Photo by Sylvia Rosokoff |
Marie Mutsuki Mockett is the author of the new novel The Tree Doctor. Her other books include the novel Picking Bones from Ash.
Q: What inspired you to write The Tree Doctor?
A: In many ways it is still a mystery. I've said that I saw a Tweet on Twitter, back when Twitter existed and when I was on Twitter. The Tweet was something like: "Those people having affairs are going to have a rough time during lockdown." And I thought, oh what a great idea for a story. But that is also something I think at least once a day.
Then I was at a garden center during the pandemic and saw a nice man helping nervous women with their plants and I thought; he has an opportunity.
This was not a generous thing to think, but again, it's the way a writer's brain works. We look for potential in a story. And then the opening appeared in my head and I started writing and did not stop.
Q: The writer Celeste Ng said of the book, “If existential despair can kill, as the narrator thinks at one point, The Tree Doctor is about the opposite: how reconnecting with the world around you--and with your own soul--will help you survive.” What do you think of that description?
A: I like this description! The novel is about many things, but I do see it in part as being about a woman who is unexpectedly alone and feels that she is surrounded by decay. She wants to find a way to be alive and that happens metaphorically but literally.
After a pandemic, I think we are all at a psychic level still dealing with a traumatic experience and it is one we share. So how can we heal?
Q: Did you know how the story would end before you started writing it, or did you make many changes along the way?
A: It really came to me all at once, though certain details were enhanced.
But I was spoiled in a way, because I realized that culturally a good part of Japanese history is about going through and overcoming crises like a pandemic.
I've tried to write about this recently--the rituals in Japan that face off with massive pestilence. Something exists in classical Japanese culture to confront this.
So I knew, before the pandemic, that we would come out the other side and that we would be changed and I was trying to envision what that path might look like based on history.
Q: What do you hope readers take away from the book?
A: It is worth it to be alive and we should not apologize for wanting to live--and women in what we have called "middle age" absolutely have the right to feel the joy of life.
Q: What are you working on now?
A: I'm not quite ready to talk about what I'm working on! But I'll share when I can.
Q: Anything else we should know?
A: Just that the book is not PG. But I think it is also not a hard read!
--Interview with Deborah Kalb. Here's a previous Q&A with Marie Mutsuki Mockett.
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