| A
Conversation with Marjorie
Anderson
The first Dropped Threads book has been a Canadian
national bestseller for over 85 weeks now. What are some of your
favourite stories regarding the public's reaction to the book?
Overall,
I have been delighted by the passion and depth of the reactions
to this book. Both Carol and I have had women readers contact us
with a whole variety of heartening responses including the declarations
that the book had changed their lives — for the better, we
assumed!
One of the most
dramatic responses happened during the Winnipeg launch of the original
anthology. The event was one of a sizzling energy from nine contributors,
one editor (me) and over 300 book enthusiasts. After the readings
and Q&A period, the contributors and I were signing books and
happily conversing with the readers. One woman stood over us with
tears streaming down her face and told us that she had never, until
that evening, thought she even "had a right to have a story"
let alone tell it and have others interested in reading it. She
talked of being a caregiver to children and parents and not knowing
how to focus on — or even be by — herself. Her experience
that evening convinced her that she should buy a journal and start
writing in it, even if no one else ever read it other than herself.
I was moved to a new understanding of the power and importance of
telling "our stories" to each other.
Over the past
two years I’ve been invited to well over twenty book clubs
to discuss Dropped Threads with groups of women who have
read it. Most often the discussion includes their stating which
stories stood out for them and then telling what "dropped threads"
are missing in this volume and might, or should, have been included.
The latter topic allows women to speak about the areas of surprise
and silences in their own lives, and many do, revealing experiences
that are every bit as fascinating as those in the book. One woman’s
response during this type of discussion was "I didn’t
like a single thing about that book!" The response at first
caused me a zing of thankfulness that there was license in the room
for the readers to express honest reactions. I asked what, in particular,
had been missing for her. She replied with some force that the book
hadn’t had one single story on ____, then named a topic that
I can’t now remember but was obviously central to her life.
The exchange provided a refreshing variety in response but also
emphasized one fundamental impulse for the reading experience, which
is to discover facets of ourselves. When a woman reader can’t
identify with that which is presented as representative of her tribe,
the sense of exclusion can be strong. I’ve kept that insight
humming inside me ever since.
At what
point did you realize that a sequel to Dropped Threads
needed to be created?
Perhaps
it was at gatherings such as the ones I’ve described above
where I realized that the stories we had collected in the first
book were just a few of thousands that were out there waiting —
and needing — to be told. Also, the idea for a second anthology
grew as more and more women either sent us their stories or asked
if they could. At the launch in Edmonton, I had a discussion with
an extremely pleasant woman the fact that there wasn’t a story
about lesbian experience in our first book. Her story about the
joys and challenges of being a lesbian and a mother is in Dropped
Threads 2. She had reminded me of one of the gaps in the book
and then had the creativity and experience that enabled her to fill
in that blank space for us.
The
Dropped Threads events in bookstores were huge successes,
with contributors and fans gathering in intimate spaces to talk
about the book. Can you tell us what those events were like?
There
was electricity in the air at all of the Dropped Threads
events, which reinforced the sense that the book had tapped into
a powerful current of women’s need and creativity. I feel
that the book didn’t so much create the passionate enthusiasm
as provide a forum for its expression. Along with the serious side
of these occasions, there was great fun. At the Winnipeg launch
where over 300 hundred people were in attendance we all beamed and
laughed and hugged like old friends at a reunion. The contributors
and I have talked about that event frequently since then and have
come to the conclusion that we were part of a "phenomenon"
that we can’t quite explain. Contributors attending launches
in other cities echoed our views and Carol had the same experience
in Victoria. What started at the launches has continued in book
club gatherings I have attended — there is an atmosphere of
celebration. I don’t try to analyze the experience any more;
I just join in and feel honoured.
Are
there any major differences in theme between the first Dropped Threads
book and the new sequel?
The
theme of the new book is the same as the last: we asked women to
write on areas of surprise and silence in their lives. There are,
though, strong differences between the two anthologies. There are,
of course, different contributors, but also a different emphasis.
In the last book the emphasis was on common experiences; in this
one there is more emphasis on the individualistic, on experiences
of loss and trauma that many of us may never experience. However,
while there is more pain in many of the stories in DT 2,
the writers aren’t stuck there. They show how to get through
pain to some form of acceptance and growth. Jane Urquhart’s
piece, which starts off the book, is an example of this type of
writing. Although her story is of loss, initially, it ends on a
note of celebration. In the pre-publication review of the new book
in the Quill and Quire, the reviewer stated that Jane’s
piece was worth the price of the whole collection and I agree. Actually,
there are a number of pieces for which that could be said.
Adrienne
Clarkson wrote the Foreword to Dropped Threads 2. How did
she come to be involved in the project?
In
our discussion about whom we would invite to be contributors, Carol
and I included Adrienne Clarkson as someone whose views would be
valuable on the topic. Carol knows and admires her as a woman and
both of us have tremendous respect for her as Governor General.
We wrote to her and invited her to be part of the book and she agreed.
She was most gracious in all our dealings with her and extremely
prompt in reading the manuscript and crafting her Foreword. We especially
appreciate that she wrote from the perspective of a woman and not
from her official position. We also admire the honesty and candour
of her views
And
finally, how does it feel to be the co-editor of such a runaway
national bestseller?
I
feel amazed, pleased, and privileged — amazed that the book
struck as much of a chord as it has; pleased to have collaborated
with my friend Carol; and privileged to be part of a community of
voices telling the stories that shape, sustain, and enlighten us
as women. To me this type of storytelling is not just entertainment
but also an essential act that carves out validity and forges connections
for us in this world. Personal stories are pieces of ourselves that
we hold out for others to touch with their minds and emotions. The
Dropped Threads anthologies have provided safe places for
that activity. So while I know we can use the term “bestseller”
in relation to the first book — and I’m pleased about
what that indicates regarding reader response — I think in
terms of it being a vehicle for connections — and hope so
much that the new one is experienced in the same way.
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© Craig
Koshyk
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