the depth
of a dark New York winter—while staring at the racks of magazines that depicted
glamorous Hollywood stars in the sunshine.
I
guess the line was moving slowly because I had plenty of time to imagine what
it might be like if I'd actually known one of those movie stars. What would it
feel like if I'd been best friends with someone who became a famous actress?
I
conceived of two girls growing up in the Midwest, one of whom breaks out and
one of whom is left behind to watch her friend rise to stardom through the
supermarket tabloids. I wrote a short story about these characters and didn't
return to them until years later when a friend encouraged me to expand the
story into a novel.
Q:
Did you always know how the novel would end, or did you make changes along the
way?
A:
Yes, I did know the ending all the time, and I wrote toward it as a goalpost. I
wasn't quite sure how I'd get Abby to that very particular place by the conclusion
of the novel, but the fact that she'd land there was absolutely predetermined.
In fact, the image of that place came to me in a dream, and I gave that dream
to her.
Q:
The book takes place primarily in Los Angeles, but also in Michigan. How
important is setting to you in your work?
A:
Setting is crucial, as it determines the atmosphere and mood of any piece of
writing. In this case, the two main settings are in stark contrast. When Abby
flies from the dark Michigan winter to the perpetual sun and color of Los
Angeles, it's as if she's entered another world. The mood of the book changes
completely as her outlook becomes brighter, and her ambitions awaken in the
California light.
Her
character is psychologically fragile and susceptible to wildly vacillating
emotions, and you could say the two places symbolize her alternating states. In
fact, there are two cities named Hesperia in the book—one in Michigan and one
in California—which represent these polar opposites for her.
Q:
How was the novel's title chosen, and what does it signify for you?
A:
As I was conceiving of The Rhizome (the creative institute in Los Angeles), I
read the work of French philosophers Deleuze and Guattari, who wrote about the
behavior of certain wasps through a metaphorical lens.
This
lit a spark in me, so I did what I often do when I get interested in a topic: I
went down a rabbit hole. I researched wasps and became a quasi wasp expert. I
became especially interested in the behavior of paper wasps, which coexist in a
cooperative but subservient society under the leadership of a queen.
Sometimes,
when a queen isn't able to establish her own nest, she's forced to join another
colony as a subordinate worker. Occasionally, she'll wrest dominance from the
existing queen and take over the nest. That's high drama right there—and an apt
analogy for what happens in the book. Wasps joined the symbolic framework of my
story, and I found my title.
Q:
What are you working on now?
A:
I have another novel in the works, but at this moment I'm focusing on short
stories. As I learned from experience with my first book, it's difficult to
stay immersed in a long project during the months directly preceding and
following publication. Instead, stories are the way to go—and I really enjoy
writing them. I eventually plan to put these new stories into a thematically
linked collection.
Q:
Anything else we should know?
A:
My favorite part of writing fiction might be doing preliminary research. The
Paper Wasp gave me the chance to explore many engrossing subjects, including
the science of dreams, the workings of a film set, the responsibilities of a
stylist and a personal assistant, the plight of Central American refugees, and
the construction of kites.
Having
lived in the Northeast my whole life, it was also great fun to do research
"in the field" for the settings of the novel. I've been lucky to get
to know Western Michigan through my husband, who grew up there and whose
parents now live on a farm in a beautiful rural part of the area. We've visited
at least twice a year for the past 15 years or so.
For
this book, I also traveled to Ann Arbor. I strolled around the University of
Michigan campus, and walked over the infamous bridge near Abby's off-campus
housing.
As
for Los Angeles, I'd only spent a small amount of time there—a few visits in
the 1990s and a few visits over the past decade—so I had a reason to go back.
L.A. has always been a fascinating place to me, full of contrasts, darks and
lights.
My
favorite part of the city is Topanga Canyon, which feels like a world apart
with its trees, hiking trails, bohemian past, scattered art, and insane hairpin
curves in the mountain roads. Some of the more enjoyable research I've done as
a writer was staying in Topanga and driving around Malibu, peeking through
gates onto private estates, dreaming up Elise's house and filling it with
exquisite, outlandish décor.
--Interview with Deborah Kalb. Here's a previous Q&A with Lauren Acampora.
No comments:
Post a Comment