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Authors: Adena Halpern

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BOOK: 29
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Funny enough, no.
Roman Holiday
was the movie that influenced me most. Much like Audrey Hepburn’s character, Ellie gets this chance to take a day out of life that’s unlike any other. She falls in love. She does things she could never do in her situation, but in the end she knows that she must go back to her life. Like Hepburn’s character, Ellie needs that day to realize it. Using the ability to be young for one day was the best device I could think of for Ellie to truly be able to have a day that would be unlike any other.

One more movie that influenced me was Neil Simon’s
The Out-of-Towners.
Barbara and Frida are like Jack Lemmon and Sandy Dennis in that movie. They can’t catch a break. They can’t get anything to eat. Everything that could go wrong for them goes wrong. You feel as exhausted and relieved as they look at the end of the movie when Lemmon and Dennis finally get into their hotel room. That’s what I wanted it to feel like when Barbara and Frida finally got into Ellie’s apartment.

How long did
29
take to write? Do you schedule time for writing, or work when inspiration strikes? Tell us a little bit about your writing process.

Counting the time it took to interview various women and get the story straight, the book took me about a year to write. Before I start writing a book there are two things I always do. First, I write the first 50–75 pages. That’s how I develop the voice of the character. Within these 50–75 pages, I might include characters or lines or themes that I didn’t think of when I conceived of the idea. This leads me to the next step: writing the outline. I hate writing outlines, but they really are the most important step in writing a book. The outline is my blueprint. I look at it constantly to see where I am in the overall story. The thing I love most about writing a book, as compared with, say, writing a screenplay, is that screenplays are very structured. Books are structured of course, but to a point. You’re able to go off the beaten track and expand on an idea. This can take days and then you forget what happens next in the story. That’s why you really need the outline to see where you’re going.

As for the actual writing of the book, that’s the best part. When I’m writing a book, that’s pretty much all I think about. I work five days a
week as with a normal job, but I also work when the inspiration strikes. When this happens, I’ll jot little notes, a line, or sometimes a paragraph on scrap paper when inspiration hits. Funny story: I was at the market and I was thinking about the chapter “I Don’t Kiss and Tell.” I wrote the sentence where Ellie says to Zachary, “I regret my life,” on the top of the shopping list so I would remember it. Later that day, my husband came to me looking concerned. He said to me, “Is everything okay?” “Why?” I asked. He pulled out the shopping list and pointed to that sentence I had written and said, “Because I found
this
in the kitchen.” We had a laugh about it. Also, I came up with the last paragraph of
29
while I was at the gas station filling up my tank. I wrote the whole thing on the back of a bunch of old receipts. It was kind of hard to decipher what I wrote once I got home, but I got the gist of it.

In the acknowledgments, you thank all the women you interviewed. What was the most surprising thing you learned from them?

The most surprising thing I learned about the women I interviewed was just how honest they were. All I did was ask them this one question, “What would you do if you could be 29 for a day?” These women answered me so truthfully that it was almost uncomfortable. They got this look in their eyes when I asked them this question, like somehow I could grant them this wish. I thought I’d get jokey answers. I thought I’d really have to pry and sometimes I did, but for the most part, they just told me what they would have done.

29
hinges on Ellie’s regrets about the way she lived her life. Have regrets been a force in your own life?

I regret 90 percent of anything I say in a given day. I regret that I just admitted that. I know it’s the main reason I’m a writer. It’s why I love what I do for a living. If I could type out everything I ever said, I’d never stop pressing the delete button. This is the neurotic in me speaking of course. The other part of me knows that I should only regret maybe 20 percent of what I say on a given day. Who cares what people think? I’m like Barbara in that way. I’ll wake up in the middle of the night regretting something I’ve said. A part of me knows that the person probably
wasn’t offended by it, but still. The late actress Kitty Carlisle used to look at herself in the mirror each morning and say, “I forgive you for whatever you did yesterday.” I do this a lot. It always seems to make me feel a little better.

Another thing I regret, or wonder about, is if I’m having enough fun in my life. Have I experienced everything I wanted to experience at my age? Have I seen everything I should have seen? You know that question, “If heaven exists, what would you like to hear God say to you when you arrive at the pearly gates?” I want him to say, “
Now, that was living!”
I don’t think he’ll say that though. I think he’ll say, “
You didn’t go out enough
.” I don’t attend enough parties. I often wish I were a Washington socialite. They seem to go to a lot of balls. I’m never in a situation where I’m required to wear a ball gown. This is a huge regret in my life.

Throughout the book, you alternate viewpoints between Ellie, Barbara, and Frida. Which of these women was the most difficult to write? Which was the most fun? Who are you most like?

Ellie, Barbara, and Frida were a total blast to write, but I would have to say that Ellie was the most fun and the most difficult. Ellie is every one of my mother’s friends’ voices. I know that voice very, very well. I’ve been hearing it my entire life. That voice is very direct. When they tell a story, it always goes off the beaten track. There’s always some advice for you in the end.

The part that was difficult was making sure that Ellie was the seventy-five-year-old woman of today. People still think of a seventy-five-year-old woman as someone sitting in a rocking chair on the front porch. I’m sure that person still exists; it’s just not any seventy-five-year-old woman that I know. Sophia Loren is seventy-five. Julie Andrews is seventy-four. Carol Burnett is seventy-six. You wouldn’t find any of these women wearing galoshes and granny glasses, would you? It was very important to me that I got this right and it was difficult not to stereotype that seventy-five-year-old “granny.” I wanted to create a character who seventy-five-year-old women, or their daughters and granddaughters could look at and say, “
She’s just like my
(fill in the blank).”

That’s where Frida came in. Frida is that stereotypical seventy-five-year-old woman. She couldn’t stay that way though and I had to figure
out why she was that way. I realized it was because she thought that was the only way a woman of her age could live. It took that day for her to realize that wasn’t the case.

29
is narrated mostly by Ellie, but also offers Barbara and Frida’s point of view. The only character whose perspective isn’t shown is granddaughter Lucy. What made you decide to structure the novel this way?

This is Ellie’s story. Ellie needed to figure out her problems in her own voice. To hear Ellie speak to the reader from the heart is to know exactly who this woman is. Also, it was Ellie’s day and I wanted to experience that day through Ellie’s voice.

Barbara and Frida are secondary. To let them speak in their own voices would have made it their stories too. I didn’t want to do that. I wanted this book to be about a woman who has spent her life wondering what could have been. When Ellie finds her answer, it directly addresses the problems Barbara and Frida have in their own lives.

The city of Philadelphia becomes a character in its own right. What about Philly drew you to choose it as the setting?

I’ve lived in Los Angeles for the past eighteen years, but Philadelphia is my home. (I sound like an advertisement.) Sometimes it’s easier to stand back (like 3,000 miles away) to see where you really came from. It took moving away all those years ago to be able to see how beautiful my city really is, both for its physical attributes and its people. Even though Philadelphia is a large city, it still feels like a small town. I could come back to Philly and run into an old friend walking down the street and the conversation could pick up where we left off years before. Philadelphia is like the bar in
Cheers
. Everyone knows your name or your brother’s name or your cousin. That’s a club I’m proud to be a part of. Ellie is a part of that environment. Ellie’s roots are there. Like me, the generations of Ellie’s family are what make Philadelphia the city that it is. To me, that’s its history. I couldn’t place her anywhere else because Ellie was exactly the type of woman I knew and admired when I was growing up.

The difficult dynamics of Ellie’s family life are key to the development of the novel, and are arguably universal issues for women—the mother-daughter relationship is notoriously difficult. Are the characters informed by your own personal experiences, or are they inspired by a more general view of this dynamic in our society?

As a daughter, when you’re writing about a mother/daughter relationship, I think it’s next to impossible not to bring some of your own baggage into it. I really tried not to. Honestly, this is the first book I’ve written where you couldn’t pick a character and say it was me or someone in my family. You would never look at me and say that I was the model for Barbara. I’m not fifty-five, I’m not overweight, I live 3,000 miles away from my mom and I didn’t marry Larry the dentist. Ellie is definitely not my mother. She has never relied on my father like Ellie did with Howard. My mother has always been much more independent than that. In terms of our relationship, my mother and I don’t bicker like Ellie and Barbara.

Having said that, like Barbara, there’s a part of me that always wants to make my mother proud. I want to win the award for best daughter in the world. This is not something that takes over my life the way that it does for Barbara. It’s just an itch that’s always in the back of my head.

So when I was writing the passage where I describe why Barbara is the way she is and that need she has to make her mother proud, I didn’t set out to bring this aspect of my personality into it. It was only when I read it over that I realized, oh crap, that’s me.

I think that feeling is pretty much universal though. I can’t imagine I’m the only daughter who wants to make her mother proud. Therefore, I’m going to chalk that up to a universal theme . . . and maybe ask some girlfriends of mine if they have that same issue.

Who are your influences as a writer?

I’m a voracious reader, but truthfully, I’m influenced more by movies than I am by books. My style of writing is less descriptive and more expressive. I’m not one to go on about what a room looks like. I find that boring. I like to hear what the character says, their tone, their
voice, and I like to see what’s going on in their head, what’s behind their words.

I got my bachelor’s degree, as well as my master’s degree, in screenwriting so a lot of what I write seems more cinematic. I get that a lot and I know it’s because of my training. When I’m writing a book, for me, it’s like watching a movie play out in my head. Writing a screenplay, however, and watching a movie are two very different things. Writing a screenplay has to be very structured. It has to have three acts on three particular page numbers. The major dramatic question of the movie has to carry you from scene to scene, even though it doesn’t seem that way when you’re watching it. That’s why I prefer writing books to movies. I hear the conversations between the characters and I write them down. I don’t have to worry specifically about what page I’m on. That is so freeing, especially when you’ve been trained to write screenplays. The best thing I ever did was learn how to write screenplays so I could write books. Don’t get me wrong; writing a book is really, really hard. I like the way the comic Lewis Black once put it: “Writing a book is like having homework that never stops.” Once I was able to free myself from the structure of the screenplay, I felt like a chef who had learned how to make a soufflé with one arm tied behind his back. It’s not any better, but it can definitely feel more liberating.

Woody Allen, Billy Wilder, Neil Simon, Larry Gelbart, and Carrie Fisher have all influenced my work in one way or another. The film
It’s a Wonderful Life
influenced my previous book,
The Ten Best Days of My Life
. Preston Sturges, however, is probably the biggest influence on my work. Consider movies like
Miracle at Morgan’s Creek
or
Christmas in July.
Those movies are more than fifty years old, but they still stand up. The movies flow so easily because the dialogue is quick and precise. You really listen to the dialogue for fear you might miss something. Actually, I just remembered this. Barbara’s last name, Sustamorn, was influenced by the names of Sturges’s characters. His characters have such amazing names, like Trudy Kockenlocker, for example. There are three characters in
Christmas in July
whose names are Tom, Dick and Harry. That’s genius. Barbara and her husband, Larry, seem like such pathetic characters on the outside that I thought it would be great to make them even more pathetic by giving them a name that sounded like “such a moron.”

What books were on your bedside table when you were writing?

I’m pretty sure I was reading Curtis Sittenfeld’s book,
American Wife,
but I don’t know that it influenced me when I was writing the book. It should have, because not only was I reading about a first lady, but the presidential election was going on. I don’t think any of that shows up in
29
though. Does it? Let me know.

Are you working on any new projects that you can tell us about?

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