Wickett's Remedy
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Myla Goldberg brings the past to life in a remarkable second novel
INTERVIEW BY LESLIE BUDEWITZ Myla Goldberg's debut novel, Bee Season (2000), was a word-of-mouth hit that garnered the kind of critical praise not usually bestowed on first-time novelists. Her quirky and intimate look at the life of a nine-year-old spelling bee champ climbed the bestseller list and was a finalist for several literary awards. Readers eager for a follow-up finally get their wish this month with Wickett's Remedy, Goldberg's fictional account of the 1918 flu epidemic. Clearly imagined and lovingly told, Wickett's Remedy tells an epic story the way it was lived, through the voices that laughed, cried and echo still. Young and unaccountably brave, Lydia Kilkenny sells men's shirts in a Boston department store. There, she meets the painfully shy, well-to-do Henry Wickett, who woos her with flowery love letters and Friday lunches. Their marriage inspires Henry to quit medical school and create Wickett's Remedy, a patent medicine sold by mail order. But a ruthless business partner steals the remedy, just as "Wilson's War" and the flu epidemic steal Lydia's hopes. As the flu's grip on the cityand the nationtightens, she signs on as nurse in a study of how the flu is transmitted, and begins to discover that the things we are meant to do are often the very things that make no sense to those around us. BookPage recently talked to Goldberg about this remarkable novel. BookPage: How did you become interested in the 1918 flu epidemic?
BP: The margin notes, which are the whisperings of the dead, highlight the flaws and lapses of memory. What inspired those voices?
BP: You started this book before Bee Season (soon to be a film starring Richard Gere and Juliette Binoche) was published. How did the success of Bee Season influence your work on Wickett's Remedy?
BP: Lydia seems driven to do the unexpected, in a time and place when good girls from good, close families didn't do that. What sparks that desire?
BP: The right details transport the reader, just as the pneumatic tubes in Gilchrist's department store magically carried the customers' change to the waiting shop girls. How do you find the key details that bring a long-gone place to life?
BP: You've written about a Jewish family in the 1980s and an Irish-Catholic girl in South Boston early in the past century. What time and place beckon next?
Leslie Budewitz lives in Montana and is a legal consultant for writers.
Author photo by Jason Little.
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