Lisa See
To answer your first question, I was born in Paris but grew up in Los Angeles. To answer your second question, I didn’t want to be an author initially. My mom’s a writer and my mother’s father was a writer. I wanted to do something different. But then I became a writer! I feel like I’ve been in a lifelong apprenticeship. I learned a lot about writing from my mother that most people take years and years to learn or may never learn. Writing was literally in my blood. I always say it was a good thing they weren’t plumbers. But after years of resistance, I woke up one day, and it was like a light bulb went off. I mean it was just like, “Oh, I could be a writer…” At the time, I was living in Greece, and I didn’t want to get married, and didn’t want to have children, and I only wanted to live out of a suitcase, and I thought, how can I do that? I’ll be a writer!” It really had to do with how can I have real freedom with my time? My goal was how can I have a life where my time is my own? Where I don’t have to be in an office, where I could travel, where I could choose my own hours? I was really trying to find what that could be because it was really important to me, and it still is. Especially when my sons were younger, I could work from home. When they had the Halloween special thing at school, I wouldn’t have to miss it. And that was just very important to me.
More Answered Questions
Dizzy
asked
Lisa See:
My new daughter-in-law is from Indonesia. Her parents are Indonesian and Chinese. She has told us about "coining" and in her case it has permanently scarred her back. I'm curious if you have ever written about it? Also wondering if you have written any books that includes any history of the migration of Chinese to Indonesia?
Julieann
asked
Lisa See:
My sister and my cousin adopted children from other countries (not western European). The Tea Girl of Hummingbird Lane was great: it presented the viewpoints of the kids, their adopted parents and their birth mothers. Wonderful. Different: Years ago, I had a friend here whose family has a tea "plantation" in Kenya. It's still there.What do you know about growing tea in Kenya?? Julie
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