Last Call
by Laura Pedersen
List Price: $13.95
Pages: 320
Format: Paperback
ISBN: 0345461916
Publisher: Ballantine Books

Laura Pedersen was born in Buffalo, New York (one of "God's frozen people") in 1965, at the height of The Folk Music Scare. (For details of misspent youth see essay at www.literal-latte.com/pederson.html).
After finishing high school in 1983 she moved to Manhattan and began working on The American Stock Exchange, a time when showing up combined with basic computation skills could be parlayed into a career. She chronicled these years in her first book, Play Money.
Having vowed to become anything but a journalist and with no conception of what a semicolon does, Laura spent the better part of the 1990s writing for The New York Times.
In 1994 President Clinton honored her as one of Ten Outstanding Young Americans. She has appeared on TV shows including "Oprah," "Good Morning American," "Primetime Live," and "David Letterman".
In 2001, her first novel, Going Away Party, won the Three Oaks Prize for Fiction and was published by Storyline Press. Beginner's Luck was published by Ballantine Books in 2003 and subsequently chosen for the Barnes & Noble "Discover Great New Writers" program, Borders "Original Voices," and as a featured alternate for The Literary Guild. Beginner's Luck has been optioned as a feature film starring Brittany Snow (TV's "American Dreams") as Hallie.
The latest novel, Last Call, will arrive in stores on January 2, 2004. And Heart's Desire, the sequel to Beginner's Luck, will be available sometime next year.
Laura lives in New York City, teaches reading and trades Yu-Gi-Oh! cards at the Booker T. Washington Learning Center in East Harlem, and is a member of the national literary association P.E.N. (poets, essayists and novelists).
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January 9, 2004
Julie Sciandra and Laura Pedersen have been friends and occasionally
colleagues for more than twenty years. They walk each other's dogs and also bowl together. Julie usually wins, but Laura insists that this is because Julie's family owned a bowling alley in Buffalo, and thus she has had an unfair advantage.
Julie Sciandra: Did you always want to be a writer?
Laura Pedersen: I was a slow starter, basically a turnip in a sleeper the first few years of my life, and I didn't come on strong academically until much later. Just learning to read was a huge accomplishment for me. I would say the prospect of telling stories first arose in seventh grade. An only child and pathologically shy I realized I had to do something to facilitate interaction. So I started telling a few jokes and funny stories, and found a positive response that led to friendships. After getting yelled at for talking during class, I was forced to start writing and passing notes.
JS: When did you first receive recognition for your writing?
LP: In middle school I won an essay contest for writing about Teddy Roosevelt. And then I won a prize in the declamation contest for a speech about Carrie Nation. But it wasn't until high school that I really hit it bigI was sentenced to community service for a poem I'd written that contained a hidden message.
JS: How do you set about writing a novel like LAST CALL?
LP: I hear a lot of writers say they start with the seed for an idea, such as a character or one particular event, and they don't know where it's going to lead them. That could never work for me. I don't start a book unless I have the beginning and the end. Only the middle is something I can work out as I go.
JS: Do you write every day?
LP: I definitely write checks every day. But I probably work on what will eventually become a book or short story about four days a week, usually between 10:00 a.m. and 3:00 p.m., with an hour break for lunch and a few other breaks for running errands or playing with the dogs. I have a very short attention span and work best in spurts, then I need to do something else for a while, like go Rollerblading or play basketball with the kids.
JS: How long does it take you to write a book?
LP: That's a real time-motion study, like how long between when a traffic light in Manhattan turns green and the cab driver behind you leans on his horn. But I'd say a book takes me a year, while doing other things. I suppose that if I sat down with a freezerful of burritos and a vat of chocolate, I could write a novel in eight weeks.
JS: Where do your ideas come from?
LP: From daily life. I live "hard" in the sense that I enjoy being on the
go and having lots of experiences. For instance, I went to the floor of the stock exchange shortly after I turned eighteen. That environment created the foundation for my first book, Play Money. Journalism has taken me to exotic places like Russia, Turkey, and Cuba. If you want to tell a story but you don't have an idea, I think it's best to go out and do something and then write about it. There are a lot of things I'd love to do but haven't had time yet, and so I'll occasionally imagine a character doing them and use that in a novel. But at the end of the day, my stories are always about living, loving, and dying.
JS: Are the characters based on people you've known in real life?
LP: I borrow bits and pieces from different individuals and then create new people, sort of like a medieval dwarf going from house to house in the middle of the night and stealing the essences of the townsfolk. For instance, my friend Peter Heffley's ninety-year-old mother, Mildred, is the patron saint of worriers and pessimists. We actually look forward to her negative pronouncements and often attempt to evoke them just for entertainment. (Hence the catchphrase, "Who put the dread in Mildred?") I know if I say, "My, that's a lovely orchid, Mrs. Heffley," she'll retort, "It's just about dead." Or if Pete says he has the Fourth of July party all organized, she undoubtedly replies, "There's a storm heading this way." So for the character of Diana in Last Call, who is unlike Mrs. Heffley in every other way, I borrowed the fretfulness along with some of her best lines. And many of my charaters are built on a small slice of me that I then exaggerate. For example, in Beginner's Luck Hallie plays poker, goes to the racetrack, and trades in the stock market. Gil likes plays by Tennessee Williams, Craig is an only child, Olivia is a vegetarian, and Bernard is optimistic and enjoys humor. Those are all based on my own experiences or personality. Plus, I'm a lazy researcher.
JS: How does being a minister influence your writing?
LP: I'm an ordained interfaith minister (we respect all paths), but I don't have a congregation, and I don't give sermons, except to the teenaged Michael. In the not-for-profit world it helps to accomplish things if you're a minister or a politician. As for organized religion, I'm a lifelong Unitarian Universalist. Most Sundays you'll find me sitting in a pew on the far right over at All Souls in Manhattan, reflecting on the UU Trinityreduce, reuse, and recycle.
JS: But there's a lot of religion in LAST CALL, especially Catholicism.
LP: I've always had an interest in religion, especially since it's been
the cause of so many wars and so much strife. Also, my earliest childhood memory is of my mother yelling, "Jesus Christ, is it ever going to stop snowing?" One of my favorite stories is how in the late 1300s there were two dueling popes, Clement VII and Urban VI, both busily excommunicating each other. Finally, a council was called to decide between them. Pietro Pilarghi, who helped bring about the council, made himself pope and told the others to take a hike. Neither did, and so then there were three popes. As for making Rosamond a Catholic, when I was growing up outside of Buffalo in the 1970s, eighty percent of the population was Catholic. As James Joyce famously said about his faith, Catholicism means "Here comes everybody!" Catholics live out loud in a terrific way. So every- where you turned there was a big church, battalions of habited nuns, outdoor celebrations on feast days, and of course the Friday fish fry. (Word of the Vatican II council that ended in 1965 apparently hadn't yet reached Buffalo. Cowboy comedian Will Rogers once explained that he wanted to be in Buffalo when the world ended because it would happen there five years later.) So my friends were constantly dashing off to Mass, confession, religious instruction, and CYO (Catholic Youth Organization). Having had so much exposure to that particular faith, I thought it would be interesting to set up a sort of fictional showdown between an atheist and a Roman Catholic. Also, if Rosie had been a Theosophist, I don't think the story would work as well because there aren't the lifestyle constraints and concept of an afterlife to work with. And worse, I would have had to do research.
JS: I notice you have a pair of snazzy new red-and-blue bowling shoes. Is there a big game tonight?
LP: Not tonight, but I haven't given up on my idea of bringing about world peace through bowling. It's a sport that allows almost everyone to play, regardless of race, religion, economic background, and body type. You can wear a sombrero, burka, kilt, saffron robe, or whatever you like.
JS: So what's next? I've seen you scribbling on your jeans, which usually means a new book is in the works.
LP: After Beginner's Luck came out people asked, "What happens to
Hallie?" It was open-ended, so I've written a sequel called Heart's Desire. Hallie has finished her first year away at college and returns to the Stockton household for the summer, which is in a greater state of chaos than usual, if that's possible. Gil and Bernard have broken up, and Ottavio is pressuring Olivia to marry him. Meanwhile, Hallie is contemplating that age-old teenage dilemma: Should she or shouldn't she?
Excerpted from Last Call © Copyright 2008 by Laura Pedersen. Reprinted with permission by Ballantine Books. All rights reserved.
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