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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>
<td width="90"></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>Firefly Lane by Kristin Hannah</title>
		<link>http://chicklitbookgroup.wordpress.com/2008/09/04/firefly-lane-by-kristin-hannah/</link>
		<comments>http://chicklitbookgroup.wordpress.com/2008/09/04/firefly-lane-by-kristin-hannah/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 04 Sep 2008 13:36:36 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>chicklitbookgroup</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[Audrey recommended Firefly Lane as a &#8220;better&#8221; Summer Sisters. Of course I had to read it immediately to correct her, but as it turns out, I really liked this book. The beginning was a little iffy, I thought it started out slow, but by the last half of the book I couldn&#8217;t put it down. [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=chicklitbookgroup.wordpress.com&blog=4611181&post=81&subd=chicklitbookgroup&ref=&feed=1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class='snap_preview'><br /><p>Audrey recommended <a href="http://library.minlib.net/search?/tfirefly+lane/tfirefly+lane/1%2C2%2C4%2CB/frameset&amp;FF=tfirefly+lane&amp;1%2C%2C3" target="_blank">Firefly Lane</a> as a &#8220;better&#8221; <span style="text-decoration:underline;">Summer Sisters</span>. Of course I had to read it immediately to correct her, but as it turns out, I really liked this book. The beginning was a little iffy, I thought it started out slow, but by the last half of the book I couldn&#8217;t put it down. I really wanted to know what happened to Kate and Tully and their friendship. Plus, the book made me cry like a baby. It&#8217;s the story about an old friendship and discerning what you want from your life, what others want for you, and being happy with what you are handed (or create for yourself). I don&#8217;t want to give too much away &#8211; the story is in the details:)</p>
<p><a href="http://chicklitbookgroup.files.wordpress.com/2008/09/firefly-lane1.jpg"><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-83" src="http://chicklitbookgroup.files.wordpress.com/2008/09/firefly-lane1.jpg?w=185&#038;h=280" alt="" width="185" height="280" /></a></p>
<p><a href="http://library.minlib.net/search?/tfirefly+lane/tfirefly+lane/1%2C2%2C4%2CB/frameset&amp;FF=tfirefly+lane&amp;1%2C%2C3" target="_blank"><br />
</a></p>
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