Authors: Elinor Lipman
I’ve convinced no one, or so it seems. I have a responsibility, someone repeats. Our shrinking numbers . . .
Later, during the book signing, there’s always someone who tells me that she converted to Judaism or married a gentile, and it’s working out fine. The funny ones lean in to confide, “I loved this book. Thank you for coming. My husband married a shiksa: me.”
I laugh. I open their copies to the title page and write gratefully, “To Mary Margaret (or Kathleen or Maureen or Christine), kind soul and brilliant critic, who restored my faith in my People.”
D
ECADES AGO, ON AN
unseasonably cold and rainy May morning, my phone rang, and it was Hollywood calling. “How would you feel on this miserable day to know that Sigourney Weaver loves your book?” this agent asked. She was talking about my first novel,
Then She Found Me,
and even though I surely knew that books could be turned into movies, I had no idea that mine had been circulated to producers. My husband and I threw an impromptu party to which I wore, aiming for Hollywood-tinged irony, a strapless dress, a rhinestone bracelet, and sunglasses.
It was 1989, and Sigourney was starring in
Ghostbusters II,
which I’d just seen with my six-year-old son. When I picked him up at school the day the deal was struck, I asked—expecting great excitement—“How would you feel if Sigourney Weaver wanted to make a movie out of Mummy’s book?” He said two things, very cautiously. “You’re not doing it for the money, are you?” and “Will it be PG so I can see it?”
Years passed. My six-year-old finished grammar school, high school, and college. I learned thirdhand that Helen Hunt, having just won an Academy Award for best actress, had taken over the project. (No one tells the author much directly.)
More time passed. Now working in Hollywood, my son saw an e-mail that suggested that
Then She Found Me
was close to getting made. (“Three great male roles,” the talent agent’s e-mail advised. “Hunt to star and direct.”) A copy of the screenplay came my way.
At first glance I thought,
Huh? Who are these characters?
But within a few pages, I was in love. I sent an e-mail to Helen Hunt via her manager, praising the screenplay, a few sentences only, figuring she wouldn’t answer. I told her at first I wondered what had happened to Dwight Willamee, the book’s geeky-librarian romantic hero, but then I hardly cared. She wrote me back quickly and at length:
All I’ve hoped for is that you feel April and Bernice [the book’s main characters] are alive and well, and that the theme and heart of the novel is there .
.
. I love Dwight. I imagine him sitting patiently for his turn to come to the screen. After years, I finally realized I had to find a magic sentence, a north star/theme for the movie that I felt deeply about and write toward that. Once I did, it became clear and I was able to start the work of putting aside a character that I LOVE, and trying to find the ones that help tell the story as I was beginning to imagine it on the screen.
How could I not love
that?
Yet before the movie even came out (in the U.S., May 2008), worried readers wrote me—not always politely, often highhandedly—about what they’d heard about Hollywood’s apparent departure from my book. Each time I wrote back, saying variations on these themes:
Someone once asked James M. Cain (
The Postman Always Rings Twice, Mildred Pierce
), “How do you feel about what Hollywood did to your novels?” He pointed to his bookshelf and said, “Hollywood didn’t do anything to my novels. They’re all right here.”
And back to my son: Tall and handsome, he came to the premiere in New York City in a Hugo Boss jacket we bought in a hurry that afternoon. I introduced him to Helen. He put his arm around my shoulders. “I hope you know you
made
my mother’s decade,” he said.
T
HANK YOU, BOOK LOVERS
, for even
thinking
about devoting your Saturday, in whole or in part, to a lit fest! You’ll be rewarded with stimulating, painless, and free fun. (Utterly up to you: the purchase of books that will help save our industry.) Not to be downplayed: the likelihood that persons to your left and to your right will be like-minded fellow readers of the opposite or same sex. Although no one promises that a literary festival is guaranteed fertile social ground, I once benefited from a feature in the
New York Times
titled “Readings As an Opportunity for Romance.”
Although everything from your side of the podium will be clockwork and pure pleasure, we vain authors still worry about things that are out of our hands. Here, therefore, is a reader’s guide to the baggage that may be fueling our silly, lit-fest anxiety:
THINGS THAT HAVE GONE WRONG IN THE PAST
LIES TO TELL AN AUTHOR WHO IS LOOKING FORLORN, UNLOVED, UNPURCHASED
GUIDELINES FOR AUTHORS
I
ONCE FROWNED THROUGH
an episode of
The Oprah Winfrey Show
featuring marriageable Alaskan males in search of wives. Every flannel-clad guy was hoping for a gal who shared his passions, i.e., fishing, hunting, and snowmobiling. Oprah did not challenge the basic thesis—that eligibles who dogsled together, bed together—nor did she ask, “Why all this comradeship? Why not hunt and fish among yourselves and meet the ladies for dinner?”
I am not against hobbies, just the elevation of them to a relationship prerequisite. My bias springs from my own lack of intergender interests and my conviction that togetherness is overrated. My parents were happily married for forty-five years. Did my mother ever toss a football around with my father? Did he knit or sew or tend the tomatoes? He’d been a tennis player before he broke his ankles in the war; she never held a racket unless it was used to dislodge a cobweb from a light fixture.
Today’s attenuated wedding announcements advance this modern theory, the one that says men and women find truest love on a raft or a lift line after the wasted years of dating sissies. Bridesmaids and siblings testify, too: how the featured bride and groom love the same obscure rock band, forage for the same mushrooms, ski telemark versus alpine, see only the films of Rainer Werner Fassbinder.
I do understand that putting forth one’s common interests for the sake of matchmaking is more polite than asking for a certain size breast or bank account. But in private, in the office I would run if I were a professional matchmaker, I’d base my decisions on better predictors of compatibility than shared leisure pursuits. My questionnaire would ask: Do you have children? Do you want children? Are you religious or irreligious? How far ahead of your flight do you get to the airport? Are you willing to leave dirty dishes in the sink overnight? What percentage of the bill do you tip? How close to the screen do you sit at the movies? How often do you eat out/talk to Mom/pay bills? Can you fall asleep with the light on? Coffee or tea? Red state or blue?
This matchmaking impulse runs in my family, and our successes are an ode to randomness. My favorite stories celebrate love as accidents of luck and good timing. The best last-man-standing fix-up story belongs to my sister. Circa 1968, her then fiancé was driving from Cambridge to Amherst, Massachusetts, to visit her. “Could you find someone for Pete?” he asked before setting out. “We’re leaving here at midnight.” My sister canvassed Patterson Hall until she found a night-owl friend, Linda, the only girl awake at 2
A.M.
Linda said okay, sure, I’ll meet him. One year later: wedding bells.
Closely related to accidental love is the time-honored hunch. Good instincts help here, and a willingness to let the aphorism, “It’s what’s on the inside that counts,” stand shoulder to shoulder with physical attraction. My friend Douglas indulged an excellent hunch when he was a bachelor of thirty-five. As a graduate student at Boston College he shared a big open office with five other teaching assistants, including Mary. One day her brother, a BC undergraduate, came by to visit and found her asleep at her desk. Douglas watched; he told me that he knew from the way Louis looked at his sleeping sister, with such fondness, that she had to be an extraordinarily good person. He asked Mary out that night and married her soon thereafter, almost forty years ago.