Lilac Girls

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A Conversation Between Martha Hall Kelly and Lynn Cullen     We asked Lynn Cullen, bestselling author of Twain’s End and Mrs. Poe, to pose some questions to Martha, author to author.   Lynn Cullen: The story of the prisoners at Ravensbrück, the only all-female concentration camp in Nazi Germany, is one that begged to be told with the insight into human behavior that only a novel can provide. Yet, more than seventy years passed before you brought this important episode in history to light in your novel, Lilac Girls. I strongly believe that important stories like this choose their tellers, not the other way around. Why do you think this story chose you?   Martha Hall Kelly: I do feel like something inhabited me the day I stepped into the lovely Bellamy-Ferriday House. Caroline? The Rabbits? Whoever they were, they led me on an incredible journey, through Poland, Germany and France to find the truth about this story. Perhaps all of those brave women, almost seventy years after World War II, wanted their story told.   LC: Is there one particular bit of research that drove you to write this book? Did the same trigger sustain you as you made your jour- ney of discovery through what must have been painful territory?   MHK: I found two manuscripts in Caroline’s archives, memoirs written by two of the so-called Rabbits. Caroline had paper-clipped the rejection letters from publishers to the manuscripts, as well as her apologetic notes to the women, telling them she had submitted their work to publishers and there was no interest in their stories. Seeing those rejections spurred me to write Lilac Girls and kept me going when I would hit a bumpy spot. It was great motivation knowing Caroline and the Rabbits wanted the world to know their story so badly.  LC: The incomprehensibly inhumane behaviors carried out in Ravensbrück represent the darkest side of the human animal. I applaud you for giving your readers an unsparing look at these atrocities but yet I’m also grateful that you juxtaposed the darkness with characters who appealed to what Abraham Lincoln called “the better angels of  our nature.” Was it difficult to switch back and forth during the writing?   MHK: Writing in first person, it’s so easy to get immersed in the characters, good and bad. So, yes, it was a wonderful relief, after living with some of  the terrible things that happened in the camp,   to switch back to write about Caroline’s life in New York City. Not hard, really, because I loved writing every bit of it, even the most heinous scenes, but definitely an emotional relief    sometimes.   LC: Has the writing of Lilac Girls changed your life?   MHK: Lilac Girls was my first novel and introduced me to the world of writing. Now, having something I can’t wait to do when I get up each morning has transformed my life in every way imaginable. It made me more confident about everything, more curious about the world and just a million times happier. Also, I’m a shy person but wanted to be able to speak out and stand up for things I believed in. Now, after spending so much time researching Caroline, who al- ways did the right thing, I find myself looking for people to help and wrongs to right. It seems corny to the usually cynical me, read- ing this over, but it’s true. Many readers write and tell me they have experienced that same urge to incite positive change after readingLilac Girls and it makes me incredibly happy.   LC: Can you share anything about your next project?   MHK: I can only say it’s a prequel to Lilac Girls and takes place dur- ing World War I. So far it has been great fun to write and I have done extensive research in Russia for it. I can’t wait to share it with everyone.    

Éditeur : Random House Publishing Group
Collection : Woolsey-Ferriday
Paru le 28 février 2017
ISBN 9781101883082

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