Last week I posted my review of The Last Runaway by Tracy Chevalier. It's not my normal read, I don't read a lot of adult historical fiction these days, but it's a genre that I think is important and I try to fit some in occasionally. I found the book to be 'quietly powerful' because of the small acts that the main characters make, have such a profound impact. And she's just a quiet character, but you just feel the kindness and goodness emanating from her. Anyway, I forgot to post the interview I had sent to me so I'm doing that today. This interview was not conducted by me, nor is it exclusive, as I'm sure others have posted it. But being as many of you probably haven't seen it yet, I'm sharing it with you guys, along with my thoughts after each answer.
For those who didn't see my review you can find it HERE. And here's the book info, since it will help to know what the book is about.
The Last Runaway by Tracy Chevalier
Hardcover, 320 pages
Published: Jan. 8th, 2013 by Dutton
Source: Publisher
New York Times bestselling author of Girl With a Pearl Earring Tracy Chevalier makes her first fictional foray into the American past in The Last Runaway, bringing to life the Underground Railroad and illuminating the principles, passions and realities that fueled this extraordinary freedom movement.
In New York Times bestselling author Tracy Chevalier’s newest historical saga, she introduces Honor Bright, a modest English Quaker who moves to Ohio in 1850, only to find herself alienated and alone in a strange land. Sick from the moment she leaves England, and fleeing personal disappointment, she is forced by family tragedy to rely on strangers in a harsh, unfamiliar landscape.
Nineteenth-century America is practical, precarious, and unsentimental, and scarred by the continuing injustice of slavery. In her new home Honor discovers that principles count for little, even within a religious community meant to be committed to human equality.
However, drawn into the clandestine activities of the Underground Railroad, a network helping runaway slaves escape to freedom, Honor befriends two surprising women who embody the remarkable power of defiance. Eventually she must decide if she too can act on what she believes in, whatever the personal costs.
A powerful journey brimming with color and drama, The Last Runaway is Tracy Chevalier’s vivid engagement with an iconic part of American history.
Q&A with
TRACY CHEVALIER
Your previous novels were all set in Europe. What made you decide to choose America, and more specifically, Ohio, as the setting of The Last Runaway?
I moved
to England right after I graduated from college, and have spent 28 years
getting used to living in Europe. During all that time I’ve felt a bit of an
outsider, even though I now have a British passport and an English husband and
son, and have lived in England longer than anywhere else. That outsider status
helped me when it came to writing: when you’re standing on the sideline rather
than playing in the game, you perhaps have more perspective. Now it seems I’ve
been away from America long enough to feel less attached, and more objective,
so I am ready to write about it.
I chose
Ohio specifically because it was the state where the Underground Railroad was
the most active. It was also a crossroads state, with lots of movement from
south to north and from east to west. Ohio served as a gateway for easterners
heading west. It’s still an interesting state, with a curious identity
different from the rest of the country. A mix of east and Midwest, it is often
presented as the boring place everyone wants to leave, yet it has the power to
elect a President. In fact, seven Presidents have come from Ohio, as well as
Neil Armstrong, Orville Wright, Steven Spielberg, Toni Morrison, Gloria
Steinem. I think it’s a fascinating state.
Of
course it helps that I went to Oberlin College, so I know the setting a little.
Since its founding Oberlin has been a radical place, admitting African
Americans and women among its first students, flying the flag for progressive
thought. It was an important stop on the Underground Railroad. In fact, there
is one of Toni Morrison’s Benches by the Road in Oberlin, marking it as a place
of historical significance for African Americans. I happened to be at Oberlin
when she unveiled the bench in April 2009, and that was what first gave me the
idea to write The Last Runaway.
I actually have never been to Ohio, or if I was it was just a drive through. I didn't know it was such an important place for the Railroad either, so all that was fascinating to me.
Why did you choose to feature a young Quaker woman as your protagonist?
A couple
days after I saw Toni Morrison unveil the Bench, I went to a Quaker meeting,
where people sit together in silence. I went to a Quaker camp as a kid, and I
still go to Meeting sometimes. There I kept thinking about the Bench by the
Road, about the incredible journeys African Americans had to make to escape
slavery and find freedom, and how Quakers helped them along the way. It made me wonder if I could make my main
character a Quaker, and what it would be like to write a heroine who is very
quiet and who always tells the truth (Quakers are not meant to lie).
I knew next to nothing about Quaker's before reading this book, so all that was new to me, and also very interesting.
Many readers might be unfamiliar with the role Quakers played in the Underground Railroad. Did women like Honor Bright really exist?
Honor
herself is made up, but lots of Quakers worked on the Underground Railroad. The
“President” of the Underground Railroad was a Quaker called Levi Coffin, who
lived in Cincinnati and then Indiana.
Indeed,
the abolitionist movement was largely begun by Quakers. Slavery went against
their belief in the equality of all people, and in the 1820s they began
organized protests that grew into abolitionism.
I remember learning about this a little in school, but I still learned so much from this book!
What do you think are the most common misconceptions about the Quaker religion/Quaker society?
People
often mistake Quakers for the Amish. Both are Protestant sects, but the Amish
are much different from Quakers, eschewing modern technology (electricity, cars,
etc.) and keeping separate from society. When you think of a man with a beard
and flat hat and a woman with a white cap, riding in a horse-drawn buggy:
that’s Amish.
Quakers
were and are much more worldly: they used to dress plainly but not radically (the
Amish, on the other hand, prohibit buttons, using pins instead), they used new
inventions, they often lived and worked among non-Quakers. Quakers were known
to run honest businesses, and some English Quaker families (Cadbury, Sainsbury)
became very wealthy, which is also not how most people would characterize them.
I expect
people also think of Quakers as not being much fun, as they didn’t drink,
dance, play games. (That has since changed!) It’s true they were rather more
sober than other communities, but they had their moments.
I think any religion that is more about keeping things simple (even plain) is mistaken for Amish. I was teased because I grew up in a religious household, we had no tv or radio, etc and we were called Amish. But we were SO different! We wore regular clothing, had electricity, even a computer. But it's nice to learn more about the difference between the Amish and the Quaker's. I'm sure they are mixed up quite often!
What did you find most surprising during your research for this novel?
I spent a bit of time in Ohio, of course, and one of my favorite moments was visiting an Amish farm. As I mentioned above, the Amish and Quakers are very different, but I needed to look around a farm that was still run in a 19th-century way, and an Amish farm was perfect for that. A farmer woman named Maddie took me around all the farm buildings and to see the animals, and patiently answered my 21st-century city-girl questions. Bare feet, a huge family, bare rooms, hundreds of chickens, jars and jars of vegetables, mud, animal stench, the biggest damn barn full of hay, a massive corn crib: I was in heaven in terms of research. I couldn’t take photos, so I just stared.The most surprising and upsetting part of my research was discovering that, as principled as they were, Quakers were as fallible as others. Early Quakers kept slaves: who knows how they justified that with their beliefs. Moreover, though there were some black Quakers, for a time they were expected to sit on the “Negro pew,” separate from white Quakers. I was stunned by the unquestioned prejudice. On the other hand, it made for a much more textured novel, since the book is really about principles compromised by reality. Quakers may have wanted everyone to be treated equally, but they did not want their daughters sitting next to black men, and didn’t consider this a contradiction. Curious. That sort of thing has made The Last Runaway more complicated, and more subtle, I hope.
This was something that I found really interesting. It's the sort of thing we see all the time in just normal regular life. People contradict themselves all the time.
Why does quilting play such an important role in the story?
I always look for things that characters can do in my books. People made stuff much more than we do now, and those activities can be quite revealing of character. Quilting is one of those skills that most women possessed, and it seemed the perfect activity to focus on, as English and American women both did it and yet came up with such different styles. English patchwork is sober and precise, American appliqué more garish and quicker to make. Then there are the African American-style quilts arising out of hardship and a make-do, improvised attitude that have found their apogee in the Gee’s Bend quilts now so celebrated. They couldn’t be more different from English patchwork, and it was a handy way of pointing up differences in the characters in The Last Runaway.
I worked hard to avoid making quilts into a metaphor – life as a patchwork, blah blah blah. Instead I tried to focus on the making itself, the planning and stitching, the social side of it, and the practical warmth. Also quilts as commerce: how many a bride needed, what they are worth in terms of time. I loved all that stuff, it’s gritty rather than sentimental.
Of course in order to write about quilts, I had to learn to make them myself. I do that with every book: fossil hunting for Remarkable Creatures, button-making for Burning Bright, painting for Girl with a Pearl Earring. It makes it easier to write about when you do it yourself.
It was amazing. To me I hear quilting and I think it would be SO boring. It's just not my thing. But it was actually a very interesting, and fascinating, aspect in the book. I think it played a big role and was very well done.
What do you hope readers take away from The Last Runaway?
Though I try to avoid being prescriptive in my books, with this one I hope readers will have a better sense of how hard it is to live a principled life in the face of practical realities. We all like to think we will do the right thing when faced with injustice, but it can be hard to take a stand. Someone usually pays for it.Also, people are not really “goodies” or “baddies.” Villains usually have a balanced side to them, and good people can be irritating and hypocritical. It’s not all black and white.
This was a part that I really liked. I think it was very well wrote and definitely was something that will really makes you think. What surprised me was how the 'villain' had a sliver of a soft spot that really confuses us (in a good way).
Any plans to return to America for the setting of your next novel?
I loved writing about America, but I am not yet sure where my next book will be set. I’m not entirely sure it will all be set in the past, either. All I know is that it will feature trees. I’m toying with the idea of following trees that were transported back and forth between the USA and Europe, but it’s still early days.Well, I love trees!
I'm not sure if you know you're here today Tracy, but either way, thanks so much for sharing with us!
About the author (from Goodreads):

























Hey, I've been to Oberlin College! There was (still is?) a highland games there...
ReplyDeleteAnyway, very cool choice for its historical significance.
Great interview! I love powerful novels like this one seems to be!
ReplyDelete"A mix of east and Midwest, it is often presented as the boring place everyone wants to leave, yet it has the power to elect a President."
ReplyDeleteYEAH OHIO!!! I was born in Cincinnati and currently live in Columbus, and I always love finding books that are set in Ohio. Can it be a boring state? Oh God yes. The drive from Columbus to Cincy is pretty the most boring drive imaginable, but I love it here:) I love what she said above - we're slightly boring yet mighty. Win:)
A tree book, I know we have plenty of trees here in the NW. I think this would be a fascinating book, I don't know much about Quakers either other than what I studied in early American History. I would love reading about the quilts. It is too bad that quilting is becoming a lost art. THanks for sharing!
ReplyDeleteLoved this interview..I have aleays been fascinated by religion...it was one of my majors in college...and it is so true that all reliogions and people have what appear to be contradictions...(or hypocrisy depending upon how you look at ) within them.
ReplyDeletePS how interesting that you grew up without a radio or TV! I kind of think that is awesome...how was it really??
What a great interview. I think I actually learned a lot from it. It was like a mini history lesson that I enjoyed. :)
ReplyDeleteThanks so much for the interview. I've read the Girl with the Pearl Earring, The Lady and the Unicorn and I have The Virgin Blue on my must read list. Can you sense a theme? I love reading fictional works on great art. You have me curious here with the part of history and the kind of people involved in this book. It will go on my must read list. I didn't realize that the quilts also didn't just reference the Quakers. So much more interested now!
ReplyDeleteWow, fascinating interview! I confess I am one of the people who confused Quakers with the Amish. Thanks for enlightening me. This sounds like a very interesting read. Thanks! :-)
ReplyDeleteNice interview! One of my favorite things about historical fiction is getting a chance to learn real history. I never knew the Underground Railroad went through Ohio either!
ReplyDeleteNice interview! I haven't read a book about Quaker.
ReplyDeleteGreat interview Candace and Tracy! This book does sound so interesting. This is something I'd definitely read.
ReplyDeleteI had no idea Quakers played a role in the Underground Railroad! I haven't read any books by this author, and historical fiction is hit or miss for me, but I really like the sound of this one. Thanks for the interview--this book wasn't on my radar at all before this.
ReplyDeleteWendy @ The Midnight Garden
Wow, great interview. That's really interesting about the Quakers.
ReplyDelete