HANK PHILLIPPI RYAN: Do you have two personalities? The
fabulous Elisabeth Elo says she does, and more on that in a moment, But first—oh.
I am so excited. It’s such an absolute joy when a dear pal has a wild success.
I am trying to remember where I met Elisabeth Elo—Elisabeth, do you remember?
But it seems as if we have always been friends.
Elisabeth
hit a home run with her first thriller, NORTH OF BOSTON. It made all the “best of” lists and she was on the way. Now, her journey
to certain stardom continues—with FINDING KATARINA M. And in all the books in all
the world, you have nee read anything like this.
Spies,
Russia, reindeer, an amazing heroine, non-stop adventure, disaster, radioactive
waste, diamonds, ballerinas, prisons, blizzards, a trek over an icy river, murder,
betrayal love and family. And vodka.
And, as I
said, the wonderful Elisabeth insists she has two personalities. Do you?
Sometimes I
do things as a writer I would never do in real life. For example, the Real Me
would never fly halfway around the world to trek to a small village in
northeastern Siberia so I could just hang out for a while and soak up the
atmosphere. Nope, that sort of thing does not appeal to the Real Me at all. I’m
your basic latte-and-chocolate kind of girl.
I like to sit in my cozy house with my fluffy pooch curled up at my
feet.
The Writer Me
is an entirely different creature. She routinely dreams up wacky, off-the-wall ideas
and immediately, thoughtlessly, blurts out YES! THAT WILL DEFINITELY WORK!
Plus, while the
Real Me is not any more motivated than the next person, the Writer Me fervently
believes in the transcendent value of ART and will go far, far out of her way
for the sake of a story.
That was how
I ended up boarding a plane a few years ago to go off on a solo adventure to
Siberia. Looking back, I’m sort of amazed I did it, but I’m not at all sorry,
because that trip gave me my just-published novel, Finding Katarina M. I couldn’t possibly have written it without first-hand
experience of the people and the place. So there you go. The Writer Me wasn’t
so crazy after all. She was just doing her work.
What I came
to understand from my experience is that there are usually two sides to a
place. There’s the place as it exists in your imagination; then there’s the
real place.
These two places can be, and usually are, quite different. The
Siberia of my imagination was a cold, dark, dangerous place where millions of
people had died in the gulag and many more had been exiled. I am sorry to say that I saw the whole region
as a sort of dreadful prison.
The real
Siberia, of course, is nothing like that. It’s a vital, evolving society full
of diverse peoples who are doing amazing things. When I was in Yakutsk, the
city was booming; construction cranes were everywhere. Cultural life includes opera,
ballet, and a yearly film festival. Yakutsk is Russian city, obviously, but it feels
very much like its own place, with its own identity and pride.
So my western
imagination got a good dose of reality, and somehow, from the merging of these
two things, came a novel about an American woman who travels to Siberia to find
a grandmother she mistakenly believed had perished in the gulag. Natalie
(that’s the main character) faces down a lot of bad stuff and experiences some good
stuff along the way, none of which she could possibly have predicted when she lived
in her cozy world of lattes and chocolate (sound familiar?).
Which brings
me to a question I love to think about, and you might enjoy as well. We all have
certain places that live vividly in our imaginations, either for good, bad, or
mixed reasons.
If you could set a novel anywhere in world, where would you go
and what kind of novel would you write? A foggy London mystery? A sensual love
story set in the south of France? An African adventure? Where would your
character stay? For how long? Why is she there, and what does she hope to
discover? Let your imagination run wild—why not? It’s fun, and it’s only a story, right?
HANK: Oooooh. Let me think. And we have to go there, right? So...not Siberia. How about you, Reds and
readers? (Have you ever been there?) And a copy of FINDING KATARINA M. to one very lucky commenter!
Elisabeth Elo is the author of the suspense novels Finding Katarina M. andNorth of Boston, chosen by Booklist as a Best Crime Novel Debut. She grew up in Boston, attended Brown University, and earned a PhD in English from Brandeis. She worked as a children's magazine editor, a high-tech product manager, and a halfway house counselor before starting to write fiction. To learn more, visit www.elisabethelo.com
FINDING KATARINA M
American doctor travels to Russia to find her estranged grandmother, only to uncover dark family secrets and a dangerous international plot.
Natalie March is a successful doctor enjoying a busy life in Washington DC. She always thought that her maternal grandparents perished in the gulag, Stalin’s notorious network of labor camps. But when a young Russian dancer comes to Natalie’s office claiming to be her cousin, Natalie must face a surprising truth: her grandmother, Katarina Melnikova, is still very much alive. Natalie eagerly travels to Siberia to meet her, only to be drawn into a web of mystery, intrigue, and danger that will push her to the limits of her endurance.
How far will Natalie go to find Katarina M.? How much will she risk to protect her Russian family and her own country from a deadly threat? FINDING KATARINA M. takes the reader on an extraordinary journey across Siberia—to reindeer herding camps, Sakha villages, and parties with endless vodka toasts—while it explores what it means to be loyal to your family, your country, and yourself.