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PUBLISHERS WEEKLY:
Author Q&A with Cammie
McGovern
Keeping Secrets
By Melissa Mia Hall, Publishers Weekly
Connecticut librarian Betsy Treading, the heroine of Cammie
McGovern’s Neighborhood Watch (Reviews, Mar. 29), spends 12 years
in prison for a murder she thought she committed while sleepwalking--but
didn’t.
What inspired the somnambulist twist?
I was most interested in the idea of a chronic sleepwalker moving
through her suburban neighborhood at night, enacting the emotional
dramas that had only been hinted at during the day.
Why do secrets play a part in Betsy’s search for justice?
Any
secrets that people take pains to hide can be explosive and therefore
dangerous. In this story, the community is on high alert for
no other reason than that a charismatic, bohemian woman moves
onto the block who’s a truth-teller, and they’ve all got secrets
to hide. Sometimes I think this idea might spring from my having
a child with autism. During his early years, I used to panic
about telling people the truth about how delayed he was. I thought
I was protecting him, perhaps, or that it would be an unpleasant
burden to lay on people I didn’t know well. I do think there’s
a host of seemingly fine reasons to keep secrets, until you realize
it’s the pretense that’s the burden.
What’s the worst aspect of a neighborhood watch group?
Any effort
to watch for “criminal activity” will, sooner or later, mean
categorizing what types of people and behavior everyone is meant
to be on guard against. In my relatively small town in Massachusetts,
two house burglaries in the same neighborhood recently spawned
the creation of a neighborhood watch group that seemed to be
almost entirely focused on the apartment residents across the
way. In this case, it was slightly higher-income families turning
a steely eye on slightly lower-income families. I believe that
self-empowering measures to protect oneself are important, but
I worry about the ways they can become divisive.
What’s the best?
I remember a speech Michelle Obama gave during
the campaign where she said real change depends not upon a president
but on all of us working locally: opening our doors to our neighbors,
reaching out and working to better our schools and community
services. Neighborhoods can so often be about the friendly distance
we keep from each other. So the good part of a neighborhood watch
group would be the idea of opening our doors and inviting each
other into our lives.
What’s next?
Another mystery with an old murder at the center,
but this one will be more gothic in feel, with an old family
estate and lots of secrets hidden around a house that’s falling
apart. I’ve been reading and loving Sarah Waters, Kate Morton,
and Diane Setterfield.
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