The Next Best Book Club discussion

Each Vagabond By Name
This topic is about Each Vagabond By Name
90 views
Author/Reader Discussions > Each Vagabond By Name - Author Reader Discussion

Comments Showing 1-50 of 70 (70 new)    post a comment »
« previous 1

message 1: by Lori, Super Mod (new) - rated it 5 stars

Lori (tnbbc) | 10621 comments Mod
Next month, we'll be discussing Each Vagabond by Name with author Margo Orlando Littell.

Her publisher, Uno Press, has given us a total of 10 copies to give away - in print (for US only) and digital (open Internationally).

In order to be considered, you must comment here or on the blog for a shot at winning one and secure a spot in the discussion that kicks off on October 17th.

http://thenextbestbookblog.blogspot.c...


This giveaway will run through September 9th.


Winners will be announced here and via email (if you provide one) on September 10th.


Here's how to enter:

1 - Leave a comment here or in the giveaway thread over at TNBBC's blog (linked above). REMEMBER, You must be a resident of the US to claim a print copy. And you should specify the format you prefer.

ONLY COMMENT ONCE. MULTIPLE COMMENTS DO NOT GAIN YOU ADDITIONAL CHANCES TO WIN.

2 - State that you agree to participate in the group read book discussion that will run from October 17th through October 23rd. Margo has agreed to participate in the discussion and will be available to answer any questions you may have for her.

*If you are chosen as a winner, by accepting the copy you are agreeing to read the book and join the group discussion right here in this thread next month.

3 - If your goodreads profile is blocked (set on private), please leave me another way to contact you.


GOOD LUCK!!!!


Eric | 59 comments I agree to participate, and I prefer print.


Kelly | 28 comments This book looks wonderful, I would love to participate! I prefer a print copy and am in the US. I agree to participate in the group read book discussion that will run from October 17th through October 23rd. You can contact me on Goodreads or at [email protected].


message 4: by Rhonda (last edited Sep 01, 2016 01:01PM) (new) - rated it 5 stars

Rhonda Lomazow (rhondalomazow) Prefer print &I really enjoy participating. Contact me@rhondareads or [email protected].


Lori | 35 comments This one was already on my list. I prefer a digital copy and will participate in the discussion on Oct 17. You can contact me at [email protected].


Marvin | 19 comments I'd love to read this book and participate in the discussion. I'd prefer print. Thanks!


message 7: by Tiffiny (new)

Tiffiny | 2 comments I agree to participate and I would like it in print


Tiffany Proctor  | 22 comments I agree to participate and would prefer print but would take digital!


message 9: by R (new) - added it

R I am definitely interested in reading this book and I agree to participate in the discuission. I would prefer a print copy.


Peg - reading heals | 52 comments I would love to read this. I agree to participate in the discussion and would prefer a print copy. I live in the US.


Ariel (BookHermit) (noonchibookhermit) | 2 comments Interesting premise! Not a US citizen but digital suits me just fine


message 12: by Judy (new) - added it

Judy (judygreeneyes) | 411 comments I'd love to read this. I would be happy with digital if it will load on my Kindle. Otherwise print is best. In USA.


message 13: by Lori, Super Mod (new) - rated it 5 stars

Lori (tnbbc) | 10621 comments Mod
Winner have been chosen at random!

Emails and/or goodreads messages will be going out to:

Eric
Kelly
Rhonda
Lori
Marvin
Tiffany
Rachelle
Peg
Ariel
Judy

Congrats to you all! Please make sure you respond as quickly as possible so we can get your copies out to you!

Tabitha and Tiffiny, I'm sorry ladies! There's always next time : )


Tabitha Vohn Man, I'm so bummed. But I added it to my Amazon wishlist and I'm looking forward to eavesdropping on the discussion next month.

Thanks Lori for making all these awesome giveaways possible!


message 15: by Lori (new) - rated it 4 stars

Lori | 35 comments hi Lori,

Realized it's almost October and hadn't heard anything further on receipt of Each Vagabond. Just wanted to make sure I didn't miss it. Thx!


message 16: by Lori, Super Mod (new) - rated it 5 stars

Lori (tnbbc) | 10621 comments Mod
Lori please check your goodreads inbox.


Peg - reading heals | 52 comments I haven't received it either


message 18: by Lori, Super Mod (new) - rated it 5 stars

Lori (tnbbc) | 10621 comments Mod
Oh no, Peg. I'm looking into this one as well.

If anyone else is missing their copy, please message me so we can look into it.


message 19: by Lori (new) - rated it 4 stars

Lori | 35 comments I received mine. The email address was entered incorrectly the first time. And I'm really loving it so far, 20% in!


Tiffany Proctor  | 22 comments I somehow got 2 copies of this book. The first person to reply with their address will get my extra copy. I will send it UPS tomorrow!


Tabitha Vohn Hey Tiffany,
I sent you a reply in Goodreads messages. Sorry the delayed reply! I wasn't online this weekend :)


Tabitha Vohn A Ginormous thank you to Tiffany for her generosity in mailing me her extra copy :) GLEE!!

I'm starting it today and hope to have enough finished by next week to ask some questions during the discussion <3


Tiffany Proctor  | 22 comments I'm glad you got it Tabitha! I just finished Friday and I am excited to discuss this book!


message 24: by Lori, Super Mod (new) - rated it 5 stars

Lori (tnbbc) | 10621 comments Mod
Hey you guys! All set for Margo to join us?

She'll be popping in starting tomorrow and hanging with us all week long. As is my usual dilemma, I work tomorrow and won't have an opportunity to check in with everyone until the evening, so I'm gonna post my first question here:

But first, Welcome Margo! I cannot tell you how thrilled I am to be able to host you and your novel here, within the group. I remember thinking as I was reading it "I need to get this book into everyone's hands!" I fell in love with your writing style immediately.

My first question is....

Did you attempt to pitch the big 5 publishers before settling in with a small press? If so, what were their responses? If not, what made you decide to shop directly with small press?


Tabitha Vohn Hi Margo,

I am so in love with this novel <3 Here are a few questions for you:

1). did the inspiration for the story come before or after the haunting poem that is the title's namesake?

2). Could you tell us about your decision to center the story around gypsies and transients? ( I love that btw).

3). I think that the pieces where you describe the houses that are robbed from the robbers perspective are so haunting and really capture the essence of what our material possessions say about us. What inspired you to capture that the way that you did?

I still have a bit left to go ( I entered the circle a little late haha) but this is one of my fave reads of the year. Thank you!


Margo Littell | 25 comments Hello everyone! I’m so excited to spend the week discussing all things Vagabond. A HUGE thank-you to Lori for selecting my book! Let the discussion begin…

Did you attempt to pitch the big 5 publishers before settling in with a small press? If so, what were their responses? If not, what made you decide to shop directly with small press?

Each Vagabond by Name’s path into the world has been long, twisty, and heartbreaking (until now, of course). In 2004, I thought Ramsy and Stella’s story was complete as a novella, about 100 pages, which formed part of my MFA thesis. Years later, I mentioned the novella in passing while pitching a different work to an agent, and she asked to see it--then agreed to take me on as a client if I expanded it into a full-length novel. She shopped Vagabond to the big five, and many other houses as well, but it never found a home--the consensus seemed to be that it was too quiet, and too dark. Then the agent left the industry. Since no agent wants to take on a work that’s already been shopped around, my novel was essentially an orphan. But I still believed that there was a home out there for my story, and I began entering it in contests and pitching small presses on my own. I came close as a finalist a handful of times, and then finally got a yes from UNO Press.


Margo Littell | 25 comments Thanks for the questions, Tabitha! I'll answer each one in a separate comment.

1). did the inspiration for the story come before or after the haunting poem that is the title's namesake?

After. Way, way, after. I first read “A Vagabond Song” in 1998, when I was a poetry student at the Pennsylvania Governor’s School for the Arts--a summer arts program for high school students. I never forgot it, especially my favorite line--“There is something in October sets the gypsy blood astir.”

Years later, in the early 2000s, I was working on a novella about characters named Ramsy and Stella that just wasn’t coming together at all. It was meandering, pointless, and plotless. I was living in NYC at the time, as far away from my Appalachian hometown in Pennsylvania as you can get, and during a phone call with my mother, she told me that “gypsies” had come to town and had been robbing homes and causing a lot of fear. It was an a-ha moment: my story needed outsiders to barge in and shake things up. From there, my plot came alive, and that poem rushed back to me--haunting, evocative, and exactly the tone I wanted for my book.

The poem was the final piece of the novel-building puzzle, but I actually can’t imagine my book without it.


Margo Littell | 25 comments Tabitha's second question...

2). Could you tell us about your decision to center the story around gypsies and transients? ( I love that btw).

I’m glad you liked the outsiders. As I was writing, they kind of took over my story. In early versions of Vagabond, the “gypsies” were minor characters--in the background, there for mood-setting more than anything else. But it quickly became clear to me that they were the key to disrupting Ramsy’s isolation--and to giving Stella a new way of dealing with her grief. The gypsies are outsiders, and feared by others, just as Ramsy and Stella are to some extent. They were natural allies for one another, and Ramsy and Stella’s involvement with them is crucial to bringing them together.

Once I understood that connection, centering my story around the itinerant thieves wasn’t so much a decision as a necessity. Their appearance in my novel wasn’t just an aspect of the plot--it was the plot. In a novel that’s gone through more rewrites and revisions and reimaginings than I can possibly count, it’s significant that the first line has never changed: “It was an ordinary fall until the gypsies came.” They’re the spine of my story.


Margo Littell | 25 comments Tabitha's third question...

3). I think that the pieces where you describe the houses that are robbed from the robbers perspective are so haunting and really capture the essence of what our material possessions say about us. What inspired you to capture that the way that you did?

I’ve always been intrigued by other people’s homes. As a kid, I had a “spy route” around my neighborhood, and I’d walk around in the evening and try to see in people’s lighted windows. As an adult, I’m the houseguest who peers at the bookshelves and angles for a look at the grocery list on the fridge. The things people believe are important, the things in their homes to which they assign value, are always revealing and usually surprising--in many cases, because they’re so modest and quotidian. The people I write about in Vagabond aren’t at all wealthy; they don’t hire interior decorators to choose and arrange their furniture; they don’t have bonuses to blow on jewelry and gadgets. But I wanted to show that their homes and possessions are valuable in a different way: because they’re familiar and cherished.

The thieves understand what their small-town victims value, and though they exploit their knowledge to quickly locate heirloom jewelry and money (“People and the things they loved were all the same”), they also envy the homes they invade because they’re warm, comfortable, and safe. In this way, these scenes carry a lot of weight in my novel, enriching the depiction of the Shelk locals as well as the thieves--they’re stealing things, yes, but they’re also young, scared, and hungry. Additionally, by writing scenes where readers can actually go into the homes and be with the thieves as they root through drawers and closets, I was trying to draw readers even more deeply into Shelk. To make them feel at home there.

Those vignettes, as I call them, were among the final things I wrote. By that point in my novel writing, I knew a lot about Shelk, and I didn’t really want to leave. So I invited myself into the locals’ homes and looked around, becoming a kind of thief myself.


Rhonda Lomazow (rhondalomazow) Hi Margo so happy to have the chance to tell you how much I loved your book.The characters the atmosphere the town itself&other chilling gypsies.My husband &i once lived in a town when gypsies invaded&it was very unnerving.i can still remember the darkness in the air.
Now to my questions have you started writing your next book?
what genre of books do you read.Anything you've read recently that you would recommend.


message 31: by Eric (new) - rated it 5 stars

Eric | 59 comments Hi Margo,

I absolutely adored Each Vagabond By Name. Thank you for writing such a wonderful book, for pushing onward despite the long road it faced. (I'm very much enjoying hearing about Vagabond's publishing-- and your writing--process.) I'm someone who desperately wants to write a "quiet" book such as this one, and it's both encouraging and a little sad to have my suspicions confirmed about the industry's bias. I would love to know what was behind your decision to create such a story (in a rather holistic manner), and to stick with it in the face of its setbacks; were you simply being true to the story, or was it a personal drive? Ramsy and Stella seem to have been there from the beginning--was their relationship the spark? (And what a relationship, so unique, but utterly true to life.)

I'm curious about your decision to begin each chapter with a theft-vignette--it's the only authorial "intrusion" in an otherwise character-driven, organic book. Could you talk a little about that? I love the distance that it provides, the breathing space, but for such a close, quiet book, it also strikes me as a risky move.


Margo Littell | 25 comments Rhonda, thank you so much! It’s interesting that you mentioned gypsies coming to your former hometown. Now that Vagabond is out in the world, I’ve had so many people tell me their own “gypsy stories.” One woman told me her parents were robbed in exactly the same way as the vignette from chapter one--thieves asking for a glass of water, and then sneaking in. The invasions that inspired my novel happened in the early 2000s in southwestern Pennsylvania, when I was no longer living there--so I didn’t have the firsthand experience of the fear, anger, and unrest. But your remark that it was unnerving echoes what I’ve heard so many times from others. (And it's that feeling I tried to capture in the book.)

Now, on to your questions:

Have you started writing your next book?

I have! I have a draft of a new novel that I’m currently tearing apart in a major rewrite/revision. I won’t say too much about the story, because it’s changing so much right now; but it takes place in southwestern Pennsylvania once again, in a town much like Shelk. I’m not an efficient writer--I tend to draft very quickly, then spend a long time (too long) reworking and reimagining everything. Minor characters take over, the “real” story emerges in the final chapter, and on and on. I’ll get there. I’m working on it every day. For me, habit is key.

What genre of books do you read. Anything you've read recently that you would recommend.

I read literary fiction almost exclusively, and it’s probably not surprising that I love reading about small towns, family secrets, and domestic unrest. I’m trying to read more small-press novels these days, and more novels set in Appalachia.

Recently, I was blown away by a collection of stories called Given Ground by Ann Pancake--the kind of book that had me underlining like crazy. Dark, beautiful stories. I enjoy Jennifer Haigh’s work--she writes about southwestern Pennsylvania--and her newest one, Heat and Light, is wonderful. Other books I read recently and loved: My Name Is Lucy Barton by Elizabeth Strout, As Good As Gone by Larry Watson, and Our Souls at Night by Kent Haruf.


Margo Littell | 25 comments Thank you so much, Eric. I can’t even begin to describe how it feels to have this story out in the world at last, with readers connecting to my characters and living for a little while in Shelk.

Your first question:

I would love to know what was behind your decision to create [a quiet] story (in a rather holistic manner), and to stick with it in the face of its setbacks; were you simply being true to the story, or was it a personal drive? Ramsy and Stella seem to have been there from the beginning--was their relationship the spark?

Quiet: it’s a loaded description, isn’t it? I love quiet books; the market does not. I didn’t intentionally set out to write a quiet book (and I’m desperately trying to make my current work in progress a little bit less so). The story of Ramsy and Stella evolved slowly, but many parts of it came to me almost fully formed. For example, Ramsy came to me whole--nothing about him, from his reticence to his missing eye to his love for Stella, changed at all from his first appearance on the page, to the very final pre-publication proofread. Stella also seemed to appear whole from the magical writerly mist. Their storyline changed over the years as the gypsies appeared and I deepened their involvement with them, but in many ways this story had to be what it is and could never have been anything else.

Ramsy and Stella were never meant for a grand, page-turning adventure, but their halting relationship changed both of their lives in extraordinary ways. To me, that was a compelling, moving. Focusing on small moments that turn lives in unexpected directions is--for better or worse--what I do.

You ask about persevering in the face of setbacks. At one point a few years ago, when I was feeling particularly discouraged about ever publishing this quiet book, my husband said I should think about swapping “vampires” for “gypsies.” It would work, he insisted. And you’d sell it. I wasn’t going to do that, of course, and for a long time I accepted that this book would just be mine alone. I was always working on new things, but I also kept submitting--a contest here, a small press there. I did feel committed to my characters, but tenacity was what kept me seeking a home for the novel.

Now and then I’d come close; I think Vagabond was a finalist five times in contests offering publication. Always a bridesmaid, etc. Those little nods don’t mean anything in the grand scheme of things, but they were affirmation that I wasn’t delusional about my novel having merit--quiet as it was.


Marvin | 19 comments Hi, Margo. To piggyback some other folks' questions/comments, I really dug the "vignettes" opening each chapter and actually thought they were one of the strongest parts of the book. Kind of as a framing device, I guess, especially as their instances of violence escalated alongside the tension of the main thread of the book as it neared its climax. I will say I was surprised Emilian was identified directly in the penultimate chapter. I found the anonymity of the others intriguing.

I thought Ramsy and Stella were both strong, interesting characters, and in a lot of ways it feels as much her story as his. Despite staying close to Ramsy, my brain somehow keeps tricking me into asking, "Wait, was part of it from Stella's point of view?" How'd you settle on Ramsy as the focal point of the narration? Any earlier drafting/thinking about letting them share the stage, or maybe going first-person with Ramsy?


Margo Littell | 25 comments Eric's second question...

I'm curious about your decision to begin each chapter with a theft-vignette--it's the only authorial "intrusion" in an otherwise character-driven, organic book. Could you talk a little about that? I love the distance that it provides, the breathing space, but for such a close, quiet book, it also strikes me as a risky move.

I agree that this was risky, especially since I worked hard to keep the POV laser-focused on Ramsy. But I needed the vignettes for a very practical reason: I didn’t want the thieves to be wholly damnable. Of course there are JT and Adrienne, who are sympathetic and make connections to Ramsy and Stella. But I wanted all the thieves to elicit readers’ compassion to some extent. I didn’t want to “justify” their actions; but I wanted to show that their victims’ homes were, for these kids, both target and safe haven. The local men are so angry, and I had to have a reason to make those feelings just as morally questionable as the thefts themselves. The vignettes gave me a way to explore the thieves’ feelings and motivations without resorting to hokey dialogue between JT and Ramsy (“Sometimes we sit on the bed and rest when we’re robbing a house…” etc) or relying exclusively on Ramsy’s speculations.

Furthermore, I wanted to pull readers as deep into Shelk as possible--to insert them right into the fear and loss and uneasiness the locals were facing. Actually sending readers into the homes with the thieves was a way for me to do this. Ramsy certainly wasn’t invited into too many people’s homes, so readers in some ways are privy to more intimate spaces in Shelk than he is. The vignettes pull back the curtains, which felt right for the book. In a book full of outsiders, I wanted readers to have an insider’s view.


Tiffany Proctor  | 22 comments Hello Margo! Have you thought about evolving the Ramsey and Stella relationship to see where it goes? I am a person who always wants to know more about the relationship main characters have when the "story" is finished. Stella and Randy are so real to me that I often have to remind myself they are not real people.

Who do you look to for advice when you hit a stumbling block or you just don't know what to do with a character or scene? Who do you see as a role model?

Shelk seemed like the perfect place for the setting of this story. Does Shelk exist is more of your writings?


Margo Littell | 25 comments Thanks for the questions, Marvin! I'll address the first comment first:

I will say I was surprised Emilian was identified directly in the penultimate chapter. I found the anonymity of the others intriguing.

Indeed, the Emilian vignette stands apart from the anonymity of the others. I named him because I wanted to be clear that the crimes Emilian was committing, in Shelk and elsewhere, were different from the petty thefts of the rest of the thieves. Unlike the wayward kids, Emilian is a true criminal, truly dangerous and capable of violence. The other thieves may lash out when they’re cornered, but not to the extent that Emilian does.

Additionally, by that chapter, the local men have almost reached a point of no return--so angry, so fearful, and ready to take action. By opening that chapter with a named thief, I wanted to signal that things are escalating fast. The men know who’s to blame, and this is the moment they’ve been waiting for. There’s no moral gray area in this vignette. This is Emilian, he’s guilty, and things are about to get very, very real.


Margo Littell | 25 comments Marvin's second question...

How'd you settle on Ramsy as the focal point of the narration? Any earlier drafting/thinking about letting [Ramsy and Stella] share the stage, or maybe going first-person with Ramsy?

You’re absolutely correct to question this: in very early drafts, I focused on Stella with the same close-third POV I ultimately used with Ramsy. But I ultimately gave the stage to Ramsy. Don’t get me wrong--I love Stella. Fully. But the story simply isn’t hers. I say that because Stella doesn’t fundamentally change over the course of the novel. The way grief affects her life changes, as do the ways she attempts to manage that grief. But--in my mind--there’s never a question that Stella would help a young person in need. She’d never claim that worrying about others was too much trouble. Her tragic past makes her an outsider in Shelk, but she doesn’t hide from the world, and she’s not ashamed to care.

Ramsy, on the other hand, has consistently and conscientiously cut himself off from meaningful relationships with other people. Liza makes inroads; Stella, in the past, made inroads. But only when JT enters his life does Ramsy truly begin to open up. He changes. He’s a different man after the night on the mountain. Stella is integral to that evolution; but allowing her to share the stage was--ultimately--diluting what I believe is the true story.

I never considered first person because I don't easily write in first. Close third is my natural style of storytelling. I feel it gives me more opportunity to build the world of the story.


Tabitha Vohn Margo, I've enjoyed reading your incredibly thoughtful answers thus far. Thank you!


Margo Littell | 25 comments Hello Tiffany, and thanks for the questions! My answers, one by one (after-school craziness has begun; I promise to get to the rest ASAP!):

Have you thought about evolving the Ramsey and Stella relationship to see where it goes? I am a person who always wants to know more about the relationship main characters have when the "story" is finished. Stella and Randy are so real to me that I often have to remind myself they are not real people.

Thanks for saying they feel real to you. They do to me, too. They’re still really, really present in my mind, even now that I’m not actually writing the book anymore. Ramsy, in particular, hovers in my consciousness and will emerge now and then to comment or react--maybe that sounds a little strange; okay, yes, it does sound strange. But there we are.

All that said--there won’t be a sequel. So many people have asked me this question! I’ve thought about it, but I haven’t felt compelled to put anything on the page. I’d be afraid to do it, to be honest. I’d love to return to Shelk and the familiar cadences of Ramsy’s world--but there’s risk in that return. I understand (and share) the desire to read more and more about them--to revel in their new life together and witness their hard-won contentment--but I feel strongly that their story is complete.


Rhonda Lomazow (rhondalomazow) Margo wrote: "Rhonda, thank you so much! It’s interesting that you mentioned gypsies coming to your former hometown. Now that Vagabond is out in the world, I’ve had so many people tell me their own “gypsy storie..."

Thanks so much
Thanks for new books to add to my list.I loved My Name is Lucy Barton one I am always recommending.
The gypsys who invaded our town started showing up at businesses then appeared climbing over the wall of our apartment building .We were hanging out at the pool they climbed over the wall made rude comments&refused to leave .I can still feel the chill in the air one minute a fun day the next minute we were in a danger zone,


message 42: by Lori, Super Mod (last edited Oct 17, 2016 03:15PM) (new) - rated it 5 stars

Lori (tnbbc) | 10621 comments Mod
What a wonderful start to the discussion you guys! I just caught myself up with the conversation.

Margo,

It really disheartens me when the big publishers refuse to take a risk on such a subtle and moving novel as this one. I like to think I have a nose for strong literature, and it's sad to see others pass on something as beautiful as this.

So I have to ask, based on the tenderness that you've written into Stella and Ramsey's relationships with Adrienne and TJ, whether you would act as they have in a similar situation. Are you the type to take a chance helping someone out who could potentially be a risk to you and your community? I find the older I get, the more cynical and untrusting I am. I don't think I could have done what they did, opening their hearts and their homes to them like that. But I adored them both so severely for doing so themselves!


message 43: by Lori (new) - rated it 4 stars

Lori | 35 comments Hi Margo,

I was blown away by the character development in your novel. I was instantly drawn in to Ramsey and Stella's story, and I was biting my nails hoping the escalating violence by the gypsies wouldn't touch them, or have the townies reactions backfire like it did with Kitty and JT. Did you at any point consider one of them dying or did you always plan on them having a happy ending together?


Margo Littell | 25 comments Tiffany's second question...

Who do you look to for advice when you hit a stumbling block or you just don't know what to do with a character or scene? Who do you see as a role model?

Ah, yes, stumbling blocks. What happens? Why? Who are these characters, and what do they want? I deal with stumbling blocks and brick walls by writing my way through them. This is effective for me, because bits and pieces emerge in the writing process and open new pathways to explore. The characters will begin speaking for themselves, and I’ll discover things I hadn’t known before. The problem is that this involves writing an alarming number of pages and discarding them when it becomes clear (and it always does) that they have little to do with the story that’s emerging. Still, for me, the only way out is through. The only way to get the story moving is to write it.

For my work in progress, I’ve just started fiddling around with the character-building techniques in a book called Story Genius by Lisa Cron, and I’ve found her way of thinking about story incredibly insightful. I’m usually not an outliner, but she’s inspiring me to drill down on cause-and-effect within each scene in a detailed way. Will see if this helps cut down on those panicked moments of wondering what in the world should be happening next, and why.

I don’t really have specific role models to help me through difficult writing obstacles. Instead I turn inward, make tons and tons of “What if…” and "Maybe..." notes, and try to find enough quiet in my life to let the characters and story start to speak to me.


Margo Littell | 25 comments Tiffany's third question...

Shelk seemed like the perfect place for the setting of this story. Does Shelk exist is more of your writings?

Shelk was inspired by my own hometown and the towns near it in southwestern Pennsylvania--closer to West Virginia than Pittsburgh, nestled in amazingly beautiful scenery, filled with so much history. My hometown is such an interesting place--it’s a former coal-and-coke town, at one point home to more millionaires per capita than anywhere else in the country. Once-stunning mansions line the main street, but they’re decrepit now, split into rentals, overgrown and neglected. (And some are for sale for under $20K.) I grew up knowing for certain that I’d leave someday, and I did. But I’ve never lost my sense of being rooted to that part of the world. I’ve lived a lot of places, but that’s home.

This is part of why southwestern Pennsylvania is the setting for almost everything I’ve written. It feels specific to me in a way that other places do not. I’ve lived in cities, in suburbs, in Europe, on the West Coast and the East. But I’ve been unable to write anything set there that felt genuine. There’s always been a persistent vagueness to my attempts. The stories I imagine have Pennsylvania at their heart, and place is as crucial to them as the characters.

Interestingly, I never wrote about southwestern Pennsylvania until I left it. I needed the distance to start seeing it clearly. It’s too easy, as a very young person, to look at a small hometown with condescension and amusement--I needed time to let all of that melt away so I could truly imagine the place, and the people.

My work in progress is set in a small town much like Shelk. Maybe it’ll turn out to be Shelk, but probably not. Still, I plan to make Shelk a neighboring town if nothing else. That’s my world.


Margo Littell | 25 comments Thanks for the question, Lori (not the moderator Lori, the other one!)!

I was blown away by the character development in your novel. I was instantly drawn in to Ramsey and Stella's story, and I was biting my nails hoping the escalating violence by the gypsies wouldn't touch them, or have the townies reactions backfire like it did with Kitty and JT. Did you at any point consider one of them dying or did you always plan on them having a happy ending together?

I’m going to hide this answer because of spoilers. (view spoiler)


Margo Littell | 25 comments It's been a great day! Thanks, everyone, for all the questions so far. Keep them coming.

Super Mod Lori, you posed a good one:

Are you the type to take a chance helping someone out who could potentially be a risk to you and your community? I find the older I get, the more cynical and untrusting I am. I don't think I could have done what they did, opening their hearts and their homes to them like that. But I adored them both so severely for doing so themselves!

I’m with you. Ramsy and Stella faced real risks--expulsion from the community, anger, even violence--but acted according to their belief in what was right. They both trusted their gut, and rooted their actions in unwavering moral fiber. I’m not sure I’d be that strong, or that trusting--of myself or others. It’s hard to imagine Ramsy and Stella’s openness winning out over my own instinctive wariness in a lot of situations.

Ramsy and Stella's actions seem almost saintly, but I definitely don’t see these characters that way. They were able to recognize something of themselves in the outsiders--and I think that's what sparked the empathy that drove them to help JT and Adrienne so generously.


Peg - reading heals | 52 comments Hi Margo. You have one hell of a book here!! I loved it. I didn't get online until after work today and I'm afraid most of my questions have been asked and answered. This has been a fascinating thread today and it's only the first day! The depth and excitement in the discussion comes from the the power of your writing and the story. And I loved your comment about your "spy route;" that curiosity and thoughtfulness permeates the book.

I'll ask a couple of questions about you:
1) At what age did you start writing and what did you write?
2) What are your passions in life besides writing?


Ariel (BookHermit) (noonchibookhermit) | 2 comments Hi Margo,

Thank you for writing this gem of a novel. It's been very informative reading about how Each Vagabond by Name developed and changed over the years. So many great questions and comments already and if I am echoing any of the above, please forgive me.
I am very curious about how Ramsy and Stella changed as the novel took shape. Was Ramsy always a veteran? This may sound strange, but I loved his backstory. It was, ultimately, so perfect for his character, how he lost his eye and how his shame fostered his isolation. And, as heartbreaking as it was to read about Stella's search for her infant daughter, the details you included (Stella opening every plastic bag along the highway, keeping mementos, leaving them for Ramsy, the way she clearly gave zero fs about what anyone in Shelk thought of her) really gave authenticity to your portrayal of the peculiar nature of grief. Stella is such a survivor. Were you ever tempted to make her more dysfunctional?

Part of me wanted to know more about the "gypsies". Like many readers, I loved the break-in vignettes. They offered a tantalizing glimpse into what kind of lives these wayward kids lived and how they saw themselves in relation to the small town folk whose lives they were so thoroughly disrupting. At the same time, it was refreshing to have the perspective of "regular" people. You really captured small town life and how it feels to be an outsider in a place where everyone knows your name and your business. As I read your story, I often wondered if you were drawing connections between this "small town mentality" and American attitudes toward the ongoing refugee crisis in Europe and issues of immigration and citizenship in the US.

Thank you for being available for this forum. How wonderful to be able to interact with an author so directly. I look forward to reading your next novel!


Margo Littell | 25 comments Thanks for the kind words, Peg!

At what age did you start writing and what did you write?

I’ve been writing as long as I’ve known how to write. I started keeping a diary when I was really little--around five years old--and journaling daily was an important part of my life until I was in my late twenties. I wrote short stories as a kid and teenager. One of my favorite things to do was write spoofs of the “situation stories” from my religion textbooks at school--the kind of hit-you-over-the-head-with-the-moral short stories that were meant to illustrate whatever topic we were studying. They were always followed by a long list of discussion questions: “What should Maureen have done? What would you have done? Do you think that’s the right choice? Why or why not? Explain.” My sendups, too, were followed by elaborate lists of questions. I’m not sure anyone else found them funny, but I thought they were hilarious.

What are your passions in life besides writing?

I love to travel. I was never adventurous enough as a very young person to backpack around the world or anything like that, and I went to a college that didn’t really emphasize studying abroad as an important experience. I was fortunate enough to be able to create my own version of studying abroad when I moved to Spain in 2006. It remains one of the boldest things I’ve ever done: I quit an editing job I loved, sold all my belongings, broke the lease on my apartment, and went to Barcelona. I was accompanying my boyfriend (now husband) who’d decided to attend an international business school. We traveled as much as we could while we were there, and I took some solo trips as well. Insert your standard comments about life-changing experiences here.

What else: reading, of course, is a passion of mine. I also love treasure-hunting at rummage sales--a dime a dozen here in suburban New Jersey. I collect painted portraits of strangers and have created a creepy gallery in my attic stairwell. My favorite is a large oil portrait of an unsmiling young girl wearing a blue headband. I hung this painting at the very top of the attic stairs, and her eyes stare at you as you ascend. She is, frankly, terrifying.


« previous 1
back to top