Just before I graduated from the University of California at Santa Cruz, happenstance and good luck got me the use of a small stone cottage in rural West County Cork, Ireland.
Photo credit: Elias Ehmann |
An
unsolved mystery at the heart of that manuscript I wrote in Ireland some 44
years ago—along with the disappearance from my life of my own beloved
sister—evolved into the plot for what will be my fourth published novel, What
Disappears, coming out from Regal
House in 2021. It’s a story that begins in Tsarist Russia, with the birth
of identical twins, and ends in the Belle Époque world of Sergei Diaghilev’s
Ballets Russes.
In writing
and reimagining this tale over the years, I found a way to explain why someone
like my great-grandmother, a humble provincial tailor who made hats and coats
for the girls’ parochial school in Kishinev, took the train twice a year, all
by herself, to Paris. My grandmother, shrugging, said it was to see the
fashions. But the emotional truth of this extravagance required a much deeper
explanation. What but the search for one’s own lost sister would compel such
risky and even obsessive behavior?
It’s a
great joy to me to see this novel about to be so beautifully launched into the
world by Regal House!
Do you have family stories that have haunted you over the years?
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