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Michael
Chabon
Interviewed
by Gavin J. Grant
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Michael
Chabon's funny, rich, and fantastic first young
adult novel, Summerland
-- a novel of fairies, baseball, and the end of the world! -- just
came out. The good news for readers is that more will follow!
Chabon's previous books include The
Adventures of Kavalier & Clay, Wonder
Boys, and Werewolves
in Their Youths.
He lives with his wife, novelist Ayelet Waldman, and their children,
in Berkeley, CA.
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BookSense.com:
What
kind of books did you like as a child? Did anyone read to you?
Michael Chabon:
I learned to read from an early age -- around four. Thereafter I don't have
any memories of being read to. I started as a reader of nonfiction -- books
about how things worked, biographies, histories. It wasn't until the fourth
grade that I got heavily into fiction, at which point my favorite genres were
sentient mice (Miss Bianca [from The Rescuers], Ben
and Me); contemporary children's lives (Harriet
the Spy, Mrs.
Basil E. Frankweiler); and fantasy (C.S.
Lewis, Susan
Cooper, Lloyd
Alexander). Except for the mice, Summerland reflects my early taste
in fiction...but I plan to have talking mice in the next book!
Do you read
to your children? Do you and your wife take turns? Do you read the books first,
before reading to them?
Yes, I read to
my son and daughter every night. Bedtime is my job because I sleep late in the
mornings after staying up until 3 or 4 in the morning to write. My wife does
mornings. Usually, though not by any means always, I read my kids the books
that I remember loving myself. Right now I'm reading Sophie Zilphah Keatley
Snyder's The
Headless Cupid, which I didn't read as a kid but have since. And I'm
reading Zeke Parzival
by Katherine Paterson -- the author of Bridge
to Terebinthia. Often the kids share stories, but not always -- they
have very different tastes and Zeke, who's five, still needs for there to be
a certain amount of illustrations.
While writing
Summerland, did you read it to your children?
No. I didn't read
it to them until it was finished; I admit to having considerable trepidation
about that. I sort of assumed that it probably wasn't going to fly too well
with Zeke -- no pictures at all. I was right about that! With Sophie, I was
of course hoping that she would love it. And yet I know exactly how she looks
and acts when she's bored by something, so there was going to be no way for
me to hide from the knowledge I was putting my daughter to sleep! Thank God,
she seemed to enjoy it -- especially the character of Jennifer T., which was
wonderful because I had created that character essentially to please her.

Were you consciously
trying to write a very American fantasy?
Yes. This is actually
the oldest layer of Summerland: the ambition to write a fantasy novel
using American myth and folklore, in the way that the works of Lewis and Tolkien,
and Susan Cooper and Lloyd Alexander and Alan
Garner use British and Celtic folklore, dates directly from the time when
I was reading those writers -- around the time I was 10 and 11.
Summerland
reminded me in tone of some of Mark Twain's books. Was he an influence when
you were writing it?
Yes! I love Life
on the Mississippi; that book had a big effect on my idea of the American
past and on the way the Liars of Old Cat Landing and their world are portrayed.
Plus it was part of my idea for Grim the Giant that he would have a certain
Huck Finn quality...
 
Was writing
Summerland easier -- or maybe more fun -- than writing your books for
adults? When did you begin writing Summerland?
It was easier,
I think, because it was more fun -- way more fun. I craved the book when
I was away from it. This book had been gestating for something like 28 years;
I had an incredible sense of certainty, utter conviction, while writing it.
Not an iota of the usual doubt. And a sense of immense relief, too.
Will
you be writing more about Ethan, Jennifer T., et al?
I am going to write
a trilogy set in this World-Tree universe. At this point, though, I have no
idea which characters are going to be coming back -- except, of course, for
those ice mice of the Winterlands.
Are you a big
baseball fan? Do you have a local team?
I am a huge baseball
fan, and have been since I was a kid. I'm a lifelong Pirates fan; it's a connection
to that fine city that long predates my actual sojourn there. Locally I have
adopted the Giants, and in particular I am a passionate admirer of their manager,
Dusty Baker.
What are you
reading?
I
tend to be a very promiscuous reader. Right now I am reading, simultaneously,
Austerlitz,
Mrs.
Dalloway, Coraline,
a compendium of Holmesiana called The
Game Is Afoot, and my wife's (Ayelet
Waldman’s) first non-mystery, literary novel, Nobody's Mother [due
out next year from Sourcebooks].
Do you have
a favorite bookshop?
I’m mostly
into used books, I’m afraid. I love the Strand[1] in New York; Powell's[2] (new
and used, of course) in Portland; and here in Berkeley (where we have an embarrassment
of bookstore riches), Serendipity[3] and Turtle Island[4]. Dark Carnival[5]
is my neighborhood shop.
Then there’s this
great little used bookstore up in Point Reyes Station, on the coast, called
Brown Study[6]. It’s tiny, but I always seem to walk out of there with 10 surprising
books under my arm.
If you worked
at that bookstore, what books would be on your staff picks shelf?
Sebald's
The
Emigrants, Casting
the Runes and Other Stories by M. R. James, and Oakley Hall's Warlock.
For starters.
 
Summerland
Search
for all Michael
Chabon's books on BookSense.com
  
Author photo by
Patty Williams.
[1] The Strand,
828 Broadway (at 12th street) NY, NY, 10003; (212) 473-1452; http://www.strandbooks.com
[2] Powells,
1005 W Burnside Portland, OR, 97209; (866) 201-7601; http:www.powells.com
[3] Serendipity
Books 1201 University Avenue Berkeley, CA 94702; (510) 841-7455; Fax: (510)
841-1920; pbhoward@serendipitybooks.com
[4] Turtle
Island Booksellers, 3042 Claremont Blvd., Berkeley, CA 94705; (510) 655-3413;
fax: 655-4238
[5] Dark Carnival,
3086 Claremont Ave., Berkeley CA, 94706; (510) 654-7323; http://www.darkcarnival.com/
[6] Brown
Study Bookshop, 11315 State Route 1, Point Reyes Station, CA 94956; 415-663-1633
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