Interviews

Q & A with BookReporter.com

Q & A with BookReporter.com

Below is an excerpt of a Q & A I had recently.

Question: You made your writing debut in 1985 with ANGELS ALL OVER TOWN. THE SILVER BOAT is your twenty-ninth novel. How — if at all — has your writing process changed over time? Have the Internet and other technological advances affected your writing experience?

Luanne Rice: In many ways my process has changed very little. My novels always begin with a character. I wait for her to tell me who she is; often she inhabits my dreams. Once I know her name, I’m ready to start writing. Although I now work on a MacBookPro 15, I still like to write the earliest scenes on a yellow legal pad with a fountain pen. The Internet makes research go faster, but something is lost. It’s too easy to search for information, take what I need, and move on. I prefer to do research from books, getting lost in the background and immersed in the realm of whatever I’m trying to learn.

Q: The importance of family is a recurring theme in your novels. How did your own upbringing influence your decision to become a writer?

LR: My family was loving but complicated. Our house was filled with secrets and bass notes. As a child I was a detective, listening at walls and going through drawers, looking for answers to what was wrong. My writing has been my lifelong solution to figuring things out, finding the love I know was there, learning everything I can about the way families work, ways of loving and trying to be happy.

Q: “Was that the inspiration for Dulse’s latest adventure? Dar wasn’t sure. She only knew that her ideas came from deep down, experiences and emotions of her own” (p. 282). Part of what makes your novels so heartfelt is that each of them comes from a deeply personal place. What was your inspiration for THE SILVER BOAT?

LR: The answer has three parts:

a) Like the McCarthy sisters, my sisters and I had to face what to do with our beloved family beach cottage after our mother died. It was an immense challenge. The house contained so many ghosts and memories. My grandparents had built it; no other family had ever occupied it. It sits on a granite hill, and the top step still has three pennies placed there by my grandfather in 1938, the year it was built. We put it on the market for ten seconds — selling felt unthinkable. My sisters were very generous and let me buy them out. I still want it to be the family house.

b) My father had a way of disappearing. Not forever, like Michael McCarthy, but frequently, and without explanation. I’ve been writing my way into that situation my whole life.

c) The silver boat actually exists.

You can read the full interview here >

Better TV interviews Luanne about The Silver Boat

Better TV interviews Luanne about The Silver Boat

Rhiannon Ally and Kevin Roberts talk to Luanne about The Silver Boat.

Adam Curry interviews Luanne

Adam Curry interviews Luanne

Adam interviews Luanne for the Big App Show about The Silver Boat

Luanne’s interview on Pix 11

Luanne’s interview on Pix 11

Luanne talks about The Silver Boat on the Pix 11 Morning Show.

Luanne on <em>Deep Blue Sea for Beginners</em>

Luanne on Deep Blue Sea for Beginners

What could be more disturbing than a mother who leaves her daughters? She’s not sick, there’s no deep dark secret, she doesn’t have amnesia. One day she just walks out. Read more …

On Cloud Nine: Interview with Luanne

On Cloud Nine: Interview with Luanne

The following interview appeared on Book Page in 1999. Luanne talks about her book, Cloud Nine.

Luanne Rice describes Cloud Nine as a book that demanded to be written. Like Susan, Luanne’s experience of caring for her own dying mother affected her profoundly, and for two years she was unable to write. Her mother “was the constant, encouraging figure in my life,” notes Rice. She attended the same small public school as her mother, and credits her teachers with reinforcing her mother’s support of her writing. “The years of her treatment and decline were so terrible and compelling,” Rice says. “The whole thing affected me really deeply, and I stopped writing. I stopped being able to think like a novelist, I couldn’t make the emotional connections I’ve been so blessed to be able to make.”

Read the full interview here >

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Links

  • Cornerstone Theater An inspiring multi-ethnic, ensemble-based theater company in Los Angeles.
  • Kevin Boyles Kevin is a great friend and favorite photographer. I’m lucky enough to have several of his photos gracing my walls, including the luminous “Point Loma.”
  • Motherhood Out Loud MOTHERHOOD OUT LOUD was performed Off-Broadway. I wrote the stepmother piece, “My Almost Family.”
  • National Domestic Violence Hotline There is help here.
  • Natural Resources Defense Council The Earth’s Best Defense. I traveled with NRDC to Laguna San Ignacio on the Baja Peninsula, to see the pristine winter home of Gray Whales, an area protected due to NRDC’s efforts.
  • Phases of the Moon Because you want to know when it’s going to be full…
  • Sea Education Association I love SEA! I did sea semester when I was 19 and it has influenced my whole life…
  • Surfrider Catch a wave, save a beach.

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