HALLIE EPHRON: When I finished reading Julia Dahl's Edgar-nominated first novel, Invisible City, I dearly hoped that the story wasn't over. Because though the main mystery was solved, a bigger (to me) mystery -- why Rebekah's mother had abandoned her and where she was now -- remained to be answered.
So I'm delighted that Julia's second novel, Run You Down, is a sequel. And I'm thrilled to host Julia herself to tell you all about it.
JULIA DAHL:
The idea for my first novel, “Invisible City,” was
simple: I had been told by activists and police officers that in cases of
sexual abuse and domestic violence, people in the insular Hasidic Jewish
neighborhoods of Brooklyn, N.Y. were often reluctant to talk to authorities
about what they had witnessed for fear of bringing scrutiny onto their
community. But what would happen, I wondered, if there was a murder in this
tight-knit world? Would people speak out then?
Over the next six years, I explored that question.
HALLIE: I was riveted by all the details Hasidic famlies, neighborhoods, their relationships with the police and religious authority. How did you find all that out, given how secretive the community can be?
JULIA: I met
people who had grown up Hasidic, and some who still lived the strict religious
life. I sought to tell their stories through the eyes of my narrator, Rebekah
Roberts, a young reporter trying to make a name for herself at a seedy New York
City tabloid.
To connect Rebekah to the world of the Hasidim, I created
the character of her mother, Aviva Kagan, who ran away from the cloistered
world of Borough Park as a teenager, got pregnant, and then abandoned Rebekah
and her father. When, at the very beginning of “Invisible City,” Rebekah is
assigned to report about the murder of a Hasidic woman, she uses the
opportunity to learn more about her mother’s world – which is she both
disdainful of and fascinated by.
HALLIE: Rebekah's personal story is just as compelling as the murder she's investigating. But left those answers hanging.
JULIA: As I got to the end of the tale of the murdered woman, I
knew that there was a missing piece to Rebekah’s story: her mother. Why did she
leave Brooklyn? Why did she abandon her child? And where has she been for the
past 23 years?
But introducing Aviva would have taken “Invisible City”
in an entirely different direction. It was, I realized, another story. Another
book.
HALLIE: Did you know there'd be a sequel?
JULIA: I hadn’t initially conceived of “Invisible City” as being
the beginning of a series, but when Minotaur gave me the opportunity to write a
sequel, I jumped at it.
Immediately, I knew that “Run You Down,” would be
different from “Invisible City.” I wanted part of the book to be told by Aviva,
and I wanted to examine different issues. I also had a deadline, which was
something I hadn’t had with the first book, which I wrote in my spare time,
unsure if it would ever get published.
HALLIE: Ah, a deadline. How did that work out for you?
JULIA: I wrote the first draft of “Run You Down” in about 10
months, then spent six months doing revisions. Alternating narrators was a
challenge – I had to make sure the voices were distinct, that present and past
action flowed smoothly, and that the reader wasn’t “ahead” of Rebekah in her
investigation into the death of Pessie Goldin.
Writing “Run You Down” was by far the hardest work I have
ever done. For whatever reason, the plot of “Invisible City” came relatively
easily to me. “Run You Down” – perhaps because there were more moving parts –
was a puzzle. There was a lot of frustration (I have nearly 300 pages of
deleted scenes), but each time I hit what I thought of as a “plot knot,” I knew
that if I just gave myself a little time, I’d unravel it. I started to think of
the finished book as a Rodin sculpture. I had a block of marble and for nearly
two years I chipped away, knowing that as long as I kept chipping, eventually,
the rough stuff would fall away and the object inside would appear.
HALLIE: Your process sounds as chaotic as mine. My "OUT" file is usually almost as long as the novel.
Did it make it any easier knowing who Rebekah is?
Did it make it any easier knowing who Rebekah is?
JULIA: As I was writing, a lot of people remarked that
writing a sequel “must be easier” because I “know the characters.” In some ways
this is true, of course: I know Rebekah’s backstory (though I was fuzzy about
Aviva’s), but Rebekah was not the same person I began writing about so many
years ago. When “Invisible City” began, she was in many ways unserious and
immature. By the last page, she had evolved into a more professional reporter
and a more empathic, if still judgmental, human being.
In “Run You Down,” which begins just a few months after
the end of “Invisible City,” I knew these new parts of her would be tested.
Could she balance the demands of reporting for a tabloid with her growing
instinct that she is, as she puts it, “a human being before a reporter”? What
choices would she have to make? Who would she have to disappoint?
I knew that if I was going to keep readers interested in
Rebekah (heck, if I was going to stay interested in her) I had to answer these
questions. I spent a lot of time gazing at walls, trying to slip into her skin
and feel what she would feel. We’ve become close, Rebekah and I.
And now, as I write her third story, I am happy to say that if we met in the newsroom, I think we might be friends.
And now, as I write her third story, I am happy to say that if we met in the newsroom, I think we might be friends.
HALLIE: And I'll be lined up to read it.
Thinking about this, I'm wondering do series protagonists need to change?