And the Dark Sacred Night

And the Dark Sacred Night

by Julia Glass
And the Dark Sacred Night

And the Dark Sacred Night

by Julia Glass

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Overview

From the National Book Award–winning author of Three Junes, a "tender, insightful, and winning exploration of the modern family and the infinite number of shapes it can take" (People).

Kit Noonan is an unemployed art historian with twins to support, a mortgage to pay, and a frustrated wife who insists that, to move forward, Kit must first confront a crucial mystery about his past. Born to a single teenage mother, he has never known the identity of his biological father.

Kit’s search begins with his onetime stepfather, Jasper, a take-no-prisoners Vermont outdoorsman, and ultimately leads him to Fenno McLeod, the beloved protagonist of Glass's award-winning novel Three Junes. Immersing readers in a panorama that stretches from Vermont to the tip of Cape Cod, And the Dark Sacred Night is an unforgettable novel about the youthful choices that steer our destinies, the necessity of forgiveness, and the risks we take when we face down the shadows of our past.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780307908636
Publisher: Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group
Publication date: 04/01/2014
Sold by: Random House
Format: eBook
Pages: 432
Sales rank: 135,622
File size: 3 MB

About the Author

About The Author

Julia Glass is the author of Three Junes, winner of the 2002 National Book Award for Fiction; The Whole World Over; I See You Everywhere, winner of the 2009 Binghamton University John Gardner Book Award; and The Widower’s Tale. Her essays have been widely anthologized. A recipient of fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts, the New York Foundation for the Arts, and the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study, Glass also teaches fiction writing, most frequently at the Fine Arts Work Center in Provincetown. She lives with her family in Marblehead, Massachusetts.

Hometown:

New York, New York

Date of Birth:

March 23, 1956

Place of Birth:

Boston, Massachusetts

Education:

B.A., Yale College, 1978; Scholar of the House in Art, Summa Cum Laude, 1978

Read an Excerpt

She saw him through the trees, and she almost turned around. In just eight days, she had come to believe that this wedge of shore, tumbled rock enclosed by thorny juniper and stunted saplings (but lit by the tilting sun at the western side of the lake) was her secret. Each afternoon, it became her refuge—just one brief measure, a piacere, of solitude—from another attenuated day of rehearse, practice, and practice even more; of master classes and Popper études, hour after hour of Saint-Saëns and Debussy; of walking over plush lawns, passing adults who spoke zealously, even angrily, in German and Russian; of waking and going to sleep in a room shared with three other girls.
 
Not that this life wasn’t precisely, incandescently, what she had craved, dreamed about, most of all worked for. How funny that all this discipline and deprivation rewarded Daphne with the headiest freedom she had ever known: freedom, to begin with, from her mother’s vigilance and her brother’s condescension, from another summer mixing paints and copying keys in her father’s hardware store.
 
During Afternoon Rest, some campers retreated to their rooms to write letters or take naps. When the rooms were too hot to stand, they spread beach towels under the estate’s monumental trees—or on the sliver of sandy beach. Others loitered at Le Manoir, though nobody called it that. They called it HQ. There was a games lounge with a moth-eaten billiards table; you could play Monopoly, backgammon, chess. They took turns using the pay phones on the porch.
 
But Daphne came here: sometimes just to sit, sometimes read, more often to gaze at the water and let herself wonder at . . . well, at the hereness of here. To reassure herself that it was real. To be alone.
 
Except that today she wasn’t.
 
Malachy, first flute, sat on her favorite rock facing the lake. She recognized him right away, because just that day, standing behind him in the lunch line, she happened to notice the distinctive swallowtail of his tame brown hair as it forked to either side of his narrow neck. (His close haircut seemed almost affected; most of the boys had mussed-up manes, Paul McCartney hair.) His posture, typical of flautists, was upright, attentive. He wore his T-shirts tucked into the belted waist of loose khaki shorts. And like his hair, his shirts were defiantly square: no slogans, tie-dyed sunbursts, silhouettes of shaggy rock stars, or sly allusions to other music camps. That day his T-shirt was orange.
 
“What, not practicing?” she said.
 
He did not jump, nor did he stand. Waiting till she stood beside him, he looked up and said, “If it isn’t the swan herself, come to test the waters.”
 
Daphne’s swimsuit was a navy-blue one-piece chosen by her mother. She wore shorts as well, book and towel clasped against her chest, yet she blushed.
 
“You don’t suppose,” he said, “that Generalissima has spies in these woods? I’ve heard there’s a flogging room in the cellar of HQ.”
 
Daphne laughed.
 
“Not kidding,” he said.
 
“Yes you are.”
 
Malachy’s prim expression broke. “Pretty martial around here, don’t you think? And can you believe all the Iron Curtain accents?”
 
“What did you expect, the cast of Captain Kangaroo?”
 
This made him laugh. “Maybe Hogan’s Heroes.”
 
“You mean, we should dig a tunnel and escape?”
 
“We could steal those little mallets Dorian uses to play his glockenspiel.” Malachy had swiveled to face her. He sat cross-legged, his calves pale and sparsely freckled, his bare feet long and bony.
 
He shaded his eyes. “Sit, or I’ll go blind. And then I won’t be able to see my music, and my brilliant symphonic career will flash before my irradiated eyeballs.”
 
She unrolled her towel and sat, facing him. He had no book or other obvious diversion. Was he there to meet someone? What a perfect place for a private meeting.
 
“So are you aware,” said Malachy, “that Rhonda would pay me a nice reward to drown you here and now?”
 
Daphne laughed nervously. She and Malachy played together in Chamber One; Rhonda was her counterpart, a cellist in Chamber Two. Openly and cheerfully competitive, she’d announced at their first dinner that anyone assigned the swan solo in the Saint-Saëns was clearly the director’s pet. (Daphne might say the same of Malachy, chosen to play “Volière.”)
 
“I just got lucky,” said Daphne.
 
“No false modesty allowed,” said Malachy. “They decided our parts based on our auditions. Nothing here happens by accident. You know that.”
 
“I guess.” She didn’t like talking about the ranking they all deplored yet knew had to be a part of their lives forever if they wanted to succeed. “So are you from one of those musical families where everybody plays something different?”
 
He smirked. “Like the Jackson Five? There’s a picture to savor. No, I’m it. The one who got whatever genetic mutation makes our subspecies behave the way we do. My brother and sister see me as the weirdo. The family fruitcake. Which is a huge relief to them. They get to be the normal ones.”
 
“So maybe I’ve got it, too. The mutation. Mom plays piano, but Christmas carols. Hymns. She subs for the church organist. Actually, I’m not sure how I got into this place.”
 
“Give it up, Swan. They’ve got their eye on you here. I saw our taskmistress smile yesterday in the middle of your solo. For about a tenth of a second. I didn’t think she had those muscles in her cheeks.” Natalya Skovoroda, the conductor of Chamber One, was Ukrainian, with a dense, porridgelike accent. Her face—a prime object, morning after morning, of Daphne’s most devoted concentration—was as round and pale as a dinner plate, mesmerizingly smooth for someone who scowled so much. Beneath that scowl, Daphne and her fellow musicians had grown close to one another quickly, like a band of miscellaneous hostages.
 
Malachy leaned toward Daphne. “You have that cello stripped naked.”
 
“Is that a compliment?” Because he sat almost directly behind her during morning rehearsal, she hardly ever saw his face. It was long and serious, his eyes a frosty blue that made him look all-seeing, older in a way that was spooky but cool. Across his nose—narrow like the rest of him—a scant dash of freckles stood out sharply, distinct as granules of pepper.
 
A speedboat careened raucously past, skimming the water, passengers shrieking as it bounced up and down. For a moment, they let it capture their attention.
 
Daphne started to stand up. “I should go wait for a phone. Haven’t called home in a couple of days.”
 
“No,” he said. “You should stay and listen to one of my limericks.”
 
“Limericks?”
 
“I’m working on a suite of limericks about our wardens.”
 
Daphne shifted on her towel. “Well. Sure.”
 
Malachy cleared his throat and sat up even straighter. He cocked his head at a dramatic angle toward the lake, as if posing for a portrait.
 
A Soviet chick named Nah-tail-ya
Said, “Eef you play flat, I veel flail ya,
But come to my room
Vare I’ll bare my bazoom.
Maybe let you peek at holy grail-ya.”
 
Blood rushed to Daphne’s face. She felt both thrilled and appalled.
 
He turned to her, widened his eyes. “Svahn? May vee haff your creeteek?”
 
She covered her mouth, trying to repress the spasms of laughter. “Oh my gosh, that is so . . . obscene!”
 
“Uh-oh. I’ve shocked you. See, I told you I’m a weirdo.”
 
“Oh my God.”
 
“Here, I’ll give you something just a bit tamer. Appetizer to next week’s celebrity recital.” Again he struck his pose.
 
There once was a diva named Esme
With a lengthy and worldly résumé.
Listed way at the end
Was her tendency to bend
Quite far over and trill, “Yes you may.”
 
“You are horrid!” Daphne cried. But she couldn’t stop laughing.

Reading Group Guide

This guide is designed to enhance your reading group’s focus on some of the main concepts in this book and to enable readers to explore and share different perspectives. Forgiveness, connectedness, and the role of the truth in relationships are complicated concepts, so feel free to wander in your discussion, and use this as a guideline only!

1. Kit’s wife, Sandra, tells him, “I think you need to move, I mean pry yourself free from a place that’s become so familiar you simply can’t see it” (p. 22). Have you ever come to a place in your life where you felt stuck? How did you resolve this?

2. Why do you think Daphne insists on keeping the name of Kit’s father a secret? Whom is she protecting?

3. Daphne tells Kits that he “does not get to know everything” just because he wants to. Do you think Daphne owes Kit the name of his father?

4. If you were Kit, do you think you could/would have waited so long to find your father? Do you think men and women have different attitudes toward “finding” their lost family connections?

5. Describe Kit and Daphne’s relationship. How does this change throughout the book?

6. Do you see any parallels between Kit’s relationship with Daphne and Malachy’s relationship with Lucinda? If you read Three Junes, what do you bring from that book about the latter relationship? Knowing what you know from this book, do you think you’d feel differently about either of those characters if you went back to reread Three Junes?

7. Daphne accepted Lucinda’s help with Kit for the first few years of his life. What do you think about her cutting off that connection so abruptly? Can you empathize with her reasons for doing so?

8. Lucinda has yearned for decades to reconnect with Kit. Do you think she should have done that on her own, without waiting for him to take the initiative? Or do you think the initiative always has to come from the child/grandchild?

9. “Things that make sense don’t always make sense” (p. 40). Jasper says this to Daphne in reference to her plan to move with Kit closer to her school. Do you think she is already planning to leave that marriage, or is Jasper missing important hints that he is already losing her?

10. What do you think about Daphne and Malachy’s relationship as teenagers at the music camp? How do you think the culture of the camp itself affects the way she feels about him?

11. Did you have a magical time or place in your life similar to that summer?

12. Malachy is a central figure in this work, but we cannot know what he felt or what he thought. How does this affect the people in the story? What do you think about his complete removal of himself from Daphne and Kit’s life—and his father’s tacit support of that distance?

13. Forgiveness is a prevalent theme. Discuss some of the characters who need to give and seek forgiveness in the book. Are some of the “crimes” they’ve committed unforgivable?

14. In your view, who has the most to forgive? Who most deserves forgiveness? Who most needs it?

15. Lucinda admits to herself that she loved Malachy more than her other children—but it’s clear they realize this. What do you think will happen, in the future, as Malachy’s “lost” son is absorbed into the family, especially after Lucinda’s death?

16. Lucinda gets mad at Zeke for hiding Malachy’s need to know of Kit, and gets mad at Jonathan for hiding his homosexuality from Malachy as well as from his parents. Do you think these secrets were justified?

17. At one point, a woman who was clearly a client of Lucinda’s at The House confronts her on the street and tells her that Lucinda ruined her life. What do you think about the work Lucinda did, inspired by her faith, to help young single mothers have and raise babies on their own in an era when they might have had other choices?

18. The Burnses’ barn, the Shed at the music camp, Jasper’s crow’s nest: All of these structures hold meaning for the characters involved. Are there places in your life that you feel as strongly about?

19. The character Fenno McLeod, the protagonist from Julia Glass’s novel Three Junes, returns as a key point of view near the end of the book. If you read that earlier novel, how does it feel to meet him again in this different context? What do you think about his changed circumstances and his relationship with Walter Kinderman (a pivotal character in Glass’s The Whole World Over)?

20. In the end, do you think Kit found what he was looking for?

21. When Daphne finally revisits the music camp, along with her second husband and Kit, do you think she is changed by facing down this fateful place in her past?

22. Similarly, do you think Fenno is changed by giving up the artifacts of Malachy that he has kept to himself, especially the box of letters and photos? How do you think Kit will respond to that gift?

23. Julia Glass fills her novels with vivid “cameo” characters, such as Loraina and Rayburn in Jasper’s part of the book, or Matthew in Lucinda’s. Do you have a favorite among these characters—or wish that some of them had been given larger roles?

24. What character in this story do you most identify with, and why?

Interviews

Barnes & Noble Review Interview with Julia Glass

When Julia Glass won the 2002 National Book Award for her debut novel, Three Junes, her acceptance speech turned "one of the most intimate and fulfilling relationships we have in our lives," the ongoing love affair between reader and book. It was a fitting tribute to the immersive power of reading from a writer dedicated to the mysterious springs of tension coiled within the most ordinary of familial bonds.

That love affair has had its corollary, in Glass's case, with a return of affection for her characters that has brought her back in successive works to further explore the lives mapped in Three Junes. A dozen years and four novels have passed since Glass first introduced Fenno McLeod, owner of a Greenwich Village bookstore and child of a loving but repressed and secretive family. Fenno's confrontation with his own emotional seclusion — and its price —was the center on which Glass's tripartite debut turned. In her next book, The Whole World Over, Glass summoned Fenno to play a supporting role in a neighbor's story, creating as she did not a sequel but a sense of a community that lives on between the pages of her works of fiction.

And the Dark Sacred Night brings us back to that luminously imagined world, returning to figures — including Fenno — who first appeared in Three Junes, but with a sharp new focus on an unresolved mystery from that novel, in the form of a young man named Kit Noonan, the unacknowledged child of a music critic named Malachy Burns, whom Fenno nursed through his death from AIDS. Out of Kit's unpredictable journey to encounter a family he's never known, Glass constructs a delicate chamber piece of a novel, in which familiar and fresh themes intertwine with what becomes, in the end, symphonic power.

Julia Glass spoke with me by phone about her new novel, dogsledding, eavesdropping and daydreaming on the job. The following is an edited transcript of our conversation. — Bill Tipper

The Barnes & Noble Review: Your new novel connects to a part of your first novel, Three Junes. But can you a little bit about where the full story of And the Dark Sacred Night came from?

Julia Glass: Each piece of fiction that I write emerges from a single character, who takes shape gradually, until I can hear his or her voice. Over time, it's occurred to me that my protagonists all originate in some aspect of myself that I find myself questioning or feeling uncomfortable about. In usually takes a while for that character to gestate, but sometimes, as with Percy Darling in The Widower's Tale, the character pops into my mind almost fully formed.

In this novel, I've brought Fenno McLeod back from Three Junes for the second time — the first was in The Whole World Over. That was a surprise to me. I never expected to return to previous characters. I knew that readers had loved Fenno, and when I found him reemerging in The Whole World Over, I wondered if I was clinging to him out of second-novel insecurity. As it turned out, his presence was natural and logical. But I did not expect to visit Fenno yet again, as I have in And the Dark Sacred Night. I don't write sequels — each of my books stands alone — but I can no longer deny that I'm prone to some kind of fictional nostalgia.

Revisiting Lucinda Burns, however, was deliberate from the start. She's a character I wished I could engage with more deeply, even though she's one I had trouble "engineering." Some characters just come to me organically, while others take more effort. In Three Junes, I needed Malachy Burns to have a deeply observant Catholic mother, to maximize certain tensions as it becomes obvious that he is dying.

I remember struggling to bring Lucinda to life — I wanted her to be demanding but also generous — and then I fell in love with her. But she was designated to take up only a certain amount of oxygen in the room.

BNR: That was a novel that was already populated with several very, very strong characters who kind of demanded their own time.

JG: Right. And certainly, Mal is a very vivid character. So it made sense that he would have a vivid mother. As with Fenno — and all the character in Three Junes — I thought I'd left them both behind for good. But then, as I mentioned before, Fenno McLeod came back in The Whole World Over. He met Walter Kinderman, with whom he found companionship and love, and then I moved on, still certain that I was done with the cast of Three Junes. But a couple of years ago, I found myself wondering if I could find a way to revisit Lucinda Burns, to write about her from her own point of view.

Yet I didn't see her as the prime protagonist of a novel. So I actually went back and skimmed Fenno's section of Three Junes, in which she appears. Was I remembering her accurately? Was she really so captivating? I'm also a stickler for continuity, so if I was going to bring her back to life, I'd better do it accurately.

For one thing, I knew I'd have to confront the secret that's revealed after Mal's death; it's like a retroactive subplot, about this child that he had conceived as a teenager. Fenno finds out about it when he discovers a box of letters and photographs under Mal's bed.

BNR: Your novels are so full of these sort of secrets, the hidden parts of your characters lives. You bury them like treasures at select places through your stories.

JG: In fact, when I decided to give Mal an "illegitimate child," for want of a less judgmental term, a child he had never known, that was fairly late in the book. So through subsequent revisions, the burden of that secret influenced Malachy's nature. If you were to reread Three Junes, you might or might not notice hints in the way he behaves or reacts to certain remarks. He doesn't know the child, but he he knows about him.

At the same time I was thinking about Lucinda, I got the impulsive notion that I wanted to write a quest novel, a story in which a hero or heroine sets out to find something, or to find something out. I love those kinds of stories. Of course, in a great quest story, whether or not the protagonist finds the object of the quest, it's what happens along the way that matters most. So what if I wrote a story about this child whose pictures were in that box under Mal's bed? What if that character were the hero of this novel and, through searching for his birth father, he finds Lucinda Burns? That's when I knew I had the story I wanted to write.

And then I had another "sign": I had recently become close friends with a woman who is one of eight adopted children. I knew that she had, before I even met her, searched for and found the identity of her birth mother — who was no longer alive. Now she told me that she was going to see if she could find out the identity of her birth father — an enormous challenge.

She talked with me not only about her feelings and her experiences as she searched for her birth parents but also about the parallel experiences of her siblings, their different feelings and approaches and desires surrounding whether or not to find birth parents. The timeliness of these conversations was just too rich. I thought, "Well, clearly I am supposed to write about this subject."

An interesting thing that my friend talked about was how the girls in her family were the ones more likely to search out their roots. And in subsequent conversations with psychotherapists, I heard that, in general, men are more reluctant to search out birth parents than women are. It may biological; perhaps as women approach the age when they know they may have children of their own, they want to know more about their genetic identity. Men are more ambivalent.

BNR: It's his wife, Sandra, who says, "This is what you need to do. You need to go find the real story about your birth father."

JG: Right. That detail came directly from another acquaintance, who disclosed to me that her husband was adopted and that she fervently wanted him to seek out the identity of his birth mother, but he refused. He loved his adoptive parents, who were still alive, and felt no desire to do something he felt would hurt their feelings. Her talking to me about how she felt it might change life for their children — and how she felt that, even though he denied it, these "shadow parents" had a strong hold over her husband's psyche — all that influenced the story I was writing.

As always, I knew the plot would emerge from the characters. I believe E. L. Doctorow once said that when he writes a novel, it's like driving at night down a long highway, where all you can see is the short stretch of road in the headlights, but you're confident you'll reach your destination. I paraphrase — but I agree completely. That's what it feels like for me, too.

BNR: It's interesting that you use that metaphor, given that you've taken And the Dark Sacred Night as the title of this book — quoting a lyric from Louis Armstrong's "What a Wonderful World." Kit is going forward through the complete unknown, hoping that he'll get to a destination that makes sense.

JG: There is a lot of groping in the dark here! [LAUGHS] That's true for a lot of my characters — and for me!

So even though I did not suddenly envision the entire plot, I knew the source of the momentum, and I knew where the book would start. The ultimate structure of the novel, in which the primary narrative is interspersed with snapshots from the distant past, fell into place very late, after I'd turned in a full first draft, thanks to suggestions from my very astute editor.

At the outset, however, I knew this much: the story would begin with Kit setting forth on his quest, and at some point he would intersect with Lucinda — and, through her, with Fenno. But as always, new characters caught my attention along the way — most notably, Jasper, Kit's onetime stepfather.

BNR: Jasper arrives with an incredible charisma and presence in the story.

JG: I seem to like cranky old men. My agent confessed that when she started reading that section, she thought, "Uh-oh, it's Percy all over again."

BNR: He has very much a life of his own here, I think, in his various preoccupations, self-recriminations and personal strengths.

JG: I love it when this happens. Just like Lucinda, he's a character whom I created to fulfill a narrative purpose, and then I became absolutely captivated by him. But there was more room in this book for Jasper to blossom fully as a character. That Vermont — in winter — would end up being such a major setting for this book was another surprise. Though I'm a New Englander, I'm very indoorsy once the mercury drops. I do not ski (or figure skate or snowshoe or ice fish). Like Kit, I'm terrified of being dragged down a mountain by gravity. My sister, however, reveled in the great outdoors, and when she went to the University of Vermont, we spent a bit of time touring the shore of Lake Champlain (in warm weather!). That was the inspiration for the elite music camp that's one of the other two Vermont settings. The farm on which Lucinda has spent most of her life is, of course, the third.

BNR: I am going to try to avoid spoilers, but — you've never supervised the rescue of snowbound backcountry hikers?

JG: Definitely not. Though when I realized that dogsledding would figure in this novel, I thought, "Oh boy, I can splurge on a dogsledding adventure (wrapped in blankets), and it will be tax-deductible!" I had read about places that offer dog sledding in New Hampshire. But that was the winter — two years ago, I think — when there was virtually no snow in these parts. So no dogsledding. Thanks to the Internet, I was able to watch YouTube videos of what it's like to be in the sled, and to read about dogsledding. But I feel a bit robbed.

BNR: There's still time.

JG: Yes, it's true, though I'm getting a little stiff in my old age. And will it still be tax-deductible?

BNR: So Jasper — Ski Bum Number One, as he's called — is tied up with the ski industry and with kind of living this self-sufficient, semi-outdoorsman life. But he is not a caricature. He is a modern person, and has his relationships at work, and has his resentments and a level of forgiveness that he is able to muster over Kit's mother having left him, and he has a wonderful relationship with Kit. That's one of the prime joys of the book, is the discovery of that.

JG: Yes, and in fact it's a rediscovery. Because Kit's mother left Jasper, years before, they've lost touch.

BNR: This is Daphne, who had Kit at a very young age.

JG: Yes. And her life was obviously turned upside- down by that pregnancy. Here she is — as the reader first meets her — a young, gifted musician, given this chance to be at an intensive camp for prodigies, but what happens that summer leads her toward a very different life than the life about which she's fantasized.

BNR: Daphne is a character that we see mostly, at first, in Kit's own flashbacks. As that seventeen-year-old prodigy, we come to her gradually, at first only in brief exposures. You show something emerging from her, a force of character that causes her to be very committed to certain things, while she remains uncertain and irresolute about others. She becomes a very powerful figure as a single mother in her son's life.

JG: Yes. And I know there are readers who won't like her, or who won't approve of certain choices she makes. But in being true to portraying the life of someone who made such dramatic compromises, who had to raise a child almost entirely on her own, her stubbornness and her protective selfishness seem accurate to me. Both her determination to hold close the secret of Kit's paternity and her decision to leave Jasper seem logical, even forgivable, when you see the betrayal and bandonment she experienced at such a young age. And despite whatever bitterness she harbors, her love for Kit is always strong.

Daphne is a character that I do not expect readers to love, yet I hope they will understand and possibly empathize with her. From a writer's point of view, those characters are the trickiest to portray — but it would have been unrealistic to make her a completely magnanimous, selfless mother.

In my original draft, there was a long section told entirely from Daphne's point of view. The reader saw her present life, fully fleshed out, as well as a more detailed account of her fateful summer at the music camp. My first draft is always way too long; my books start out with delusions of War and Peace — and must be gently disabused. My editor is brilliant at talking me to the point where I do all the necessary cutting on my own. I like to say she's a midwife, rather than a surgeon. But in this case, it also became clear that the reader wouldn't want to spend so much time inside Daphne's skin. So in the end, you encounter her almost entirely through her son's eyes — and then, toward the end, through Fenno McLeod's perspective.

I've never written a book in which I cut away so much of a single character as I did of Daphne. Whole worlds were lost: her relationship with her second husband and Kit's half sister; her life as a high school music teacher; a much more involved account of life at the music camp. It's interesting to note that Daphne teaches people of the age she was when her life was effectively derailed.

But I have no regrets about the cuts I made. Writers giveth life — and they taketh it back.

In a way, the most important mother in the novel is Lucinda — bringing me back again to the initial spark of this entire story. And here's where I've returned to a subject that never ceases to fascinate me: the relationship between older parents and their grown children — especially the paradoxical tension between longing to be close to one's children and not wanting to know their deepest secrets. That was very much on my mind in The Widower's Tale; one could even draw a certain parallel between Percy Darling and Lucinda Burns, though they are very, very different individuals.

BNR: Yes.

JG: Lucinda, like Percy, clearly has a favorite child, however guilty she may feel about it. Though she lost this child decades ago, she's in perpetual mourning for Mal, who was both her most difficult and her most special child. She also has a very successful daughter — Christina, who, like her father, is a lawyer — and then her youngest child, Jonathan, whom she's never known all that well. She thinks she resents the distance — until he opens up; when he does, she regrets what she learns.

As someone who's lucky to still have two living parents even as I approach sixty, I often feel panicky at the thought of things I'll never know about their past. But do we really want or need to know everything? And would our parents really want to know everything about us? At one point in the novel, Daphne pushes back against Kit's probing and says something like "You've been brainwashed by this psychotherapeutic generation of yours that believes it should know everything. You don't get to know everything." She has a valid point! The urge toward self- revelation in our society goes too far. Privacy, as we all know, is an endangered privilege.

BNR: People have asked you a lot about your background in visual arts and painting, and certainly that's evidenced here, as it is in other novels that you've written. Kit Noonan is an art historian, for example. But music plays an extraordinarily important role in the lives of the characters — something that's true of your other novels, but especially so here. It's an important element of the story in that it's a camp for real musical prodigies that Malachy and Daphne meet at, and that both of them are reacting to as they are discovering themselves as young adults. But even beyond that, music keeps threading through. Classical music, the American Songbook, and rock 'n' roll all thread through this book and these characters' lives. Were you more conscious of that in this novel than in previous books?

JG: Oh, yes. Music is much more important in this book than in any of my others. I enjoy music in an untutored, childlike way, and my experience as a "musician" would be limited to the singing I did in my high school glee club, so for this novel I did a lot of quite enjoyable research. I owe a huge debt of thanks to my friend Edward Kelsey Moore, who besides being a talented novelist (The Supremes at Earl's All-You- Can-Eat) is a professional cellist. A lot of what he shared with me, about music and musicians, hit the cutting-room floor, but I am the richer for it.

In every novel, I write about something — a place, an experience, an emotion — with which I'm intimately familiar, but it's also crucial to me that I take on challenges. If write only inside my comfort zone, I'll suffocate. Here, among other things, I tackled the search for an unknown parent and the experiences of an ambitious, gifted young musician.

As an aside, I'll tell you a funny story. When the publisher was showing me potential jackets for the book, one of them portrayed the neck of a cello against a bright red background. This is partly because I joked to my editor, "All my books are blue and green; do I ever get to have a red jacket?" She and I thought this image a real possibility. Then, apparently, another senior editor, catching a glimpse of the image, said, "Don't tell me that's a book jacket. Listen: if a reader thinks a novel is going to be about the classical music world, it's the kiss of death; you won't sell a single copy." So we deep-sixed that jacket!

BNR: I want to talk for a moment about your approach to dialogue. You give us a very organic sense of conversational back-and-forth, often between parents and children, in ways that feel very much like we're eavesdropping. Does it simply come into your ear and you go at it that way? Do you have to radically cut down what you've written?

JG: The lion's share of "writing," for me, is the daydreaming I do when I'm alone out in the world — driving, shopping, walking the dogs. That's when I make all the big decisions about my characters, their choices, the twists in plot. Dialogue is the only thing that I write spontaneously at the keyboard. I think of it as the way I listen to my characters (as opposed to the rest of the time, when I'm telling them what to do).

When I sink down deep into writing dialogue, it feels like eavesdropping, for page upon page upon page; later, when I read it over, I laugh at how long these conversations are. In The Widower's Tale I wrote a Thanksgiving dinner that I realized had gone for almost thirty pages without anything much happening. But I learned so much about the relationships of the characters at that table! Still, I had to go back and delete most of it.

And in the first draft of a conversation, everybody sounds like me. Only over many revisions do I differentiate characters' habits and tics, any regional or age-related vernacular. Whether someone is, say, very well educated or very emotionally expressive, or prone to using slang, that involves a lot of conscious crafting.

Another character I enjoyed bringing back, in part because I love the way he expresses himself, was Walter Kinderman, from The Whole World Over. Walter is a man who rigorously avoids swearing, but he's also a former actor, so he's theatrical and flamboyant. Also opinionated; also romantic. I love giving voice to Walter. Fenno, on the other hand — somewhat ironically, since I've spent more time with him than any other character of mine — is a lot harder to "hear," in part because he's extremely introverted, very reticent — and, as a Scotsman, from a different culture than the one I take for granted.

BNR: One of the things that I love about this book, and that I have loved about your past work, is the frequency with which memorable aphorisms appear. They kept sneaking up on me. Many of them come out of Fenno's consciousness, such as when he and Walter are describing their time with the therapist, the couples therapist that they see, and Fenno describes the Asian decor of the therapist's office, and I think many of us who have been in therapists' offices will sort of recognize the theme. He notes, "One man's midlife crisis was another man's Hiroshige block print."

JG: [LAUGHS] I was very proud of that line. So thank you.

BNR: You should be! It lands with a certain recognition. In another moment, you write: "But saints, like tyrants, fall hard. Saints are merely tyrants in the kingdom of virtue." So you arrive at these turns of phrase that, despite the naturalness of these exchanges and the internal reflections that your characters engage in, create ripples like a pebble dropped in a pool. Do you work hard at those moments?

JG: When small truths like that emerge from me, it's often a surprise. I'll sit back from the keyboard and think, "I wrote that?" It means I've entered what athletes sometimes call what The Zone: I'm writing so organically, so fluidly, that it's almost as if someone else's words are coming out of me. Those are the moments when characters do things you didn't plan on having them do. All it means, of course, is that you're way down there in the subbasement of your unconscious, but you could swear that the characters just walked off the page, down the street, and it's all you can to run and keep up with them. I had that experience as a fiction writer for the first time when writing about Fenno in Three Junes — who, by the way, was never intended to be more than the son of the intended protagonist, Paul McLeod. I guess Fenno was having none of that: he took center stage all on his own.

I hesitate to say this, but there are moments when, reading passages that I wrote a year and more ago, I honestly don't know how I wrote them. It's not just that I can't remember writing them; I can't imagine writing them. I can remember the effort that went into engineering certain plot twists, or creating certain settings, or doing the research on playing the cello or riding in a dogsled. But those passages you're referring to come out of some deep, dark well. They're a gift.

April 1, 2014

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