Zoe Fishman is the author of the new novel Invisible As Air. Her other books include Saving Ruth and Inheriting Edith, and her work has appeared in the Atlanta Journal-Constitution. She teaches at Emory Continuing Education and the Decatur Writers Studio, and she lives in Decatur, Georgia.
Q: Why did you decide to write about a character who's
addicted to opioids in your new novel?
A: That was actually the starting point of the novel. I was
and continue to be very interested in the way this epidemic has ripped through
the country, destroying so many people's lives, and almost always beginning
with a doctor's prescription.
Oxycodone knows so class or gender or economic strata, and I
wanted to write about an unlikely, rather invisible victim: an upper-middle-class
working mom who knows better but still can't help herself.
Q: You write, "So although Sylvie and the Snow family's
situation is different than mine, it's my hope that by writing myself through
grief, I was at least somehow able to write them authentically through it
too." How did your own experience with grief inform your writing of the
novel?
A: It made me much more empathic to everyone's individual
grief path. Everyone handles grief differently depending on their personal
histories and personalities, and all paths should be given space.
The novel also allowed me to call out the people that let me
down when my husband died, the supposed friends who didn't so much as send a
two-line email acknowledging my loss. When Sylvie lashes out at the PTA
meeting, that's something I longed to do and still do actually.
But I'm very lucky, I wasn't let down by many - I have a
wonderful community, friends and family that continue to keep me and my sons
afloat.
Q: How was the book's title chosen, and what does it signify
for you?
A: When you love someone, and especially if that someone
happens to be a complicated person and the love a complicated love, I think a
lot of times you see what you want to see. It's too much, too exhausting to dig
any further beneath the surface than you already have for a variety of reasons,
but mostly because to voice concern usually means a fight and heavy denial.
Sylvie's addiction is invisible to her family because they
want to believe that the changes in her demeanor are organic, and also because
confronting her about the alternative would require energy that they just can't
summon.
Q: You write from Sylvie's perspective, but also from the
perspectives of her husband and son. Did you write the book in the order in
which it appears, or did you focus more on one character at a time?
A: I wrote the book is the order it appears. I'm what they
call a "plotter" - I always have a thorough synopsis and outline
before I begin writing.
Inevitably it changes as the characters come alive, a type
of magic that I'm very grateful for because that means that they're becoming
their own people outside of my very structured plan.
Q: What are you working on now?
A: My next novel is about a widower in his 80s, Abe, and a
woman in her 20s, Nora, who meet at a shiva in New York City and become
unlikely friends. Obviously there's a lot more to the plot than that, but that
was the initial idea.
Q: Anything else we should know?
A: A lot of folks have asked me about my thoughts on
grief, as someone who is grieving themselves and is writing about it in
Invisible As Air.
If I could offer one piece of advice to the friends and
loved ones of those that are grieving, it's this: don't pretend it hasn't
happened. You're not helping by ignoring. Ask them how they're doing in the
wake of these painful deaths. Say the names of those that have died. In this
small but very impactful way, they live on.
--Interview with Deborah Kalb
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