Lian Dolan is the author of the new novel The Sweeney Sisters. She also has written the novels Helen of Pasadena and Elizabeth the First Wife, and her work has appeared in a variety of publications, including Pasadena Magazine and O, the Oprah Magazine. She is the producer and host of the the talk show Satellite Sisters, and she lives in Pasadena, California.
Q:
How did you come up with the idea for The Sweeney Sisters, and for your cast of
characters?
A:
There are a lot of books, movies and TV shows about multi-generational families
with strong matriarchs or patriarchs, but I wanted to write about adult
siblings making their way in the world without the “older” generation.
I
wanted to answer the question of what happens when Mom and Dad are gone and the
siblings have to create a new kind of relationship. I thought that question
might be even more heightened if one of the parents was famous, like the father
in The Sweeney Sisters.
And
then I started seeing posts on Facebook from people in my circle about
welcoming a new sibling into the family, thanks to an over-the-counter DNA
test.
That
seemed like a great wrench to throw into a sister story. Imagine being in your 30s
or 40s and having a new sibling show up. Wow, gamechanger!
The
characters of Liza, Maggie, and Tricia Sweeney came very quickly to me.
Character
development is my favorite part of the writing process! I love building the pieces
of characters that will fit together and serve the story.
I
have been thinking about sisters for years, thanks to my podcast Satellite
Sisters. And knew I wanted to include the uber-responsible oldest sister, the
freewheeling middle sister and the disciplined and independent younger sister. The
Sweeneys have the same parents, but different lives, and I thinks that’s pretty
typical in most families.
Q:
The novel is set in Southport, Connecticut. Why did you choose that location,
and how important is setting to you in your writing?
A:
As a reader, I love novels with a strong sense of place. It feeds into the “take
me away” reason I read books. So. It was natural for me as a writer to want to
create a setting that resonated.
My
first two novels are set in Pasadena, my current hometown, and I knew from the
many, many book club events I’ve gone to that readers love being a part of that
world with the Rose Parade, the gorgeous houses, the famous art and
architecture and institutions like Caltech and The Huntington.
For
this book, I chose Southport, the town where I grew up, because it lent itself
to a story about long-kept secrets and chaos behind the perfect façade. Southport is a picture-perfect town but what
goes on behind those doors with the big brass knockers may not be so perfect.
Plus,
I miss those East Coast summers, especially Fourth of July. There’s a Fourth of
July scene that’s a real centerpiece of the book with the traditional bunting
on historic homes, the homegrown bike parade, annual fireworks at the beach and
lobster and blueberry muffins on the table.
Q:
Can you say more about what you think the novel says about concepts of family?
A:
To me, family is an ever-evolving story. But a lot of families get stuck, plain
and simple. I think a lot of disfunction comes from families repeating the same
patterns of behavior over and over again, without growth or in.
With
The Sweeney Sisters, I wanted to write about how families can move through
disfunction, can open up to new people and new relationships and build a
stronger, bigger unit.
Q:
The Sweeney sisters' late father, William, was a famous writer. What was it
like to create a book about a writer?
A:
Bill Sweeney is definitely a writer from a generation that is almost gone—when
writers were rock stars and covered in gossip columns and The New Yorker in the
same week.
His
work is the sort of fiction that would still be read in high school or college,
part of a canon that would include Roth, Vonnegut, Knowles, even Salinger. I
imagined him looking like John Irving but acting like John Cheever.
That’s
the kind of male writer I remember from my youth. In fact, Robert Ludlum, the
superstar thriller writer, lived nearby and I used to see him walking on the
beach all the time.
Putting
all of those pieces together for The Sweeney Sisters was a fun mash-up of
memory and make-believe.
Q:
What are you working on now?
A:
I host a weekly podcast called Satellite Sisters and write a monthly humor
column for Pasadena Magazine, so I always have a lot of story ideas in the
hopper.
As
far as fiction. I’m thinking about the next novel but nothing ready to share
yet! I’m getting a lot of calls for a sequel to The Sweeney Sisters, which is
something I never considered, so now my brain is working on that.
Q:
Anything else we should know?
A:
I hope the book’s themes of reconnecting and resiliency resonate with readers
during this time. There are laughs and
parties and romance in The Sweeney Sisters, but there’s also a lot of love. I
hope it provides a hopeful escape for people.
--Interview with Deborah Kalb. Here's a previous Q&A with Lian Dolan.
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