
A Goodreads user
asked
Helen Simonson:
Where do you get the themes for your stories?
Helen Simonson
Hi Jim. I never start with particular themes. I start with the tiniest of images - a woman looking out at the Sussex marshes from a hilltop; the town of Rye, glowing in the last fingers of a sunset - and then I wait for a person, a character to walk into my head and into the story. Sometimes themes are not apparent to me until after the book is printed and other people find them. A reader in an audience had to inform me that I wrote well about the theme of grief in Major Pettigrew (who knew?). I think a writer is interested in many themes and ideas, but must firmly push them to the back of the mind and write the concrete particulars of the lives of characters instead. Themes will emerge organically but if one tries to begin with a grand theme, one risks the book being heavy as lead. For my next book I'm laughing at the idea of ex-pats (British and American) trying to remake village life in their own image in the south of France. I'm busy trying to see who lives there and what they are up to today - and when themes emerge (such as remaking foreign locations into something familiar!) I give them a quick look and then set them aside. Hope this helps explain. Of course this got my younger son into trouble in high school English class when he boldly stated "My mom says writers never meant to put themes in their stories!" Oops...
More Answered Questions
Diane Cadei
asked
Helen Simonson:
No question, just wanted to say that it has been a long time since I read a book that I just had to sit and read until I finished it----"The Summer Before the War" was just that book, it was a beautiful Sunday afternoon and I laid on the couch and read and read and read. I just had to finish it. Thank you for such a lovely story. Bring on more. I don't mind waiting. Are you writing another?
Linda
asked
Helen Simonson:
I just finished The Summer before the War, and oh my gosh. I knew it was going to be bittersweet, but how did you capture such a clear picture of that view from Rye, and the absolute tranquility of an English garden on a summer's day? I am sure I will take myself there many times in my mind's eye, such a sense of peace. I loved Major Pettigrew too (I gave it a starred review for Library Journal!)!
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