While your novels are all different with a variety of
protagonists, one of the central themes that runs throughout is the importance
of place. Beautiful Lies and Sliver of Truth both took place in New York. Black
Out focused on the seedier side of Florida. Your new novel, Die For You, takes
place in New York and Prague. Can you tell us more about how you choose
the location for your novels?
LU: Like so much about my process, it's more as though
the place chooses me. I lived in
New York City for 13 years before leaving for Florida. It was only after I'd been gone for a
couple of years that I fell in love with it again. When I started writing BEAUTIFUL LIES, Manhattan was just very naturally Ridley's
home. And that book turned into a sort of love letter to my time there, to all
the places I knew well, to all my memories - good and bad -of living
there.
When I wrote BLACK OUT, Florida had fully seduced me. After years of exploring the state --
from clubbing in Miami, to kayaking in the mangroves, from diving in the Keys
to trekking though the Everglades -- I started to perceive this dark and wild
heart that people rarely mention when they write about Florida. People seem to find the state kind of
funny, the crime that goes on here is treated with a very light hand in most
fiction novels. People see Florida
as a kind of kitschy, vacation-y place - and of course it is that in some
ways. But it has a feral center, a
dark underbelly that really inspires and fascinates me.
DIE FOR YOU was
inspired by the place I was in - that was a big difference for me. I spent time in Prague, planning
to vacation with my family, be a tourist, and recuperate from writing BLACK
OUT, which was such an intense writing
experience for me. But the city
just blew my mind with its surreal beauty and fascinating history. I just couldn't stop myself from
writing.
You spent five weeks in Prague while writing this
novel. How did the change in locale affect your writing/creative process?
LU: In the summer of 2007, my family and I conducted a
home exchange with a Czech family.
We stayed in a lovely apartment near Malá Strana, just a short walk from
the Charles Bridge and Old Town Square.
We had never done a home exchange before and I had never spent so much
time in another country, so it was a totally new experience -- and not a
completely comfortable one, at first.
We didn't speak the language - at all. And in spite of our efforts to learn,
we really never did. Czech is a
West Slavic tongue and I found it almost completely inaccessible. But living there for five weeks - with
a toddler - meant that we had to grocery shop and do our laundry and all the
non-tourist type things one must do when living somewhere. We had to learn to get around.
We arrived in Prague with a ton of laundry, since we'd
been to London and New York prior to arriving in the Czech Republic. I immediately assessed that the small
washer and drier in the apartment were definitely not going to meet our needs. So I did what any child of the
millennium would do. I Googled. I
found the website for a laundry service, all text written in perfect English,
to my excitement. So I called to
arrange for service, but the people who answered spoke only a little
English. In my hideous Czech, I
tried to make myself understood.
The man on the other end knew only one English sentence: "Text your
address!" And he gave me a number,
which I mercifully understood. So
I texted him my address, and an hour later a gentleman showed up in a white
unmarked van and left with all of our clothes. I watched him go, wondering if I'd ever see him again. But he returned the next day, with
everything washed and neatly folded.
Success!
So we found our comfort zone and a routine pretty
quickly. We were always up early,
so we often found ourselves wandering very quiet streets at sunrise, looking
for an open cafe. We would all eat
together, and then my husband and daughter took off for a bit, while I sat to
write. It was effortless writing
there. I was just soaking up all this energy from the unspeakable beauty all
around me. The pages just flowed. I was away from the normal responsibilities
of home, in some ways, so my days were just about my family, my writing and
exploring a truly inspiring place.
If you had one day in Prague how would you spend it?
LU: Oh, I'm Prague-sick just thinking about it. I would rise early and walk the Charles
Bridge (Karluv Most) as the sun rises.
It's the only time of day that the bridge, which connects the Little
Quarter to Old Town, won't be completely packed with tourists and vendors. I
could literally feel the energy of centuries through the soles of my feet.
After the bridge, I would have breakfast at Bohemia
Bagel (in Malá Strana at Lázeňská 19) just steps from the Charles Bridge. We
stumbled upon this place because it was the only open restaurant at 7:30 AM,
but wound up going back almost every day for the friendly service and yummy
scrambled eggs. It was a little
bit of home in a very foreign place.
After that I'd head to Old Town and wind through the
random network of streets, viewing the historic buildings, visiting quaint
shops. Is it time for lunch
yet? Noon is a great time to stop
in Old Town Square and have a bite at one of the many outdoor cafes or watch
the Astronomical Clock in the Town Hall mark the hour with its march of
apostles and other moving figures.
Of course, I'd have to visit Prague Castle, which is a
city in and of itself, commanding every view in the city from high above the
Vltava River. My favorite sights
within its high walls are the stunning St. Vitus's Cathedral, a gothic wonder,
and the picturesque Golden Lane lined with artisans' cottages.
For dinner, The Allegro restaurant at the Four Seasons
is one of the best in Prague. It's a beautiful place with a wonderfully
romantic atmosphere and magnificent views.
Or for a traditional Czech meal - which basically
consists of a giant platter of roast meat and vegetables or goulash with
dumplings, and a Pilsner Urquell (traditional Czech beer) bigger than your head
- I'd visit Pivnice U Glaubicu.
This fun and casual restaurant, located at Malostranské námestí 5/266 is
built into a 700-year-old wine cellar. It can't be beat for atmosphere and
hearty food.
We had the best mojitos we've ever had at La Bodeguita
del Medio (in the Jewish Quarter at Kaprova 5). This eclectic, funky place serves a blend of creole and
Cuban food, great steaks, classic cocktails and, of course, Cuban cigars into
the wee hours. It was allegedly an
Ernest Hemingway haunt.
I could go on for pages but suffice it to say, I'd go
back in heartbeat, stay for another five weeks and never be bored!
Black Out was set in Florida,
but not the sunny/touristy side of Florida most of us know and love. It
was a darker, more dangerous part of the state. Did you find Prague had a
similar darkness to it?
LU: Oh, Prague has a magnificent dark side. First of
all, it's ancient. All those fairy
tale rues and the towering Prague Castle, the Charles Bridge with all its
moaning saints - the perfect fodder for a dark imagination.
But like Florida, the city was packed with tourists
from all over the world. They
wondered over those old cobblestones, eating ice cream cones and buying "Praha"
teeshirts. It all seemed so sunny
and peaceful, but just around the corner from the main drags there are tiny
dark streets, and narrow staircases leading below the city, secret courtyards.
I felt
like Prague was a city of secrets, so lovely to look at, but having borne
witness to so much history. What
was she hiding? I wondered. What
stories could she tell? It was this fascination that inspired DIE FOR YOU.
Any destinations you haven't been that you're thinking of
visiting for inspiration?
LU: Last summer we spent five weeks in Paris and it definitely
ignited my imagination - how could it not? I just kept thinking about Ridley and all the trouble she
could get herself into there!
This year we'll spend three weeks in Australia when I
visit for the Brisbane & Melbourne Writers Festivals. I can only imagine what experiences
I'll have Down Under and how I will be inspired. The places I have been and the things I have seen in my
travels are truly extraordinary, have most certainly informed my fiction in all
sorts of ways. But it's really the
wide open experiencing of life that offers the most inspiration, no matter
where you find yourself.
----------------
I hope you'll check out the new page on my website that features other writings, including essays both published and unpublished. In the months ahead, I'll be posting a short story that will appear in FLORIDA HEAT, an upcoming anthology edited by Michael Lister and published by Bleak House. So, stay tuned!
What I'm reading:
The Hour I First Believed by Wally Lamb
What I'm listening to:
Regina Spektor/ Far
Ocean's Favorite Book:
Moon Rabbit by Natalie Russell
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