Lily King is  the award-winning author of The Pleasing Hour and The English Teacher, which has garnered much praise and critical acclaim. Her third book, Father of the Rain,  follows Daley Amory as she watches the destruction of her parents'  marriage against the backdrop of the last days of Richard Nixon's  presidency. Joshua Bodwell --- a journalist and writer who, like King,  lives in Maine, and has published short stories in several journals ---  interviewed King about her craft, inspirations and autobiographical  basis. Here, she reveals her love for Virginia Woolf, her propensity for  exploring complex familial bonds --- like Father of the Rain's  father/daughter relationship --- and the erratic starts and stops that  led to the completion of this visceral, textured novel.
 Joshua Bodwell: What was the first book you remember reading as an adolescent that made a lasting impression on you?
Joshua Bodwell: What was the first book you remember reading as an adolescent that made a lasting impression on you?
Lily King: In ninth or  tenth grade I was assigned Winesburg, Ohio in English class and fell  deeply in love with the language and just the utter bizarreness of the  characters' behaviors, all their secrets and thwarted passions. I  remember having to write a paper on the "grotesque" in WINESBURG, OHIO.  And at the heart was George Willard, a writer struggling to break free  from all these people in pain. I wouldn't have been able to identify  with him at the time, but now I understand why I was so drawn to it. I  read it over and over in high school.
JB: When did you first start writing and what do you remember of that time?
LK: One of my best  friends in fifth grade, Amy Mix, told me one day that she was writing a  novel. We had never had one creative writing assignment, ever, so the  idea was a shock to me. I started my own novel that night. I only wrote  twenty pages, and it had perhaps too many parallels to the Partridge  Family (five kids, a painted bus), but it definitely lit the fuse for  me. The funny thing is, years later, after college, I talked to Amy Mix  on the phone, the first time I'd talked to her since eighth grade, and  the first thing I asked her was if she was still writing. "Writing?" she  asked, completely bewildered. I'd always assumed she'd become a writer,  too.
JB: When you began your new novel, Father of the Rain, what was the initial idea or image that got the story rolling?
LK: I think it started  with the puppy, a father buying his daughter a puppy that she wouldn't  be able to keep because she knew, though he didn't, that she would be  moving out of the house with her mother in a week. And her choice of the  ugliest puppy, so that it wouldn't be even harder to leave. Once I got  the puppy in the car, the rest of the first chapter came quickly: the  mother with the group of city kids in the pool, the father scheming to  sabotage the moment in some way, and the daughter trying to please them  both at the same time, all the while carrying around this tremendous  secret that her mother was about to leave the marriage.
JB: Are you an extensive plotter or did this novel evolve organically as you wrote?
LK: I plot a little  ahead. I write with a pencil in a lined notebook and in the back of  every notebook I leave twenty blank pages for notes. So while I'm  writing chapter one, I'll get ideas for chapter three and I'll take a  few notes. And then when I have too many notes to see at once, I'll make  a little time line. And sometimes I'll follow the timeline, and  sometimes I'll toss it out and go in a different direction. I don't like  to be too confined to and restricted by an outline. It can deaden the  writing. But I do like a little hint of direction, something to be  moving toward.
JB: This makes me think of the great E.L. Doctorow line:  "Writing is like driving at night in the fog. You can only see as far as  your headlights, but you can make the whole trip that way."
LK: I can't believe you  quoted that of all quotes. It has been my mantra for years and years.  Actually, I misquoted it for years and years. Until recently I thought  it was "driving cross-country at night." Not sure where I got that, but  writing a novel to me does feel like driving from Boston to L.A. in the  pitch black.
JB: It's so common for readers to believe that novelists pull  material from their own lives. You've published three novels that  feature three complex female characters (two of them written in the  first-person). Can you talk about how much material you harvested from  personal experience for Father of the Rain and how much is pure fiction?
LK: My mother recently  quoted Padgett Powell as saying: "I take everything I know, then lie  about it." I have searched the Internet and can't find this line  anywhere, but I think it sums up the process pretty well. For me writing  is like dreaming --- elements from life come in, but they are jumbled  and distorted. It's the fictional possibilities that light everything on  fire for me. When I try to write straight memoir, it feels dead. The  only thing that's still alive is the emotion. So all my novels have a  lot of emotional truth, emotions, but not necessarily situations I have  experienced, and in entirely different contexts. Though Father of the Rain begins in autobiographical territory for me --- summer of 1974,  small town Massachusetts, parents divorcing --- it departs from my  actual experiences pretty quickly, and by the end of the novel the  trajectory that the narrator Daley's life has taken is very different  from mine.
JB: If one were forced to name a common thread between your  three very different novels, they might point out your exploration of  family. Why do you think that is?
LK: I have a hard time  staying away from the family drama. Whenever I write anything, even a  short story that is not intended to be about family, a sibling or a  parent always walks through the door.
JB: Daley, the narrator of Father of the Rain, is not  an only child, even though at times it seems she is, and is usually much  more emotionally mature than her older brother, Garvey. Why did you  decide to not make Daley an only child?
LK: It wasn't a  decision, exactly. Garvey came in during the first chapter, but very  faintly, very much in the background. His presence became increasingly  important to Daley and the book. I was really surprised myself by how  vital he becomes by the end.
JB: As you follow Daley's life, you make three significant time  leaps in this novel in order to move her from adolescence to middle age.  Can you talk about the way you crafted those sections, and also how you  maintained Daley's voice and personality.
LK: I love big leaps in  time in novels. But I also know they can be disastrous to its cohesion.  I really tried hard not think of how badly it could go wrong and just  tried to write from instinct without any sort of intellectualization of  it. I didn't think about trying to maintain anything. I just wrote it  the way I felt --- not thought --- Daley would be thinking in those  different circumstances and stages of her life.  
JB: The father in Father of the Rain, Gardiner, does many  despicable things in the course of this novel --- be it reading letters  aloud from Penthouse magazine to his children, or the mix of  mental and physical violence he commits on those around him --- yet he  never devolves into a caricature. How did you go about forming this  character? Did you have to find a way to empathize with him in order to  write him?
LK: He was just there  for me. I wasn't at all aware that I had empathized with him until my  husband, my first reader, read it and found him endearing. It really  shocked me. Endearing? I knew I was trying to depict as thoroughly as  possible Daley's complicated feelings for her father, but I didn't  realize that the reader would end up with those complicated feelings for  him, too.
JB: Do you think this reaction has anything to do with the complexity of alcoholism as an illness, not a choice?
LK: Well, one of the  things I've learned about alcoholism is that an active drinker who wants  to keep his life as together as he can needs to be awfully charming and  lovable in order for the people around him to tolerate the drinking.
JB: In THE ENGLISH TEACHER, you explored a complex mother/son  relationship. With FATHER OF THE RAIN, you have turned your attention to  a father/daughter relationship. What caused you to turn your attention  to this?
LK: I guess I wasn't  quite done with all the bad parenting possibilities! I am very  interested in father/daughter relationships, and I don't think they get  equal play in fiction. There are certainly a great many mother/daughter  and father/son novels out there, and a good many mother/son ones, too.  But not many father/daughter ones come to mind. Several years ago, I  read a parenting book that claimed, with all sorts of studies to back up  this claim, that women get their self-esteem almost solely through  their relationship with their father. Given that our society, and our  world, is still quite patriarchal, it makes sense that a man's opinion  of you is what is going to matter more. Just a few days ago I found one  of the first notes to myself that I ever wrote about this novel. There  were possible scene ideas, and then at the bottom it said: "The way we  were treated by our father is the way we expect the world to treat us."  FATHER OF THE RAIN is one woman's efforts to escape that fate.
JB: You once told me that this novel came in fits and starts, but when it came, "it came in a torrent." Can you talk about that?
LK: My first two novels  came out at a fairly steady trickle, but this one was really erratic. I  remember one month in particular, January of 2008. I wrote between  three and six pages every day, which is a lot for me. It felt like it  was pouring out of me. Then I woke up on the first of February  and…nothing. I had a sudden visceral aversion to my own novel. I  couldn't go near it. I wrote short stories instead. I didn't write  another word until May. There were a number of times like that. I think I  got very sad writing parts of the book, and I'd have to stop so that I  wouldn't be swallowed up by that sadness.
JB: Your novels have involved no shortage of difficult subject  matters: giving up the child of an unplanned teenage pregnancy, rape,  and alcoholism. When asked about the difficult subject matter of his  writing, the short story writer Andre Dubus once said, "I think honest  writers write about what bothers them." Do you agree?
LK: What a great quote. I think it's very true. And so often what bothers you is stuff you really don't want to  write about. But it comes in. It walks into your novel and you scream  No! and tell those ideas to get out, but they don't listen.
JB: Father of the Rain is set in a seaside New England town.  Your previous novels have been set in France and on an island off the  East Coast. How important is place in your fiction?
LK: I love writing  about a place, small towns in particular, and I had a really good time  in this novel creating a town in Massachusetts quite similar to the one I  grew up in, with the three-aisled grocery store and the carnival that  came every summer, and then creating the characters' relationships to  it. I think of the setting as another character. Some novels don't need  that character, but I love reading books that do it well.
JB: Who are some of the writers who have influenced you?
LK: It begins with Judy  Blume, then Anderson and Updike and Bellow, then Faulkner and Carver,  then Virginia Woolf and Toni Morrison, then Marilyn Robinson, Alice  Munro, Shirley Hazzard, Alice McDermott, and Rachel Cusk.
JB: Can you take one of those writers and talk specifically about how their work has impacted you, and therefore your work?
LK: I suppose Virginia  Woolf has had the greatest impact on me. I discovered her late, in  graduate school, and because of her and because of the work of my best  friend there at school, Laura McNeal, who is a stunning writer, my  writing took a dramatic turn. I had come to grad school writing sort of  pithy, dialogue-driven short stories with very little attention to  imagery or the beauty of sentences, but by the end of my two years  there, I found I was much more interested in creating mood and texture, a  sort of sensual experience. My first novel very much reflects that  shift.
While I was writing Father of the Rain, I was aware of moving away from  the lyrical sentence and found my writing was much more driven by  dialogue again. I felt like I was leaving Woolf's influence and it made  me feel sort of panicky, like where was I going if not in her direction  anymore? I'd like to believe I am coming more into my own voice, though I  am at a loss for how to describe it or exactly who has influenced it. I  think the truth is that it's the material itself that has the most  influence on how I tell a story, not whom I have read or what I  admire. The voice is organic to the story itself.
JB: How does your reading life affect your writing life?
LK: Reading is  essential to my writing. It feeds it. I often take notes while I read,  not notes on what I'm reading but on what the reading has sparked in my  imagination, which is often entirely unrelated to the words on the page.  I got the idea for my second novel while reading an essay by James Wood  on Virginia Woolf. I think the note I took was: "novel set during  hostage crisis '79-'81?" When I am completely depleted, I often take a  day or week off of writing and just read to replenish.
JB: Some authors have claimed that they only read nonfiction ---  or don't read at all --- while they are in the thick of writing a novel  because they fear that another writer's voice will creep into theirs.  Do you ever worry about that?
LK: I hear that a lot.  But I have to read fiction for inspiration, for a reason to go on.  Nonfiction rarely gives me the thrill of fiction. And I don't feel like  my voice is so fixed that it wouldn't be aided by a dose of great  writing every day.
JB: You once told me that given the option between writing and  your daughters, you will "choose my children over my writing every  time." Can you talk a little bit about navigating motherhood and  authorhood?
LK: Before my children  were in school full-time, it was a chronic struggle and confused me to  no end. I had part-time childcare and was constantly reconfiguring the  hours. I never felt like I had enough time to write, and yet I missed my  children terribly in the hours that I did have. Then they went to  school and the balance was righted.
JB: Do you think stories are created or discovered?
LK: I just read my  11-year-old daughter this one, and she said, "That's an amazing  question." I think they are created, but the good ones feel discovered.
JB: Finally, if you could be any fictional character, who would you be?
LK: Elizabeth Bennett (from Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice). I admire her to no end.
Blog
May 16, 2011
      An Interview with Lily King, Author of FATHER OF THE RAIN
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