Hope Jahren
asked
Tracy Chevalier:
My favorite line in GWAPE was this: "Years of hauling water, wringing out clothes, scrubbing floors, emptying chamberpots, with no chance of beauty of color or light in my life, stretched out before me like a landscape of flat land where, a long way off, the sea is visible but can never be reached." Can you tell me how it came to you?
Tracy Chevalier
Hi Hope!
Wow, I had completely forgotten that line. Actually, I've forgotten most of what I wrote - once it's published I never read it again, unless it's a section I'm reading at an event.
I can't recall where I got that line. Looking at it now, I suspect I started out by listing the tasks I imagined Griet performing, then imagined how she would feel, and the simile of seeing the sea a long way off just came to me. My writing is usually like that: I write to get from point A to point B, but in the midst of the journey I stop and think about how I can describe it in a more compelling way. Sometimes the words and images come easily; other times I struggle and rewrite and choose different similes/metaphors. The best is when it comes easily and naturally; if you have to rework it a lot, it's probably better to cut it and start again.
I have a feeling the above line came easily...
Wow, I had completely forgotten that line. Actually, I've forgotten most of what I wrote - once it's published I never read it again, unless it's a section I'm reading at an event.
I can't recall where I got that line. Looking at it now, I suspect I started out by listing the tasks I imagined Griet performing, then imagined how she would feel, and the simile of seeing the sea a long way off just came to me. My writing is usually like that: I write to get from point A to point B, but in the midst of the journey I stop and think about how I can describe it in a more compelling way. Sometimes the words and images come easily; other times I struggle and rewrite and choose different similes/metaphors. The best is when it comes easily and naturally; if you have to rework it a lot, it's probably better to cut it and start again.
I have a feeling the above line came easily...
More Answered Questions
Julia Rice
asked
Tracy Chevalier:
?Not a question, just a comment: just read The Lady and the Unicorn and loved it. Of all your books I have only read Girl with a Pearl Earring previously (loved that too), but now feel I want to read more of your work. By sheer coincidence, caught you on Radio 4 yesterday, so it feels like a sign! Thank you.
Sally MacKenzie
asked
Tracy Chevalier:
Any news on a Falling Angels sequel? It's my favorite of your books, and I've been hoping for years that you'll be returning to those characters very soon! The book sparked my interest in cemeteries and graveyards, and I finally got to visit Highgate Cemetery last year (both sides). Great to have a solid visual for the next time I re-read the book!
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