Authors: Toby Devens
Eventually—after emerging from the initial swamping wave of grief, and bolstered by good reviews for
Mercy, Lord!
—I was ready to write again. But I had a child to support and care for, and over the next decades, even after my second marriage, my time and energy went to the family and job I loved. Still, ideas brewed, and eventually I left my job to write a book that literally demanded to be written,
My Favorite Midlife Crisis (Yet)
. After that, another I couldn’t turn away—it had my heart—
Happy Any Day Now
.
Q. What do you most like about the writing life?
A. When the work is going well, you get something like a runner’s high. I assume serotonin or another pleasure hormone is surging, because everything around you fades and you’re totally absorbed in the joy of writing. Also, when things in the real world are falling apart and you feel helpless to change them, your ability to shape a fictional world, steer your characters’ destinies, give them satisfying resolutions to their problems can be sanity-saving.
The feedback from readers is incredibly fulfilling. After
My Favorite Midlife Crisis (Yet)
came out, I received so many revealing and touching e-mails via my Web site. Readers identified with the characters and thanked me for giving a voice to women “of a certain age.” One wrote that her husband had walked out of their marriage earlier that week and she’d been despondent. Finally, she forced herself out of the house, wandered into a bookstore café for a cup of tea and a browse, and picked up
Midlife Crisis
. She said that the book gave her hope that there could be happiness ahead for her. For an author, it doesn’t get better than that.
On the practical side, it’s nice to be able to work in sweats and slippers and make your own schedule. And I like the balance of the solitary—it’s just you and the laptop when you’re writing—and the camaraderie with other writers.
Q. What writers have you particularly enjoyed and been inspired by over the years? And are you a member of a book club?
A. The first who made an indelible impression was Louisa May Alcott. I loved
Little Women
so much that, as a preteen, I wrote a mercifully short play based on the story and drafted my friends to act in it.
Later on, I became a big fan of the three Johns: Updike, Cheever, and O’Hara, who did such a wonderful job of vividly capturing specific times and milieus. Dorothy Parker is an idol. She displayed amazing versatility: short fiction, poetry, screenplays, book and film reviews. Everything was clever and frequently, in the case of her stories and poems, heartbreaking.
I love Susan Isaacs’s voice.
Compromising Positions
was to me a breakout novel. Her savvy, witty woman protagonist was a new phenomenon and readers were captivated by her. Since I tend to write about bright women who use humor to brave their way through crises, that first Isaacs book was a personal inspiration.
There are certain authors whose talent transcends their genres. I’m addicted to Daniel Silva’s Gabriel Allon series, Elizabeth George’s Inspector Lynley novels, and Laura Lippman’s Baltimore-based Tess Monaghan books. These writers are masters of the spy and detective formats, but, bottom line, they’re simply fine writers.
Among the younger crew, I’m especially impressed by Tana French, whose Dublin-set stories are riveting. I have a review of her
Faithful Place
at the salon page on my Web site, at www.tobydevens.com. Maggie Shipstead made a marvelous debut with
Seating Arrangements
. Karen Thompson Walker’s
The Age of Miracles
is a stunning first novel.
As for nonfiction, Nora Ephron is a hands-down, thumbs-up favorite. In a tribute to her in my blog, midlifepassions.blogspot.com, I try to explain why her work resonates so deeply with women of all ages and backgrounds. Other nonfiction writers I’m always eager to read: Anne Lamott, Doris Kearns Goodwin, and Erik Larson.
I am a member of a couples book club, which is a hoot. The mechanics of coming to a consensus about what we want to tackle next is always fun and surprising because we try to move outside our comfort zone. We chew over the books during dinner. Once I nearly slung the soup at a dear friend. He literally hated a novel I adored. The back-and-forth gets pretty heated. But a really rich chocolate dessert always produces the peace that passeth (mutual) understanding.
Q. What is your next novel about, and what might we expect from you over the next several years?
A. First, I’m heading to the beach. And not just to stretch out on the sand. I like to have my settings—the medical practice in my first book; the invented Maryland Philharmonic in my second—work almost as characters in my stories. And what’s better than a beach town where an intruder from the past is about to make waves?
My protagonist is in her mid-forties, with an interesting history and a future in jeopardy because . . . Well, I’m in the early stages. I know it’s going to be exciting and fun to write and, I hope, like my other novels, exciting and fun to read. Even when the roof caves in (as it does literally and figuratively in this one)—especially when the roof caves in—if you survive intact, you gotta laugh.
That’s the immediate project. Over the next few years, more novels, because there are always stories percolating, and not writing is never an option.
CONVERSATION GUIDE
QUESTIONS FOR
DISCUSSION
SPOILER ALERT: The Questions for Discussion that follow tell more about what happens in the book than you might want to know until after you’ve read it.