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Friday, February 26, 2016

Interview with Glen Hirshberg


Please welcome Glen Hirshberg to The Qwillery. Good Girls, the 2nd novel in the Motherless Children Trilogy, was published on February 23 by Tor.







The QwilleryWelcome back to The Qwillery. Good Girls in the 2nd novel in your Motherless Children Trilogy. Motherless Child is set in the South. Good Girls is set in New Hampshire. How has place influenced these novels?

Glen Hirshberg:  Thanks for having me back.

Good Girls takes place in New Hampshire and also in the Mississippi Delta, and as in all of my writing, I think, place plays a huge role. Partly, I just love the experience of being elsewhere, and so setting off for different light and cultural rhythms and landscapes has always been part of what propels me to write (and a lot of what I love about reading).

But also, I’m learning that this whole trilogy may really be about the conditions under which people will allow themselves to love or trust or hate or destroy each other. When and how they form families. And I do think that certain places—for obvious and some less-obvious reasons—have more effect on all of the above than others.

The South of Motherless Child and certain sections of this book creates one set of deep resentments and hatreds, and also ties and traditions.

The New England in this book is flintier, but also maybe sweeter. Stars Hollow with a serious monster problem?



TQPlease tell us something about Good Girls that is not found in the book description.

GH:  It’s funnier than you might think. Funnier than I thought it was going to be. Until it isn’t.



TQWhat appeals to you about writing Horror?

GH:  I never set out to write to a specific genre, so I’m not sure anything specifically appeals about writing horror, per se. I know that in reading horror I love, I always respond to the weirdly beautiful imagery, the depth of feeling, the way confronting terror opens us more profoundly to wonder, the peculiar sense of connection to the rest of humanity that comes with reveling in our shared dread.

But in terms of writing, honestly, for whatever reason, I just often seem to do my best work when I’m playing with darker elements. I tend to stick better to the story I’m telling, discover more about my characters because they are confronting their most elemental concerns and having their most foundational and transformative experiences (even when they don’t survive them). It’s not so much that writing horror appeals to me as that it often seems to make me better.



TQPlease give us one or two of your favorite quotes from Good Girls.

GHGood Girls really is a book of many moods. It can be lyrical, playful, brooding, gory, scary, haunting. Here’s a taste of a couple of those flavors:

Up first is a remembered conversation between Aunt Sally—the matriarch and origin-creature of my little vampire clan—and Mother, her (now permanently dead) former companion. They’re sitting outside their tents in the Mississippi Delta, surrounded by their fellow creatures, most of whom they have created, and for whom they have only contempt. Mother brings up the old spiritual, “Sometimes I Feel Like a Motherless Child,” and Aunt Sally sneers at it. Mother is surprised, and presses her, saying:

“You really never feel like that? Like a motherless child? That doesn’t speak to you?”

Aunt Sally responds by declaring that she never thinks about her mother, which leads to this exchange:

“Considering who you are, what you come from. How can that be?”

And Aunt Sally—daughter of a slave, granddaughter of a slave, thrice-raped child of a raped child of a raped child—had drawn herself up, stared Mother down. “I think about my father sometimes. I think about him a lot, actually. But my mother? Turns out she was of no account whatsoever.”

On the human side, meanwhile, much of the book centers around the actions and intuitions of a sensitive, loving, determined orphan college girl named Rebecca. And without giving too much away, events funnel her inevitably toward one critical, terrible decision. Here’s the moment right before she makes it:

Rebecca’s whole life, it turned out, had been preparation for this moment. All that practice on Crisis Center phone calls and in grief counseling groups and foster homes full of resentful not-siblings and not-parents, all those years of reading people, knowing whom to trust and when to stay and when to run, intuiting whether someone was really jumping, really going to hurt someone else, all this time sorting monsters from mothers, had led her to this. Because everything she had left in her world depended on who Sophie was, right this second, and what she wanted, and whether Rebecca read that correctly, and guessed right.

She guessed.



TQWhat are you working on now?

GH:  I’ve recently completed a novelette I’m pretty excited about called “Freedom is Space for the Spirit,” which takes place in a snowy, spectral St. Petersburg (Russia). That will be up on Tor.com in early April.

Now, I’m just hammering away at the final book of the “Motherless Children” trilogy, which I’m currently calling A Whole Bucket of Stars.



TQThank you for joining us again at The Qwillery.

GH:  Thank YOU.





Good Girls
Motherless Children Trilogy 2
Tor Books, February 23, 2016
Hardcover and eBook, 352 pages

Three-time International Horror Guild and Shirley Jackson Award Winner Glen Hirshberg brings his flair for the grim, grisly, and emotionally harrowing to Good Girls, the standalone sequel to Motherless Child.

Still in college, Rebecca is the “responsible one.” She keeps her friends from getting too crazy—though Human Curling is kind of out there. She’s a safety valve for Joel, her foster father, and helps out at Halfmoon House, which he runs with his wife, Amanda—Rebecca’s foster mother, who makes sure her children able to protect themselves. To take care of themselves.

Mostly Rebecca takes care of everyone else. She works at the university’s crisis center, doing whatever she can to help the troubled souls who call the hotline. Until the night he calls.

Jess has lost so much: her job, her home…her daughter Natalie, no longer human thanks to the creature who called himself the Whistler. She tried desperately to save Natalie, but in the end, Jess herself pulled the trigger and killed her child.

Deep in mourning, Jess flees, with the remnants of her family: the man she loved, seriously injured; her infant grandson, somehow still innocent and pure. And Sophie.

Natalie’s best friend, Jess’s almost-daughter, and a mother herself, though her son is dead. Sophie’s alive but not alive—half-mad, half vampire, half a person…and Jess’s responsibility.

The Whistler is hunting Jess. She killed his Mother…and Natalie, who was his “destiny.” But he’s not so single-minded that he can’t have a little fun along the way, take what he needs from Rebecca’s friends and family…take Rebecca for his own….

Fates collide in a small town where fear and love are two sides of the same coin and life and death lie far too close together.





Previously

Motherless Child
Motherless Children Trilogy 1
Tor Books, September 1, 2015
Mass Market Paperback, 272 pages
Hardcover and eBook, May 13, 2014

In his powerful novel, Motherless Child, Bram Stoker Award-nominee Glen Hirshberg, author of the International Horror Guild Award-winning American Morons, exposes the fallacy of the Twilight-style romantic vampire while capturing the heart of every reader.

It's the thrill of a lifetime when Sophie and Natalie, single mothers living in a trailer park in North Carolina, meet their idol, the mysterious musician known only as "the Whistler." Morning finds them covered with dried blood, their clothing shredded and their memories hazy. Things soon become horrifyingly clear: the Whistler is a vampire and Natalie and Sophie are his latest victims. The young women leave their babies with Natalie's mother and hit the road, determined not to give in to their unnatural desires.

Hunger and desire make a powerful couple. So do the Whistler and his Mother, who are searching for Sophie and Natalie with the help of Twitter and the musician's many fans. The violent, emotionally moving showdown between two who should be victims and two who should be monsters will leave readers gasping in fear and delight.

Originally published in a sold-out, limited edition, Motherless Child is an extraordinary Southern horror novel that Tor Books is proud to bring to a wider audience.





Upcoming

Freedom is Space for the Spirit: A Tor.com Original
Tor Books, April 6, 2016
eBook, 32 pages

Freedom is Space for the Spirit by Glen Hirshberg is a fantasy about a middle-aged German, drawn back to Russia by a mysterious invitation from a friend he knew during the wild, exuberant period in the midst of the break-up of the Soviet Union. Upon his arrival in St. Petersburg, he begins to see bears, wandering and seemingly lost.





About Glen

GLEN HIRSHBERG received his B.A. from Columbia University, where he won the Bennett Cerf Prize for Best Fiction, and his M.A. and M.F.A. from the University of Montana. His first novel, The Snowman’s Children, was a Literary Guild Featured Selection. A story collection, The Two Sams, won three International Horror Guild Awards and was named a Best Book of the Year by Publishers Weekly. Hirshberg has won the Shirley Jackson Award and been a finalist for the World Fantasy and the Bram Stoker Awards.




Website  ~  Facebook

Twitter @GlenHirshberg






The Giveaway

What:  One entrant will win a Hardcover copy of Good Girls by Glen Hirshberg from the publisher. US / CANADA ONLY

How:  Log into and follow the directions in the Rafflecopter below. Note that comments are moderated.

Who and When:  The contest is open to all humans on the planet earth with a US or Canadian mailing address. Contest ends at 11:59 PM US Eastern Time on March 6 , 2016. Void where prohibited by law. No purchase necessary. You must be 18 years old or older to enter.

*Giveaway rules and duration are subject to change without any notice.*

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3 comments:

  1. Thanks for this fascinating giveaway. very interesting interview and feature. What a talented author.

    ReplyDelete