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		<title>Still Life with Husband: Q&amp;A with the Author, Lauren Fox.</title>
		<link>http://chicklitbookgroup.wordpress.com/2009/03/04/still-life-with-husband-qa-with-the-author-lauren-fox/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 04 Mar 2009 18:44:01 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[




























Still Life with Husband
 Written by Lauren Fox




Hardcover



February 2007
$22.95
978-0-307-26491-6 (0-307-26491-2)



 









Q: STILL LIFE WITH HUSBAND is your debut novel. Where did the idea come from? And how long have you been working on it?
A: I
had the idea for this novel several years ago. It struck me that men
who cheat on their partners receive so much [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=chicklitbookgroup.wordpress.com&blog=4611181&post=173&subd=chicklitbookgroup&ref=&feed=1" />]]></description>
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<td height="150" align="left" valign="top"><span style="font-family:verdana,arial,helvetica;font-size:small;"><strong>Still Life with Husband</strong></span></p>
<p><span style="font-family:verdana,arial,helvetica;font-size:small;"> <strong>Written by</strong> <a href="http://www.randomhouse.com/knopf/catalog/results2.pperl?authorid=72016">Lauren Fox</a></span></p>
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<td align="left"><span style="font-family:verdana,arial,helvetica;font-size:xx-small;"><strong>Hardcover</strong></span></td>
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<td><span style="font-family:verdana,arial,helvetica;font-size:xx-small;"><strong>February 2007</strong></span></td>
<td><span style="font-family:verdana,arial,helvetica;font-size:xx-small;"><strong>$22.95</strong></span></td>
<td><span style="font-family:verdana,arial,helvetica;font-size:xx-small;"><strong>978-0-307-26491-6 (0-307-26491-2)</strong></span></td>
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<!-- MAIN CATALOG CONTENT AREA --><br />
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<p><strong>Q: STILL LIFE WITH HUSBAND is your debut novel. Where did the idea come from? And how long have you been working on it?<br />
A: </strong>I<br />
had the idea for this novel several years ago. It struck me that men<br />
who cheat on their partners receive so much attention in literature and<br />
popular culture, but, aside from a few obvious examples women who stray<br />
are sort of ignored. I know people whose relationships have been<br />
affected by infidelity, and it’s not always the men who are guilty. I<br />
started to wonder if I could tell a sympathetic story about a woman who<br />
has an affair.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-family:verdana,arial,helvetica;font-size:x-small;">It took me five years to write this book, but I<br />
had a baby in the middle of that time period, so I took a brief<br />
two-year break to wallow in a cesspool of hormonal muck, then to run<br />
around after a kamikaze toddler, then finally, when things were<br />
slightly more under control, to sit and stare at the computer screen<br />
and wonder where my brain had gone&#8230;</span></p>
<p><span style="font-family:verdana,arial,helvetica;font-size:x-small;"><strong>Q: So your narrator is<br />
a young married woman. You are a young married woman. Your narrator<br />
freelances for magazines. You freelance for magazines. You see where<br />
I’m going with this? You’re writing about infidelity. Are you worried<br />
you will be confused with your narrator?<br />
A: </strong>Yeah, and I lifted<br />
many, many more superficial details from my life and plopped them into<br />
Emily’s story—she lives in my apartment, hangs out at my favorite<br />
places, and she has my frizzy hair. Maybe I was looking for a fictional<br />
thrill. In fact, I think that, because this was my first novel, I did<br />
rely on a lot of those surface elements because they made it easier for<br />
me to delve into the heart and mind of someone who’s not like me at<br />
all. Fiction is fiction. If I had called the book STILL LIFE WITH<br />
HUSBAND: A MEMOIR, well, that would be another story altogether —a much<br />
more boring story.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-family:verdana,arial,helvetica;font-size:x-small;"><strong>Q: Since I already know you are a happily<br />
married woman, how did you come to the idea of writing about<br />
infidelity? What parts of it proved to be challenging?<br />
A: </strong>The<br />
whole idea was challenging and complicated and even a little bit<br />
painful, and I think those are the things that drew me to it. The pull<br />
between loyalty and desire, between what’s ethical and what seems<br />
crucial for your own survival, and the decision to hurt someone you<br />
love—those are really interesting struggles to me, and I liked<br />
spelunking in Emily’s psyche, figuring out what decisions she would<br />
come to based on what she thought she needed most. I really grew to<br />
like her, and sometimes as I was writing the novel, I’d think, “Oh,<br />
Emily, don’t do it!” And then, of course, I’d make her do it.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-family:verdana,arial,helvetica;font-size:x-small;"><strong>Q: I heard a rumor that your husband didn’t see the manuscript until it was completed. Is this true?<br />
A: </strong>Absolutely.<br />
My husband is an insightful reader and a careful critic, but I just<br />
couldn’t make good use of his skills while I was writing this book.<br />
“Honey, could you read the passage where the wife— hmm, yes, I guess<br />
she does look like me!—decides to sleep with another man, and tell me<br />
if you think the verbs are strong enough?” In fact, though, hardly<br />
anybody saw the manuscript while I was working on it. I felt that I<br />
would be too susceptible to criticism. I felt protective of Emily and<br />
her complicated world, and I wasn’t ready for anyone to mess with it<br />
until I was finished.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-family:verdana,arial,helvetica;font-size:x-small;"><strong>Q: You started this book before you<br />
were a mother, and completed it after. Do you think the birth of your<br />
daughter had any influence on the book’s resolution, and do you think<br />
it will influence your writing in the future?<br />
A: </strong>Having a child<br />
made me a more productive writer, because when I know I only have<br />
ninety minutes to work, I tend not to fiddle around the way I used to<br />
when I had the whole day stretching out in front of me. You can’t spend<br />
three hours reading about the history of lentils when preschool pickup<br />
time is 11:15. As children do, my daughter has also changed the way I<br />
think about myself. I’m much less invested in my success or failure as<br />
a writer, which has freed me to write exactly what I want to write.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-family:verdana,arial,helvetica;font-size:x-small;">I<br />
don’t think that my daughter’s birth affected the resolution of this<br />
novel specifically, but it is true that, toward the end of the writing<br />
of the book, I was closer to the experience of pregnancy and able to<br />
imagine that aspect of Emily’s experience more fully.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-family:verdana,arial,helvetica;font-size:x-small;">One thing<br />
I’ve noticed since my daughter was born is that I find it much harder<br />
to think about, much less write about, really awful, sad things. I’m<br />
planning to focus on musical comedies from now on.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-family:verdana,arial,helvetica;font-size:x-small;"><strong>Q: You earned your MFA from the University of Minnesota. Have you always known you wanted to be a writer?<br />
A: </strong>When<br />
I was young, when everyone else was outside playing, I was holed up in<br />
my bedroom, filling notebooks with tragic rhyming poems about horses<br />
dying in barn fires (“And sometimes in my dreams / I can still hear<br />
their screams”) and sentimental tales of blind orphans triumphing over<br />
adversity. Also, I’m spectacularly untalented at just about everything:<br />
I’m klutzy and bad with numbers and really frighteningly disorganized,<br />
and I’m the kind of person you feel sorry for when I try public<br />
speaking. It made the choice to be a writer an easy one.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-family:verdana,arial,helvetica;font-size:x-small;"><strong>Q: What other writers do you admire / who are your literary influences?<br />
A: </strong>I<br />
like writers who play tug of war between humor and sorrow in their<br />
work, and I also appreciate a really excellent literary page-turner. So<br />
I love Michael Chabon and Lorrie Moore, Alice Munro, Graham Greene,<br />
William Trevor (especially The Story of Lucy Gault) and Ian McEwan<br />
(particularly Enduring Love and Atonement).</span></p>
<p><span style="font-family:verdana,arial,helvetica;font-size:x-small;"><strong>Q: The best friendship between Emily and Meg is one most women will recognize. Do you have a real life Meg?<br />
A: </strong>I’m<br />
lucky to have more than one Meg in my life. I have several brilliant,<br />
beautiful, hilarious and kind friends whose affection I constantly<br />
aspire to deserve. They’re like editors of my daily life: they laugh at<br />
the good jokes, help me make sense of the complicated parts, and they<br />
tell me when I’m spouting nonsense. Meg is a composite of these women.<br />
More than one friend who has read the book has informed me that she<br />
knows she is Meg. One actually refers to herself as Meg. I just nod.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-family:verdana,arial,helvetica;font-size:x-small;"><strong>Q: What’s next for you?<br />
A: </strong>I’m<br />
working on another novel. It’s about three close friends, two of whom<br />
are married to each other, and the messiness of friendship and<br />
betrayal.</p>
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		<title>No obligation book groups?</title>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 25 Aug 2008 18:27:46 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>chicklitbookgroup</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[Real Simple Magazine online: No Obligation Book Group!
Now, obviously this is in NO WAY suggested as a replacement for our book group, but I really love this idea of a no obligation book group. You can read along, take a peak at what others have to say, and leave your own comment. No meetings, no [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=chicklitbookgroup.wordpress.com&blog=4611181&post=31&subd=chicklitbookgroup&ref=&feed=1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class='snap_preview'><br /><p><a href="http://www.realsimple.com/realsimple/content/0,21770,1832415,00.html" target="_blank">Real Simple Magazine online: No Obligation Book Group!</a></p>
<p>Now, obviously this is in NO WAY suggested as a replacement for our book group, but I really love this idea of a no obligation book group. You can read along, take a peak at what others have to say, and leave your own comment. No meetings, no deadlines. Move at your own pace. I will definitely be checking it out (probably because I will feel the need to comment quite a bit).</p>
<p>(From RealSimple.com) Here’s how it works:</p>
<p>1. Every month, <em>Real Simple</em>’s editor chooses four great books<br />
2. <em>You </em>get to vote on which should be read for that month.<br />
3. During the month, the editor will read along with you, posting her/his own insights about the book and guiding the discussion.<br />
4. You can chime in with your own comments or just follow along…no obligation. Nice, isn’t it?<br />
5. Every month a different book will be featured — but you can always go back and comment on older discussions or previous books.</p>
<p>The first book club leader will be <em>Real Simple</em>’s Managing Editor Kristin van Ogtrop. <strong><a href="https://www.surveymonkey.com/s.aspx?sm=AY5r0nq79ULu02whdkyHeQ_3d_3d" target="new">Click here for the four books she’s selected.</a></strong> You can vote until August 31. The book club begins here on September 3, with a new book club starting every month. (Bookmark this page!).</p>
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