Tracy O'Neill is the author of the new novel Quotients. She also has written the novel The Hopeful, and her work has appeared in a variety of publications, including Granta and Rolling Stone.
Q: How did you come up with the idea for Quotients, and for
your characters Alexandra and Jeremy?
A: I’d met a man who either was or claimed to have been a
spy. When I met him, it seemed to me that he wanted very much to feel safe and
settled, to have a family. Yet I couldn’t help but suspect that his work in
intelligence had made such a life only more difficult.
The Snowden revelations had already become international
news by then, and I was interested in thinking about how precisely what we
believe will keep us safe often does not and how paranoia, even when
somewhat justified, circumscribes how we connect with each other.
Alexandra was the second character I conceived of. I knew
she needed to have a much more normal job, but it needed to still be touched by
a society of watching and being watched. I knew she needed to be naïve, and I
knew she needed to be driven by impulses only at the edge of her consciousness.
Q: Did you need to do any research to write the book, and if
so, did you learn anything especially surprising?
A: I was in a Ph.D. program in communications at Columbia,
so I was doing quite a bit of thinking about mass communication, digital
surveillance, journalism studies, so on.
I read about The Troubles. Then at one point I dragged one
of my best friends Maggie with me to Northern Ireland so that I could have a
stronger sense of what it felt like to be there. I was shocked when I realized
how quickly the neighborhoods shift in Belfast. It is one thing to see the map
and another to move through the territory.
Q: What do you think the novel says about technology and its
impact on people's lives?
A: I hope that this is a question that the novel addresses
at novel length.
Q: How did your writing process for this novel compare with
your experience writing The Hopeful?
A: For the better part of the time in which I was writing
The Hopeful, I was frightened that I would never be able to stretch the
narrative to novel length. Quotients needed radical cutting. It was well over 600
pages, and I cut what amounts to a novel from the final manuscript.
Q: What are you working on now?
A: At the moment, I am writing a brief essay on Wayne
Koestenbaum.
Q: Anything else we should know?
A: One of my greatest challenges with Quotients was settling
on a title. I have several notebook pages full of really appalling ones.
--Interview with Deborah Kalb. Here's a previous Q&A with Tracy O'Neill.
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