Michael Parker, photo by Tasha Thomas |
Michael Parker is the author of the new historical novel Prairie Fever. His other books include The Watery Part of the World, and his work has appeared in a variety of publications, including The Washington Post and The New York Times Magazine. He lives in Austin, Texas.
Q:
How did you come up with the idea for Prairie Fever, and for your characters
Lorena, Elise, and Gus?
A:
My grandmother died a few weeks after I was born, so I never met her, but my
mother told me stories about her. She was the only one of my grandparents not
from North Carolina---she grew up in Lone Wolf, Oklahoma, where the story
begins and remains for the better part of the novel.
Of
the few stories I heard about her, the one that stuck with me, was how my
great-grandmother used to put my grandmother and her sister atop a horse in the
winter, pin blankets all the way around them to protect them from the wind and
snow, pat the horse, who know the way to school, and send them out into the
elements.
I
thought about that image---of the two sisters, wrapped in blankets, travelling
in darkness on the back of that horse the eight miles to and from school---for
years before I decided to write about it.
All
my novels have come from images I’ve not been able to get out of my head. I
don’t begin with ideas---I begin with a vision, a snippet of movement in a
landscape, and from that point comes characters, and the desires of the
characters, which constitute, eventually, with much rewriting, the plot.
Q:
How important is setting to you in your writing?
A:
I tend to think of landscape as inseparable from character. It is a repository
for emotion. Ideally I’d like to avoid ever writing a tag like “she felt,” or
“he thought.” I’m interested in thoughts and feelings that are suggested
through the things the character sees—and, through the filter of the character’s
noticing, the things the reader sees.
So
it’s crucial, in that respect. It’s inseparable from character, from plot. At a
certain point there’s little point in distinguishing between the “elements” of
fiction, because if the story’s working, they become indivisible.
Q:
Did you need to do much research to write the novel, and did you learn anything
especially surprising?
A:
Most of my research came from reading newspapers from that period and that part
of the country. My father ran a small-town newspaper, and he died while I was
writing the book, so in a way my research was a way of honoring his life’s
work---which is why the newspaper becomes such an important part of the story,
of the girl’s life, of the life of the community.
I
think I was surprised at how well written those newspaper articles were, though
I don’t know what was surprising about it, since aside from the major dailies,
journalism these days is mostly syndicated wire material. Very few papers are
owned by folks in the community. The writing no longer has any connection to
the place—there’s no sense of idiom or regional distinction.
That’s
a sad thing, and it was wonderful—and yes, surprising—to reconnect with
journalism that seemed to be coming from the place, and the residents of that
place, rather than from some impersonal, homogeneous space.
Q:
What do you hope readers take away from the novel?
A:
The most I can hope for is that my work raises or poses questions about how we
live, how we love, how we relate to each other, how we fail each other, and how
we sometimes, despite ourselves, find our way out the messes we make. If the
novel poses a question in the reader’s mind, I feel like the book is a
success.
Q:
What are you working on now?
A:
I just retired after 29 years of teaching and moved full-time to Austin, where
I’ve lived part time since 2010, so I’m mainly working on unpacking boxes and
trying to figure out how to part with books for which I have no room.
Actually,
I’ve been writing some short fiction, but stories are so much harder for me
than novels—and they take longer for me to write. I’m glad to have something
short to work on, though—and I welcome the intensity of story-writing, which
calls for a different kind of attentiveness than writing novels.
Q:
Anything else we should know?
A:
Only that I thank you for your interest in my work, and wish you and your
readers all the best.
--Interview with Deborah Kalb
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