Author Interview: Wendy Walker of "Four Wives"
I love a good summer read and I highly recommend Wendy Walker's Four Wives - and not just because I got to interview Wendy Walker and get the scoop on what transformed her into a writer. Four Wives is an intimate look at the choices of four highly-educated women. Now living in suburbia, they are the picture of perfection - until they confront their varied personal struggles.
The sometimes painfully close-to-home prose is quick-paced and witty - there is more here than you might suspect. And I don't think any female reader will be able to read the book without wondering if Walker is also a mind-reader. If you've been married, given birth, held down a job while raising a family, stayed-home while raising a family - or generally lived as a female in today's world, you'll find yourself in this book.
I conducted an email interview with Wendy Walker to find out more about how she made these characters come alive...from the back of her minivan!
Amy - Tell us a little about your life.
Wendy - I grew up in the midst of growing affluence. My parents were the children of immigrants and they worked their way up the economic ranks through hard work, and without formal educations. As a young girl, I set my sights on becoming an Olympic figure skater and trained competitively for ten years, three of which were spent at a training facility in Colorado. When I made the difficult decision to quit, I focused on my studies, intent on becoming an investment banker like my father.
I attended Brown University and after graduation landed a job at Goldman, Sachs & Co. as a banker in Mergers & Acquisitions. But that job never felt quite right to me, mostly because I did not have a passion for it, and also because it was very clear to me that to do that job and one day have a family, I would have to find not just a husband, but a wife as well! It is a grueling life. I went next to law school at Georgetown and then worked as a corporate litigator to help pay off my student loans until I got married and decided to have children.
It was not a difficult decision to quit work to stay home with my baby, but I soon grew restless. This is a very common dilemma for “housewives” and mothers who stay home – the desire to be with your children, but also the gaping hole that is left when you give up the part of yourself that existed in the outside world. It was at this point I decided to start writing to fill that hole and also to forge a career that would fit in with the role I had chosen as a mother. I am grateful that this dream came to fruition!
Amy - One of the things I love about your story as a writer is that you wrote much of the book from the back of your minivan in-between ferrying your three sons to school, soccer practice, etc. What was it that triggered you to begin writing during that time? Did you set out to write a book or did that goal come later?
(Read more by clicking on the link below.)
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