Tanya Maria Barrientos is one of those authors who is so highly recommended by writers you know, such as Suzanne Strempek Shea and Jennifer Weiner,that you're
willing to try one of their books and are thankful that you did. Tanya's first
novel,Frontera Street,tells the story of two women from the opposite sides of
the tracks who find that they have more in common than they know when they begin
working together at Frontera Street Fabrics. It's a beautiful story of finding
community and friendship despite the social and emotional borders that divide
people up.
Family Resemblance,her second novel,was a Ride and Read Transit Book Club pick
and she has also recieved a fellowship from the Pennsylvania Council of the Arts
in 2001 and also the Pew Fellowship in the Arts that same year. Currently,Tanya
is a journalist at the Philadelphia Inquirer and I was fortunate enough to talk
with her for your reading pleasure:
1)There are characters in both of your novels,Frontera
Street and Family Resemblance,who have a love of
sewing, is this an interest of yours as well?
Funny you should ask. My mother is an amazing seamstress. She made all
my
clothes when I was growing up and that is why I decided to set much of
Frontera Street in a fabric shop. I was dragged to countless fabric
shops,
propped on a bench in front of the pattern books and told to wait for
her. I
loved the colors and textures of the fabric, and I liked paging through
those giant pattern books. Problem was, I was a TERRIBLE
seamstress..the
portion of FRONTERA STREET about Dee making a pair of coulottes that
bag and
pinch was straight out of my girlhood.
Now, in FAMILY RESEMBLANCE the main character needlepoints. That's my
thing.
I love it, and had a great time inventing projects for Nita in the
novel.
2)Your second novel,Family Resemblance,was a selectionof the Read & Ride Transit Book Club;how did it feel
to be the recommended reading for an entire city?
It was an amazing honor. They always pick a fiction book and a
non-fiction
book and the month they chose my novel, they selected SEABISCUIT as the
non-fiction book. I took my husband to my local B&N and made him take a
picture of the display they had set up with FAMILY RESEMBLANCE and
SEABISCUIT sharing a table..I knew that was never going to happen
again!!!
3)Have you ever considered writing a nonfiction book?
In the real world, I'm a journalist at the Philadelphia Inquirer, so I
work
with non fiction all the time. So far the bug to write a non fiction
book
has not bitten.
4)Will you write a follow-up to Frontera Street?
No. I think the story has been told.
5)Who do you think is the most promising voice in
fiction today?
Wow, what a tremendously difficult question. I'm a big fan of Gish Jen
and
the Chinese writer Dai Sijie. I love Suzanne Strempek Shea and Elinor
Lipman.
I love Ian McEwan and Zadie Smith and Ann Patchett ....Face it, this
question in impossible to answer!
6)What were some of your favorite books growing up?
TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD, of course.
GONE WITH THE WIND, which I think I read eight times.
THE CHOSEN, AND THE PROMISE by Chaim Potok
Anything by Jane Austen and the Brontes...
As a little kid, my faves were:
HARRIET THE SPY and CHARLIE AND THE CHOCOLATE FACTORY and a book I
don't
think too many people have heard of called BEAUTIFUL JOE, about a dog.
And ANYTHING by Beverly Cleary..Little Women (natch) and all the Laura Ingalls Wilder
books..I Loved those!!!
7)Do you think the internet has become more of a help
or a hinderance to writers and readers alike?
Probably a help, because now regular readers (as opposed to critics)
have
the power to make a book a hit more than ever before.
My thanks to Tanya for taking the time to chat with me and I strongly urge folks
looking for a good read to check her out(click the title link to find out more).
There are plenty of good writers with great stories to tell that may not catch
your eye right away but some things are definately worth a second look. Tanya's
novels are worth that and more.
Pop Culture Princess
Tuesday, February 07, 2006
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Labels
- About Writing (43)
- author interviews (29)
- Autumn in August (22)
- Bad Movie Month (95)
- book review/preview (587)
- books and reading (1009)
- Catch-Up Theater (4)
- comic books (275)
- contests (44)
- Current Reads (11)
- Dr.Horrible (8)
- Foodie (428)
- Freddy Fear (15)
- Heroes (66)
- Jane Austen (317)
- Library Haul (61)
- movie posters (382)
- movie trailers (412)
- movie/DVD review (180)
- MST3K (17)
- music (300)
- On the Shelf (29)
- Open Letter (35)
- Oprah Book Club (3)
- Oscars (91)
- pop culture (1195)
- Road of Rereading (17)
- RomComComfortFood (5)
- sci-fi/fantasy (219)
- scifi/fantasy (39)
- Series-ous Reading (74)
- Top Ten (31)
- Trilogy Time (4)
- TV talk (641)
- TV Thursday (444)
- vampires (291)
- Year with Hemingway (13)
2 comments:
My mother, too, was a seamstress, and I remember all too well the benches by the pattern books. And the strange, almost sweet smell of the paper patterns that arose when she opened the metal filing cabinets.
More original content. You've been busy. And I thought the FedEx commercial was pretty funny. Maybe it's a guy thing, because none of the women at work liked the ending very much either.
Yeah,idle hands are the devil's playground and the title for a really lame horror comedy wih Seth Green:)
I intend to have more interviews but will try to keep some original content to please my adoring fans;) I still like the Kermit car ad but I've noticed that there seems to be a PG-13 version of the Jessica Simpson Pizza Hut commerical which has Kermit and Miss Piggy towards the end with a When Harry Met Sally ref(the original version has the geeky teen boy waking up from his fainting spell with Jessica hovering over him feeding him another pop crust treat as his parents loom in the background).
Post a Comment