1. DID YOU GROW UP IN A FAMILY LIKE
PAULS?
Our family was very different, starting with the
fact that both my parents were Holocaust survivors. They
spoke more about the war than Pauls mother did, and unlike Paul, I embraced my
legacy as a child of survivors, teaching a course on it in my mid-twenties. As I met more children of survivors and read more
widely about the Holocaust and its aftermath, I was fascinated by silence. By people who kept silent about what theyd
survived, and I was haunted for many years by a line in Virginia Woolfs first novel
The Voyage Out, where someone remarks, I want to write a novel about the
things people dont say. In more personal terms, while I did grow up in New
York, it was in a different neighborhood than Paul, I dont have a sister, Im
the younger not the older brother, and we had very little money in our family, unlike
Paul.
2. WAS BEING THE CHILD OF SURVIVORS
A FACTOR IN YOUR BECOMING A WRITER?
Absolutely. I
think every writer is drawn to explore the mysteries of human feeling and experience--and
in my case, life presented some black holes. Most
of my parents families had been murdered by the Nazis, and so there was a huge void
where there should have been continuity, history, anecdote, and most importantly--people. In my twenties, when I started claiming my Jewish
heritage, it was clear that this was a subject I had a special feeling for, and I chose to
devote myself to it. That sense of purpose
fueled my first published story and has continued to inspire me, though Ive written
many other kinds of books.
3. HAS YOUR FAMILY READ YOUR
FICTION? HOW HAVE THEY REACTED TO IT?
My parents had difficulty with my early work because
I think they wanted to protect me from the Holocaust and there I was writing about
it--albeit at a remove. My mother was understandably most able to talk about
my non-fiction, but her early inspiration and appreciation for my creativity--and her love
of books--was crucial to my becoming a writer. My
father speaks many languages but hes more of a reader of newspapers than books;
however, my brother has said that some of my work as made him cry, and I take that as
quite a tribute.
4. IN YOUR NOVEL, THE
PROTAGONISTS BROTHER HAS A HISTORY OF SEX WITH MEN AND WOMEN, AS WELL AS DRUG USE. ARE CHILDREN OF SURVIVORS DRIVEN MORE THAN OTHERS
TO THESE LIFESTYLES?
5. THE SECRETS FINALLY REVEALED IN
THIS BOOK EXPLAIN A FAMILYS INEXPLICABLE SADNESS, AND IN SOME OF YOUR OTHER BOOKS
YOUVE DEALT WITH SECRETS WITHHELD, SECRETS UNEARTHED.
WHATS THE FASCINATION FOR YOU?
Most parents dont let their children know how
they function inside, how they make choices, who they are. In the case of my parents, that
basic unknowability was heightened by other factors: their European formality
and distance; the reality that talking too much about their pre-war lives was dangerous
because it too easily led back to memories they couldnt bear to put into words; the
absence of physical connections to that past like photographs. So both present and past seemed mysterious to me,
fraught with the unspoken. Is it any wonder
Ive been a fan of mysteries and have been writing my own mystery series?
For Paul, the city is like a lover hes
spurned. He fled the city and its claims on
him just as much as he fled Valerie. He wound
up in a college town that, for all its charm, is a cocoon, a place where its easier
not to grow up. The challenge for him is
whether he can learn to love
7. YOUVE REVERSED THE USUAL TRAJECTORY OF ARTISTS BY MOVING
FROM
I miss the cultural wealth and diversity of
8. YOURE PROBABLY BEST KNOWN
FOR THE AWARD-WINNING COLLECTION DANCING ON TISHA BAV.
HOW IS WRITING A SHORT STORY DIFFERENT THAN WRITING A NOVEL? WHICH DO YOU ENJOY MOST?
A short story is like a weekend guest, a novel is
like a divorced relative staying with you until figuring out what to do next. When will you have your home to yourself again? Beyond the time involved, with a story I often feel
I can see it in my head, see it completely.
But a novel is too large and complex for me to have that clear a sense of
the whole at any given stage. A story comes to
me initially as something very specific like a situation, a scene, or a character, whereas
a novel always feels like it was several different starting points and inspirations. I enjoy everything I write--or I wouldnt
write it. I couldnt write it.
9. YOU HAVE A FLOURISHING CAREER AS
A PRINT AND RADIO REVIEWER. DOES WRITING BOOKS
CHANGE HOW YOU PERCEIVE REVIEWING THEM?
Every time I pick up a book thats been sent to
me by a publisher, Im keenly aware that theres a human being at the other end,
someone whos poured a lot into it, and has hopes and dreams attached. But once I start the book that awareness fades and
the deeper Im into it, the more Im concentrating on the story or the writing
itself, on how well the book follows through on its aims.
The sense of the author involved returns when Im writing a review, and
especially when I have something negative to say. I
try not to be mean-spirited, but that doesnt prevent me from being honest.
10. YOUVE WRITTEN NOVELS,
SHORT STORIES, ESSAYS, MEMOIRS, LITERARY CRITICISM, MYSTERIES AND EVEN PSYCHOLOGY FOR
ADULTS AND CHILDREN. WHY SO MANY DIFFERENT
GENRES?
Back in grade school, I read across genres--history,
natural science, biography, fiction, science fiction--and its probably that early
diversity thats led me down so many paths. I
like the challenge of trying something new,
and when I finish writing a book, the last thing I want to do is write another just like
it, so Ive often deliberately chosen something in another genre to keep myself
fresh. Even with my mystery series which has
continuing characters, Ive tried to make each book significantly different from the
previous installment. Each genre has unique
challenges, as I found when I was asked to write a memoir for an anthology and found
myself thinking, I could do this as fiction, but telling the truth is going to be
hard!
back to:
The German Money
PUB DATE: September, 2003
CATEGORY: Fiction
PAGES: 208
TRIM: 6 x 9
ISBN: 0-9679520-0-X
PRICE: $14.95/ Trade Paperback Original
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