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FAQs
About Anna Pigeon series:
How Anna got her name: When I lived in
Minneapolis there was, across the river, in St. Paul, a fine
children’s ‘touch and see’ museum. The woman running it was tall and
beautiful and moved like a ghost. She had a square, strong face and
shining brown hair to her waist. I was besotted. Her name was Anna
Pidgeon. Years later, when I began the series, I thought of her and,
would you believe it, misspelled her name. An homage
born of ignorance.
Is the character, Anna Pigeon, based on anyone? She is
based on me -- except she is taller and stronger and smarter and
braver. We've evolved in different ways over the years, so now
she is less like me. While Anna Pigeon battled alcohol
dependence and slowly became more of a work-oriented loner, I've
grown more whimsical, more lackadaisical, lazier, happier.
I've rejoined humanity, and Anna had no intention of getting near
it, though that, too, is changing now that she's married Paul.
What is a 'WOG' (From Winter Study):
WOG is for WOlf
Dog. I used wolf dog so long I had the characters start calling it
a wog.
About
"13 1/2"
Were you flexing your
writing muscles and seeking a new challenge, or has this devious
plot been simmering in the back of your brain for a long time? This
book has been a long time in the writing. The plot has been
simmering in the back of my mind for nearly twenty years but was
unsuited to any sort of adventure Anna might be involved in.
Your books depict an
almost cinematic sense of place. Was there a special reason you
picked post-Katrina New Orleans as a setting for 13 1/2?
Living in New Orleans through Katrina I couldn't but feel the
craziness, devastation, depression, and, mostly the determination to
survive that permeated the city. It so wonderfully echoed the
themes of the characters in the book that it was an obvious choice.
I’m always fascinated by
the writer’s process. Especially intriguing are the unsigned journal
entries between chapters, a plot device that pulls the reader along,
yet tantalizes because of their macabre subject matter. Did you
decide to use these notes from the beginning, or were they something
that came to you as the story progressed? They
came to me as the book unfolded. In doing the research for the book
I read first person accounts of multiple murders from the 1800s to
today. As I did my homework, it struck me that this was a perfect
tie-in to the work one of the leading characters in the book did.
Is any of 13½ based on
true events? I
think 'based on' would be wrong, rather shall we say 'inspired by'.
When I lived in Minneapolis many years ago there was a horrifying
multiple murder in Rochester. The why of it was such a sad mystery
I never did get it out of my mind.
What kind of research
did you do to bring authenticity to the juvenile detention center
where Butcher Boy was incarcerated? The
detention center is completely a fiction. I wanted a place that
was, like my characters and the book, straddling the past and the
future, a place with modern leanings and sins of the past soaked
into the walls.
You really get into the mind of the Butcher Boy. Did you do some
specific research on the criminally insane?
I read so much about
criminally insane murderers that, should Homeland Security ever
check my on-line wanderings I will undoubtedly be dubbed a Person of
Interest.
In the Anna Pigeon
series, your protagonist is a National Parks Ranger. One supposes
that Anna’s personal traits reflect some aspects of your own
experience, since you are a career park officer yourself. In 13½ you
have created an entire new cast with some doozies of personality
quirks. Without giving up any spoilers, not a single one resembles
your main characters from the Pigeon series. If the above assumption
is accurate, that Anna is in some respects a reflection of you, is
there a character in 13½ who might come close to your own
experience? This was an aspect of the book that was most
challenging and most satisfying. Anna is, indeed, me in many
respects (just younger, prettier, funnier, braver and smarter). No
one carries my emotional belief system in 13 1/2. Each is created
anew.
There are many
characters in 13½ who play significant roles in the development of
the main characters of Polly, Dylan, Richard, Marshall and Danny.
Without giving too much away, is there another character you think
plays the most significant role in the lives of your protagonists? Polly's
daughters play a huge part. Not in the moving of the plot but in
the symbolic sense of redemption and innocence to be protected or
lost.
What made you decide on
writing an intense, mind twisting drama? When I lived in
Minneapolis many moons ago, there was a horrific murder in
Rochester. A boy, nice boy, killed his entire family. Over the
years I became fascinated, not with the murders so much, but with
how those who survive such a calamity go on with their lives.
How did you come up with
the title? The
title was a gift from a Psychiatrist friend of mine who worked with
juvenile offenders. He mentioned that they often got the tattoo 13
1/2: twelve jurors, one judge, half a chance.
Did writing this
book give you nightmares? Not
nightmares but, too often, a deep and abiding sadness.
Other Questions:
Is Nevada your real name or a name you just
write under? I was born in Nevada and my parents decided it was
going to be my name whether I was a girl or a boy. 'Barr' is
my maiden name, and the one I'm know by professionally.
How does plotting your novels work? All I
know when I start is who dies, where they die, how they die and
usually I know who did it. But sometimes I'm wrong, and in the
middle I realize, he didn't do it. My gosh, it was this other guy!
Do you outline your books before writing them?
I tried once, years ago, to outline it all like a grown-up and write
a synopsis for every chapter, and it read like the English
assignment from hell. Every bit of spontaneity got sucked
right out.
Is there a message in your fictional writing?
I don’t write with a message in mind
because I think the message should come out of the character and the
story naturally. But I
hope I encourage women at 45 who have just finished a career
teaching and who have always wanted to go into the parks to just “do
it.” I didn’t go in the Park Service until I was
36 years old. I want to encourage women to do
what they want, what they love. And, I want to
encourage people to take care of parks. People
who love the parks will take care of the parks because they mean so
much to us. I am hoping people who have never
gone to a park will read my books and will now vote for park
measures. I hope they’ll think “Oh yeah, I read
about that and it sounds like a cool place.
Was it hard to get published? I wrote
one full-length book and it didn’t get published, so I wrote another
book just to prove to myself that I could do it.
And by some miracle, that second book did get published.
It sold about 12 copies—I’m sure my mother bought them all!
I didn’t sell another book for ten years, even though I wrote
four more that are still stored out in my garage.
I looked at them a little while ago—they’re not that good.
Have any of your books
been considered for movies or television? They would make a great TV
series, ala “Bones” and “Women’s Murder Club.” The
Anna Pigeon series has been optioned for many years running but
nothing has ever panned out. I don't know if I'm sorry or not. You
know they would cast Pamela Sue Anderson as Anna.
How many years did you
work as a National Parks Ranger, and how long did you “moonlight” as
an author before you gave up your day job? I was a seasonal
park ranger for six years and a permanent for two. I wrote the
whole time. It's a compulsion.
Having seen you
interviewed on Ken Burns' “National Parks” series, I'm interested
to know how you find time to write, considering the amount of time
your work with the parks demands? Since
writing is my work, I find that everything else, EVERYTHING else --
Parks, weeding the garden, cleaning the bath -- feels like goofing
off and, as you know, there is always time for goofing off.
Your books are often written in the minds of
the characters as much as in the settings?
I just find it riveting why people do things. That's one of the
things that makes life so interesting.
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