Adrienne McDonnell is the author of The Doctor and the Diva. The publisher sent me the Q & A and is sponsoring a giveaway for two copies of Adrienne's book, see details at the end of the post.
What is THE DOCTOR AND THE DIVA about?
The story
begins in 1903, in Boston
. A young, Harvard-educated obstetrician who is a rising star in his
profession becomes dangerously attracted to a patient—a lovely opera singer.
She turns to the doctor for help in conceiving a child. The doctor
becomes so drawn to her that he takes a great moral risk—a secret he can share
with no one.
The novel is
based on ancestors, and hundreds of pages of family letters. Who were those
ancestors?
The married
couple in the novel, Erika von Kessler and her husband Peter, were inspired by
my son’s paternal ancestors—his great-great grandparents. They lived in
Boston at the beginning
of the twentieth century, and they were an extraordinary pair. Even by
modern standards, they dared to live in bold, highly adventurous ways.
What moved you to write about them?
I can
remember the moment I first heard about the great-great grandmother, the woman
whom I call “Erika” in the novel. I was nineteen years old, living in
Santa Barbara . A
friend had gone away for the weekend, and she’d loaned me her beachfront
apartment. It was around midnight, and I was lying there in the arms of a
young man I barely knew. He later became my husband, but at that moment
we were just beginning to know one another. He talked about his
grandfather, who had recently died. Suddenly he said, “When my grandfather was a little boy, his mother
deserted him and her husband and moved to
Italy to develop her career as an
opera singer.”
The idea of a
privileged woman in early twentieth century
Boston who abandoned her husband and small
child for the sake of her art … the thought of it amazed me. Then I
couldn’t decide: did I admire her and want to applaud her courage? Or was
it heartbreaking that she’d deserted her little boy? The tension of all
those conflicting feelings drew my imagination to her.
How did you manage to
learn more about her life?
Early in our
marriage, my husband and I moved to Boston
. Every day on my way to work, I walked through the Back
Bay neighborhood where these ancestors had once lived.
Erika’s childhood home stood on Commonwealth
Avenue . Her father was a famous
physician, and they lived in a rather grand house with two archways.
When I went
up to the front entrance and cupped my hands against the glass pane to peer
inside, I saw that much remained the same as it had been in the late nineteenth
century. The wide staircase was still paneled in black walnut, and I
imagined her fiancé Peter mounting the steps, and her voice echoing down to him
while she sang from the parlor upstairs.
Why did their story seem
so haunting to you?
When I stood
across the street from “Erika’s” house, I could almost see a young girl’s
face—her face—staring back at me from an oval window on the third story.
I had a strange sense of god-like omniscience, because I knew things about her
life that she couldn’t foresee—how her husband would one day be forced to
divorce her and take custody of their small son; how she would sing in I Puritani from Montepulciano, Italy; how
her little boy would write her letters that were never delivered to her.
What about her
husband? How was he unusual?
Her husband
was a fascinating person as well. He was British, a highly successful
international businessman – an importer of Egyptian cotton, among other
things. “Peter” was a man of voracious curiosity, a naturalist, a lover
of flora and fauna. He imported the first chimpanzees to the London Zoo,
where he later became a Director. He traveled across four continents, and
ventured into remote places, keen on seeing and experiencing everything.
And he wrote prolific, richly detailed letters.
He was the
sort of man who’d ride a camel through the Egyptian desert to visit a tribe of
Bishareen nomads, where he’d move from tent to tent, tasting their dried bread
and goat’s milk.
Or he’d head
to a friend’s lush Caribbean coconut
plantation, where they’d ride at midnight in a buggy along a beach, with
vampire bats flying overhead…. He’d slash a path through a rainforest
with his machete, or he’d travel upriver in South America
toward a waterfall that few Europeans had ever seen.
A third character in the novel—the
fertility doctor Erika and Peter consult—becomes a crucial figure in their lives. Many readers may be
surprised to learn that fertility specialists existed in 1903. Were their
treatments effective?
Certain
procedures that many people might regard as “modern”—such as artificial insemination—were
actually being practiced more than a century ago, but doctors had to conduct
such work surreptitiously. They risked grave moral condemnation.
THE DOCTOR AND THE DIVA takes place at a
real turning point in medical history. Prior to that era, if a couple
were unable to have children, the fault was always placed on the woman.
The problem was always thought to be due to a “barren” wife. In the
latter half of the 19th century, physicians began to discover a
startling truth: a man could be virile—he could be sexually potent—and yet he might also be infertile.
What led to that
discovery?
As far back
as 1677, a man in Holland
named Leeuwenhoek looked through a microscope and saw sperm. By the
mid-nineteenth century, physicians had begun to study human sperm with real
scientific scrutiny. An American physician named Dr. Sims became known as
“the father of modern gynecology.” Dr. Sims would follow married couples
into their homes. He’d wait behind a bedroom wall while a couple had
intercourse, and then he’d rush in and probe and take measure of things under
the microscope. He invented an instrument known as the “impregnating
syringe.”
During the Victorian era,
how was he allowed to do that kind of research?
Dr. Sims shocked
and appalled many people. But the majority of patients who filled
gynecologists’ consulting rooms during the nineteenth century came there
because of infertility. Some were so desperate to conceive a child that
they were motivated and willing to cooperate.
There’s some
statistical evidence that infertility was more prevalent during the nineteenth
century than it is today. One cause was gonorrhea, which was epidemic and
incurable then. During the 1870s, there was one rather sad and touching
case that convinced a professor of obstetrics at the
University of Pennsylvania
that husbands—as well as wives—were part of the equation. A female
patient came to him, begging for an operation to help her conceive. While
the doctor was trying to decide if he ought to perform the procedure, the
woman’s husband presented himself, feeling very guilty about all his wife’s
anguish and distress. He told the doctor that he believed his
gonorrhea—from which he’d been suffering for many years—must be the root cause.
So, after an examination of the husband’s semen under the microscope, it became
evident that the man was sterile. This proved a revelation for the
professor of obstetrics. Afterward, he told his colleagues: I beg of you, be sure to examine the husband, as well as the wife.
A century ago
when doctors performed artificial insemination, did they use a husband’s sperm,
or a donor’s?
At first,
during the mid-nineteenth century, they relied on the husband’s sperm.
But by the 1880s and 1890s, certain gynecologists did begin to use donor
sperm—although they rarely revealed what they’d done until decades later.
Older women in the family shared their memories with you, and rumors
they’d overheard. What else did they say about the real Erika?
One elderly
cousin, born in England in
1898, came to visit the U.S.
As a child, she’d heard a lot of whispering about her American
aunt. She’d heard that “Erika” had a baby daughter fathered by a man who
was not her husband…. She’d heard that long after Erika had deserted her
son, she’d appeared one day, unannounced, at her son’s boarding school.
The novel draws upon
hundreds of pages of family letters. Where did you find those letters?
After my
husband and I had lived in Boston
for nine years, we decided to move back to the West Coast. We drove
cross-country and stopped at his aunt’s ranch in the Sierra
Nevada foothills. Like me, she had a passion for
genealogy. From the moment you stepped into her house, you felt the
presence of the ancestors…. Huge family portraits stared down at you from
her living room walls. She had a little gallery of framed butterflies --
a dozen exquisite butterflies that her grandfather “Peter” had meticulously
painted with hair-thin brushes.
“Where are the
letters I’ve heard so much about?” I asked her. The aunt brought
out hundreds of pages of correspondence. Reading them just amazed
me. I realized that these ancestors had led far bigger lives than I’d
imagined. Their voices could be heard in those pages. There was so
much detail and adventure—nights spent exploring winding streets in Tangier, or
visits to a coconut plantation in the Caribbean
where the guests told ghost stories after dinner….
If Erika were
alive today, do you think her career vs. motherhood conflicts would be any
different?
Her guilt and
anguish would probably be very similar to that described in the novel.
But I think that today, the courts and society would have allowed her more
flexibility with respect to staying in contact with her child. In those
times, transatlantic airplane travel wasn’t an option. She couldn’t fly
back and forth to visit her son for a few days. In that era, if a mother
moved across an ocean and settled in another country, that was it —she was gone. And from a legal standpoint,
she surrendered her rights to custody.
It’s
interesting to think about her husband “Peter” and his mode of parenting.
In real life, “Peter” was often an ocean and a continent away from his young
son, and he did a lot of his parenting by letter. At the age of seven,
the boy was placed in boarding school, and during vacations, his father
arranged for him to live with a family like the “Talcotts” (as described in the
novel). The boy was basically “mothered” by a colleague’s wife. But
despite his father’s long absences, the real-life Quentin always regarded his
father as a towering, loving figure—and as an extraordinary man.
And long
after Erika’s death in 1918, her son remembered his mother with a certain pride
and respect. His daughters told me that as they were growing up,
“Quentin” always kept a framed photograph of his mother on top the Steinway
piano—a picture of Erika dressed in her operatic regalia.
What did you enjoy most about writing THE DOCTOR AND THE DIVA?
Apart from
the joy of composing the fictionalized story, I loved doing the research.
It was deeply pleasurable to steep myself in another era, and revel in all
those exotic lands described in century-old family letters.
Learning
about the history of medicine and the working life of a 1903 obstetrician like
Dr. Ravell—that was also fascinating. And the music! I cannot tell
you how it nourished my soul and my senses, to listen to the gorgeous arias
that Erika sang. Had it not been for my son’s ancestor, I might have
missed out on a whole domain of thrilling and lovely music.
How long did
it take you to write THE DOCTOR AND THE DIVA?
About six
years. I wrote a first draft of the novel in the mid-1980s, but the
result was lifeless and stale. I packed up those pages and stored them in
a box for twenty years.
Then, after a
couple of decades passed, I envisioned an entirely new way to frame the
novel. This time I would begin Erika’s story not through her own
perspective, but instead through the eyes of the young doctor who was becoming
obsessed with her, a man who would take a terrible risk and jeopardize his
career because of her.
How did you research
the novel, and balance factual information with storytelling?
First, I read
the family letters with great scrutiny, always on the lookout for material that
might be transformed into a scene. I imagined the exotic locales as stage
sets where dramas might unfold.
Like any good
student, I brought home musty books and old recordings from University and
public libraries, and while I pulled out my pen and took careful notes, my
conscious and unconscious mind were both at work. I was constantly on the
hunt for just the right, historically apt detail. For example, when Erika
is confined to her bed during childbirth, Doctor Ravell puts a ball of cotton
soaked in chloroform into a tumbler, and he tells Erika to place the glass over
her nose. After she breathes its vapors, the tumbler slides from her hand
and rolls along the carpeted floor. That’s all you need to evoke pain
relief during childbirth in 1904—one detail like that, just a whiff.
What was the
creative process like?
I researched
for a couple of years before the formal, serious writing of the novel
began. While I was gathering the historical facts, an entire scene would
often come to me. Whenever I “overheard” conversations between the
characters and I’d grab scrap paper and capture their dialogue quickly. I
jotted down whatever the characters were saying, even when I had no idea where
in the novel that exchange might occur. I tossed the wildly scribbled
scenes into a box and saved them. As I researched, the dramatic scenes
accumulated, and the story line began to take shape. (Later I found that
the dialogue I’d “overheard” barely needed revision. It came out clean,
and sounded natural.)
For many
months I refrained from doing any “real” writing. Instead, I kept
listening to ravishing arias and consuming a feast of fascinating
information—about the history of medicine and opera, about the training of
vocal artists, or about apartment hunting in
Florence a century ago.
When I
finally sat down to begin the newly envisioned novel in earnest, I pulled out
that box of spontaneously scribbled, random scenes and saw very quickly how
they ought to be sequenced. Even before I began to compose the first
page, my unconscious had already done much of the work. A new draft
erupted from me with great speed and excitement.
On a deeper,
thematic level, what is THE DOCTOR AND THE DIVA about?
GIVEAWAY DETAILS:
The publisher is sponsoring a giveaway for two copies of The Doctor and the Diva by Adrienne McDonnell.
~ You must be Google Friend Connect follower or an e-mail subscriber to participate.
~ US addresses only!
~ The deadline to enter this giveaway is Midnight EST December 19th.
1. Please leave a comment in appreciation to the author on THIS post.
2. Please fill out the FORM.
12 comments:
Thank you for this interview.
I possibly wouldn't have even given this book a second look if I'd seen the cover, but after reading your interview I really would like to read this. I really have to stop judging a book by it's cover!
It is amazing to think that they did infertility treatments that long ago.
wfnren at aol dot com
wrensthoughts.blogspot.com
Just fascinating!! I'd love to read this one.
Thank you for the chance to win this book. I am a historical fiction fan and it sounds like a good book.
griperang at embarqmail dot com
I love the fact that this story was taken from research of the author's husband's ancestors. How interesting!
lag110 at mchsi dot com
I would love to read this book. It sounds really good and interesting. Tore923@aol.com
Wow! What an informative interview!! I can't wait to read this book now!! Thanks so much for the interview and giveaway:)
sounds so interesting; I love reading and enjoy opera too!
This book sounds so interesting to me. I loved your interview.
I been doing genealogy for over 40 yrs so this is right up my alley. Hope to win. Thanks
amhengst at verizon dot net
Great interview! I loved how the idea for THE DOCTOR AND THE DIVA came about. I will definitely be adding it to my wishlist.
yadkny@hotmail.com
I want to read this book so bad!! It sounds really good
birthdaywish@gmail.com
This looks like a great book! I would love to read it!
Laura Kay
anovelreview(@)yahoo(.)com
I really enjoyed reading your interview! I know I would love your book! Thank you for the giveaway!
mittens0831 at aol dot com
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