Authors: Jennifer S. Brown
Q. What was the inspiration for
Modern Girls
?
A. As the self-appointed family historian, I’ve begged relatives to tell me stories every time we gather. In days of yore, I’d whip out an old-fashioned cassette player to record what they had to say; these days I merely pull out my iPhone’s voice recorder. A number of years ago, my father casually said, “Your great-grandmother had an unwanted pregnancy.” I was shocked that not only did she have one, but that it was common knowledge in the family. Unfortunately, by this point my grandmother (her daughter) had died, so I needed to fill in the details with my imagination. Why would a married woman in those days not want a child? What were the options open to women? What if she’d been unmarried? All those “what ifs” led to Dottie and Rose.
Q. What kind of research did you do?
A. The first thing I did was return to those cassette tapes and try to understand how my family lived, how they behaved, what they believed. I wanted to get a sense of the time. Some details I shamelessly stole: the names Rose and Ben came from my own great-grandparents; another ancestor was trampled by a horse at a protest in Ukraine; many of my family members were Socialist. Yet the story itself is complete fiction.
The next step was to read about the time period, in both nonfiction and fiction. Many wonderful books helped shaped the world I was creating:
World of Our Fathers
by Irving Howe,
Bread Givers
by Anzia Yezierska,
A Bintel Brief: Sixty Years of Letters from the Lower East Side to the Jewish Daily Forward
by Isaac Metzker,
Call It Sleep
by Henry Roth,
The Rise of David Levinsky
by Abraham Cahan, and
In My Mother’s House
by Kim Chernin, among others.
Finally, a trip to New York helped me solidify my facts. At the New York Public Library, I accessed
New Leader
, a Socialist newspaper, to understand the issues of the day. I also looked at transportation maps from the 1930s to learn how Dottie would have gotten around. A visit to the Tenement Museum helped me picture what Yetta’s apartment would have looked like when Rose first arrived in America.
Q. While the Lower East Side of New York is familiar territory for many people, Camp Eden is not. Was Camp Eden a real place?
A. Socialist camps for Jewish adults were not uncommon in the 1930s, the most famous being Camp Tamiment in Pennsylvania. Camp Eden was another such camp, beginning in the late 1920s, although by the late 1940s, it was primarily a children’s camp. I knew about Camp Eden because my grandparents met there, but I could find no information on it, so I made up details about what it was like based on family photos. I was thrilled when, later reading the Socialist paper
New Leader
, I found articles about the camp, and much of what I had written was not far off base (although some is complete fiction; that’s what novelists do when we don’t know something—we make it up). Wonderful ads appeared touting the benefits of the camp, and I loved the ones that read: “Where the Spirit of Comraderie [
sic
] Prevails” and “Special Rates for Party Members.”
Q. Do you have a set writing routine?
A. My best writing days are the ones on which I’ve had a long morning run. I find a good run clears my mind and prepares me for the day. I can work just about anywhere, and I do. At home, I sit on the living room couch with the computer on my lap. I’m a regular at my local café when I need a change of scenery. My town’s library has a gorgeous reading room built in 1892, which makes me feel like I’m in another time period.
I’m fortunate that I don’t need silence to write. I’ve been known to write out ideas while sitting in a roomful of noisy kids while waiting for my daughter’s dance class to end or on the sidelines of the soccer field. If I feel a need to tune out the noise, I have playlists of music popular in the time period I’m writing about to help give me a better feel for what my characters would be listening to.
Q. What are you working on now?
A. More historical fiction! It’s a little early for too many details, but I’m knee-deep in research on Prohibition and the Hebrew Orphan Asylum, with a dash of World War II history (in particular about returning soldiers) thrown
in.
Photo by Jim Pogozelski
Jennifer S. Brown
has published fiction and creative nonfiction in
Fiction Southeast
,
The Best Women’s Travel Writing
,
The Southeast Review
,
The Sierra Nevada Review
, and
The Bellevue Literary Review
, among other places. Her essay “The Codeine of Jordan” was selected as a notable essay in
The Best American Travel Writing
in 2012. She holds an MFA in creative writing from the University of Washington.
CONNECT ONLINE
jennifersbrown.com
twitter.com/j_s_brown
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