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READERS GUIDE:
A Conversation with Cammie McGovern
1. Your new novel goes into some pretty complex territory—prison
life, sleep disorders, physics. Will you talk a bit about how
you went about researching Neighborhood Watch?
Researching ends up being one of the most fun, but also the trickiest
parts in writing good suspense fiction, I find. In the past,
I’ve tended to over research certain subjects and have had a
hard time paring down the information which can be incredibly
fascinating but also deadly in keeping a suspenseful story going.
In this one, I found sleep disorders particularly compelling.
There are a surprising number of real cases where sleepwalking
has been used as a successful defense in murder cases. The most
remarkable might be a Canadian man named Kenneth Parks who, in
1987, with no known history of violence, got in his car, drove
fifteen miles, climbed in the window of his in-law’s house and
attacked them both with a lead pipe, ultimately killing the mother-in-law
he’d by all reports always been very fond of. He argued that
he was sleepwalking the entire time and had no memory of the
events. Because he had a well-documented history and genetic
predisposition to the condition (his father had also been a sleepwalker)
he was eventually acquitted. For my purposes, I was most interested
in the idea that a chronic sleepwalker might become terrified
of her own subconscious desires and impulses and what was getting
acted out in the middle of the night.
2. How was the experience writing this novel different from that
of Eye Contact?
In Eye Contact, I was much more focused on the depiction of the
autistic boy who has witnessed a murder at the center of that
novel. I was hoping to depict something both true and hopeful
about autism and parenting a child with disabilities based on
my own experiences raising a son who’s now fourteen and has autism.
For that, my research was basically our lives and especially
the first six years of his. I was also new at writing a mystery
which I discovered was much harder than I expected it to be.
Since then I’ve read so much more throughout the mystery and
literary suspense genres that I’ve picked up some tricks which
make it no less of a challenge, but also a lot of fun. I feel
like this book is plotted with a much surer hand and told with
a more intriguing narrative voice.
3. Do you have experience with the sort of suburban landscape
Betsy’s trying to navigate? Why do you think the suburbs make
such a great setting?
My sense is that the flourishing of American suburbs gave rise
to an emphasis so many of us grew up with: that appearances are
important and facades matter. Houses and lawns should look a
certain way, as should—by extension—the children and the occupants
of those houses. Ostensibly there’s nothing wrong with keeping
up appearances, but the desperate attempt to maintain a shiny
façade when there are cracks widening to fissures below the surface
can be incredibly dangerous, I think.
I’ve always been especially fascinated by the housing developments
that pop-up on old farmlands where there are no trees or natural
landscaping to integrate the cluster into its environment. They
look like an oval of Monopoly houses. Part of me can see the
great appeal of these developments—everyone would be equal, with
identical houses. Your lives might be a shared reflection of
each other’s, almost like the old level-playing field of a college
dorm. But of course it isn’t really a level playing field and
every house on the street might look the same but they all contain
secrets. To me, that idea of a cul-de-sac of identical houses,
cut off from the outside, felt like a great, pressure-cooker
setting.
4. Who was your favorite character to write? Why? Were any of
the characters particularly difficult to create?
I suspect my favorite character to write was Linda Sue, the one
who moves onto the block, lets her lawn run wild and says whatever
she feels like at the neighborhood gatherings. She speaks the
truth, as she sees it, to people who’ve been dancing around it
for years. I’ve always secretly loved these people in life—who
aren’t afraid of the social awkwardness of ruining a dinner party.
In this case, her honesty destroys the pretense the whole neighborhood
has carefully constructed for itself and sets in motion the unraveling
of everyone’s facade. And, sadly, she pays the ultimate price
for it.
5. Were it not for DNA testing, Betsy would have never been released
from prison. What’s your opinion on DNA testing for inmates,
especially those on death row? Is the expense justified even
if only a fraction of a percent of people are cleared?
Since 1992, new testing on old DNA evidence has freed 254 innocent
men and women convicted of crimes they didn’t commit, many of
whom had been previously sitting on Death Row. The Innocence
Project, started by Barry Scheck and Peter Neufeld as a clinical
course in law school, has now expanded into similar programs
in 59 law schools around the country with students getting hands-on
experience doing the extraordinary legwork of filing petitions
to revisit settled cases and apply for new DNA testing on old
evidence. Doing any research into this topic, one quickly realizes
there are countless examples to prove that our justice system
is composed of human beings who are inherently flawed, and the
victims are most likely to be indigent or low income defendants.
“After Innocence” is an especially moving documentary that would
persuade most people that yes new DNA testing is an essential
new tool that is absolutely imperative for cases on Death Row.
6. Trish credits Betsy with inspiring her to become a writer.
Who are the people in your life who helped you become a successful
writer and novelist? What advice do you have for young people—or
even older people—hoping to embark on a writing career?
I grew up as the child of two teachers (my father was a law school
professor, my mother a high school English teacher.) Our house
was full of books and even though I was secret TV addict as a
child and not a particularly voracious reader, the effect was
still the same—books, and the conversations they inspired, were
valued above everything else. My sister was an early inspiration
because she was bold and self-confident about wanting to be an
actress at a very young age, even when our parents were frantically
steering her in other, more practical directions. She was also
very kind about my writing before I had any discernable talent,
but mostly she was an example: That to become an artist takes
a certain self-confidence—and not a showy, arrogant one, I don’t
think, but a quiet one lodged deep within one’s heart—that this
is, very simply, what you want to do. Later, the friend I made
in my MFA program and on a Stegner Fellowship at Stanford taught
me a lot about how long the journey toward making any kind of
living at writing can be and how fraught with ups and downs along
the way. We all had little tastes of early success and then long,
wintry spells of failure. When I look at who amongst us is still
writing and publishing, it’s not necessarily the ones with the
most talent in the beginning, but the ones who rode out the hard
years of rejection and kept going.
To anyone, young or old who wants to start writing, the first
step is reading as much and as widely as possible. Teaching at
a college level, it becomes abundantly clear: the best student
writers, hands down, are the ones who’ve read the most on their
own, outside of school assignments. They’ve already developed
a passion for certain writers and come to class touching a book
jacket tenderly before they read a favorite passage aloud. The
effect a lifetime (or even a few years) of avid reading is almost
incalculable: you develop a better vocabulary and a more fluid
sense of sentence structure, how to vary it, and use paragraphs
effectively. Mostly, though, you internalize the components of
how to tell a good story—with a beginning, middle and end, mystery
along the way, and (hopefully) conclusion that satisfies.
7. When you begin constructing a mystery plot, what’s the biggest
challenge?
I seem to work in an impractical way. I write (longhand!) a whole
bunch of scenes with different possibilities of secrets to be
revealed and then find the story around the scenes, characters,
and developments that feel the most alive or funny or touching
or what have you. For me, this method makes for better writing
because I can save only the best and I’ve learned how to cut
great volumes of material so I save only the best. But it also
means writing three times the number of pages I ultimately end
up with. I also confess I have a hard time picking my killers
and usually have no idea what the ending is going to be when
I begin. It’s such a delicate art because you want it to be a
known character, but I’ve always had a problem with the Sunday
school teacher introduced in the first third of the book who
suddenly and sort of unaccountably turns out to be a psychopath.
The violence needs to come from somewhere. In the best mysteries
you hope to have flickered little suggestive lights at that place
without shining some obvious strobe on it.
8. Your favorite thriller/mystery authors and influences?
I read an enormous amount from a pretty wide swath of contemporary
fiction. I love the dark edges of Tom Perrotta’s humor, along
with writers like Jess Walter and Carolyn Parkhurst. For page-turning
story ideas, I read Harlan Coben, Laura Lippman, Tana French,
and Dennis Lehane. My next book has gothic elements, so I’ve
spent this last year reading and loving Sarah Waters, Kate Morten,
and Diane Setterfield (books about books and readers! I love
them!)
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