I happen to remember exactly where I was when I read The Weird Sisters by Eleanor Brown. I
was on vacation over the July 4th holiday, and this was my "getaway"
reading. Each night, I holed up in the spare bedroom I occupied, with a small
lamp and a cupcake, and read into the wee hours of the morning. Then during the
day, I carried the book around with me just because it was so BEAUTIFUL, I
wanted to gaze at it. People would say, "Hey, what's that you're
reading?" and I'd be like, "Oh, just The Weird Sisters. It's pretty
good so far" and they'd be like, "Oh," and I'd stick my nose
back in it so they wouldn't bother me. . .
The Weird Sisters is a fun peek into a quirky family who have to bond in order to help each other through a gut-wrenching ordeal. As a firstborn, I could relate to Rose, the oldest daughter in many ways. I think everyone could find something in this book that they have experienced to some degree. I was easily swept into the drama since all of the conflict is set up in the beginning. This is no "slow plot" story; I found myself aching for each one's separate dilemma and cheering for Rose (the oldest, of course) to get past her firstborn instincts and get onto living her own life.
In case this book hasn't made it into your hands yet, here
is a summary about the book from www.eleanor-brown.com:
The Andreas sisters were raised
on books - their family motto might as well be, 'There's no problem a library
card can't solve.'
Their father, a renowned,
eccentric professor of Shakespearean studies, named them after three of the
Bard's most famous characters: Rose (Rosalind - As
You Like It), Bean (Bianca - The Taming of the Shrew),
and Cordy (Cordelia - King Lear), but they have
inherited those characters' failures along with their strengths.
Now the sisters have returned home
to the small college town where they grew up - partly because their mother is
ill, but mostly because their lives are falling apart and they don't know where
to go next.
Rose, a staid mathematics
professor, has the chance to break away from her quiet life and join her
devoted fiance in England, if she could only summon up the courage to do more
than she's thought she could. Bean left home as soon as she could, running to
the glamour of New York City, only to come back ashamed of the person she has
become. And Cordy, who has been wandering the country for years, has been
brought back to earth with a resounding thud, realizing it's finally time for
her to grow up.
The sisters never thought they would find the
answers to their problems in each other, but over the course of one long
summer, they find that everything they’ve been running from – each other, their
histories, and their small hometown – might offer more than they ever expected.
Welcome, Eleanor! Congratulations on your success! As of
today, the book is #12 on the NYT Bestseller List. What does that feel like?
It’s thrilling! When it hit the list,
I was completely surprised – I had expected two people to buy the book: my mom,
and my editor’s mom. So when it was that successful, it was totally unexpected.
But the more I think about it, the more wonderful it is, because what it means
is that I’m not alone in the questions I was struggling with when I wrote the
book. None of us is alone. And that’s a comforting feeling.
I loved the theme of Birth Order and its influence on us.
How did you research birth order, and how did you use it to completely form
each character, personality, behaviors, and even the conflict each was
experiencing?
I’ve been fascinated by birth order
theory for a long time – my research project for my psychology major in college
was on birth order! So when I sat down to create the Andreas sisters, I drew on
the archetypes and built them from there, creating their motivations and, yes,
their conflicts from those traits.
What inspired the idea of this Professor of a father who
only spoke in "Shakespeare"? I completely adored how the sisters
could still understand what he was saying despite his cryptic sonnets.
Every family has its own language,
comprised of nicknames, quotes from books or movies (or plays!), references to
experiences they had together. I wanted the family in The Weird Sisters to have
its own language, so I tied that idea in with a question I had about what would
happen if someone in a family were obsessed with something, and, voila!
Shakespeare!
One of my favorite parts was how they all read books, laying
them around the house, picking up one in the kitchen, then putting it down to
read something else when they reached the living room. Also carrying them in
their purses to be pulled out whenever they wanted to not communicate. This is
kind of a description of my dream world. Did you grow up this way, or know
someone who did?
I’m grateful to have grown up in a
house full of books and music. Reading was what we did – aloud, silently,
together, alone. It’s allowed me to explore lots of different ideas and live
different lives, all through the pages of a book or a magazine. The family’s
love of literature definitely mirrors my own!
I did my research and noted that you love Maeve Binchy, too!
Hello! I wrote a post about her since one of her recent novels was
starred on my list. Can you pinpoint what it is about her writing that has
touched yours?
Isn’t she wonderful? Reading one of
her books feels like chatting with an old friend. The most important lesson I
took from her is how to weave together multiple storylines. She so deftly
juggles multiple characters and then brings them together in surprising and
thoughtful ways. I studied her books a lot in order to be able to write a story
with three main characters.
Lastly, what is your advice for aspiring writers?
Read everything. Write everything.
Then do it all over again!
Thank you so much for taking your time to answer my questions!
I can't wait to see what you have in store for your next book!
Readers, it is your turn! Eleanor is graciously giving away
a signed copy of her paperback, newly released! To enter, just leave a question
or comment here. Or tell us how birth order has influenced you. The winner here will be
drawn randomly on 4/19/12. (US/Canada only, sorry!)
For more information you can like Eleanor Brown on Facebook or visit her website.
Our randomly selected winner is. . . . jpetroroy! Congratulations! Thanks for participating, everyone!