The White
by Deborah Larsen
List Price: $12.95
Pages: 240
Format: Paperback
ISBN: 0375712895
Publisher: Vintage Books

Deborah Larsen grew up in St. Paul, Minnesota, and now lives with her husband in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania. Her collection of poetry, "Stitching Porcelain," was published in 1991, and her poems and short stories have appeared in The Nation, The Yale Review, and The New Yorker, among other publications. She has been a Wallace Stegner Fellow at Stanford and a Wallace Stevens Fellow at Yale; she teaches creative writing at Gettysburg College, where she holds the Merle S. Boyer chair. The White is her first novel.
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Q: How did you discover Mary Jemison's story? What captured your interest?
DL: When I moved to Gettysburg I heard that a valley nearby had been the scene of the capture of a young white woman by a Shawnee/French raiding party in the eighteenth century. Then a friend told me that the true story of Mary Jemison's subsequent adoption by the Seneca had been published and that we had a copy of it in the Gettysburg College library. I read the book (by James Seaver) and was incredulous: a fabulous life lay beneath the stiff prose in that account.
Q: How did you research the life of Mary Jemison? Was it difficult to recreate her story given there are so few accounts? How did you capture her voice?
DL: The Seaver account of Mary Jemison's life was my mainstay source: after all, she sat in his presence and gave him her story, which is amazingly detailed. I read other histories for this book. Of course, I transformed the material. My novel is an invention, not a recreation.
Her voice was a gift, pure and simple. I just listened for the voice that wasn't obviously there, for the voice that lay between the lines in the narrative.
Q: What made you decide to write your first novel now, when you've already established your career as a poet and short story writer?
DL: I first wrote this story as a screenplay. Then I decided to try a completely different treatment. The White became a novel shot through with poetics. The material itself really demanded a prose narrative, but you could say that the form of this book chased after me. It had very little to do with career.
Q: Do you see any parallels between Mary's captivity and your personal experience as a nun?
DL: Wellformer nun! I'm happy to say that there are no parallels between the sexual scenes and convent life. But seriously, yesthere is a line in Scripture about "leading captivity captive." What I call the circumscribed life is always fraught, dangerous, but also full of potential richness and beauty.
Q: Why do you think Mary chose not to return to her birth culture?
DL: The Mary of history was plainly concerned about her children's welfare. My Maryfor The White is not a "history" as suchchooses to remain on her lands for complicated reasons which accrue throughout her life.
Q: Why is Mary's story interesting to readers today?
DL: In the settling of the new democracy which became the United States, both violence and beauty were thrown into high relief. My character, Mary, was at the center of this maelstrom and became strong by evading none of it. Now, perhaps more than ever, a story about a fascinating Americanin this case, a womanwho actually flourishes psychologically in a tumultuous time, can provide entertainment, meditation, and hope for readers.
Excerpted from The White © Copyright 2012 by Deborah Larsen. Reprinted with permission by Vintage Books. All rights reserved.
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