Do you remember me mentioning reading a creepy (but good) book a couple of months ago? It was The Winter People -- and I recently got to interview Jennifer McMahon, the author, for Shelf Awareness!
Do you have a high tolerance for scary movies and books? How
do you write such deliciously creepy fiction without scaring yourself?
I love scary movies and books, but the truth is I'm not all that
brave--I'm really a big scaredy cat! I love a book or movie that makes
me need to sleep with the light on (and it doesn't take much, believe
me!).
And I do scare myself when I'm writing. When I'm sitting in front of
the computer and I feel the hair go up on the back of my neck and get
goose bumps, then I know I'm onto something good. There's one particular
scene in The Winter People that terrified me when I wrote it
and still scares me when I think about it--the bit where Martin wakes up
and finds Sara sitting in front of the closet and he hears a
scrabbling, scratching sound coming from inside the closet. I think we
all had that deep, almost primal fear of our bedroom closets at night
when we were kids, and I guess I never really got over mine.
The Winter People is your sixth
book, and they all fall somewhere between literary suspense and
supernatural mysteries. Do you think of yourself as falling into a
particular genre? If so, which one do you claim?
Honestly, I don't think any of my books fit neatly into one
particular genre and I'm certainly not thinking about trying to make
them fit when I'm writing. I'm just doing my best to write the book that
I would most want to read. Even though it can be tricky at times, I
really love that my books are enjoyed by mystery/thriller fans,
paranormal/horror fans, women's fiction readers and young adults.
When you were writing The Winter People, which came first: the idea for Sara Harrison Shea's story (set in 1908) or the modern framework starring Ruthie?
I had Ruthie's storyline before anything else. It was inspired by a
game my daughter, Zella, had me play several years ago. She could be
kind of a bossy kid, and her games at the time were very tightly
scripted.
The set up for this one went something like this:
"We're sisters. You're 19 and I'm seven. You wake up one morning and I'm in bed with you. I tell you our parents are missing."
"Missing?" I said. "That's terrible. What happened to them?"
Then Zella told me they were taken. Into the woods. She shrugged her
shoulders nonchalantly and said, "Sometimes it just happens."
I wrote down this idea for a book with two sisters whose parents
disappear into the woods, but it didn't go anywhere, so I put it away
for the time being.
Years later, I had this idea for a book set during the Civil War. I was watching Ken Burns's Civil War,
and there was a short bit in there about Abraham and Mary Todd
Lincoln's young son dying in the White House. Mary Todd believed the boy
came back to visit her and started having séances in the White House. I
dropped my Civil War idea and decided to write a book about a
spiritualist at the turn of the century who loses her young daughter,
but believes she can still communicate with her.
As I was writing this, my character, Sara, had a few surprises up her
sleeve. One day, when I was writing, I got this line from her: "The
first time I saw a sleeper, I was nine years old." I got chills,
wondered what on earth a sleeper was (part of me wasn't sure I really
wanted to find out, because I knew that whatever it was, it was going to
scare the heck out of me!). The whole book took a turn and I soon
realized I wasn't writing about a woman who believes she can communicate
with her dead child, I was writing about a woman who believes she can
bring her daughter back.
It was around this time that I decided I'd put my sisters with their
missing parents in there, too. They'd live in Sara's house in the
present day. They'd wake up one morning to discover their mother had
vanished, and eventually come to realize that her disappearance was
linked to a dangerous secret over a century old.
Was Sara's story inspired by any legends or stories from New England history?
I wish! Nothing specific, but when writing The Winter People,
I definitely relied on the atmosphere of a long, hard Vermont winter,
where shadows loom large and trees seem to morph into something more
sinister, and if you listen hard enough, the creaking of the
snow-burdened tree limbs could be mistaken for someone--or
something--stealthily approaching.
You write about small-town Vermont very convincingly. Have you come across any haunted houses in your area?
Thank you! I grew up in Connecticut, but have been in Vermont since
the late 1980s. Even though I've lived here ever since, any native
Vermonter will tell you I'm a flatlander. I think not being a real
Vermonter gives me a bit of outsider perspective that helps me to pick
up on little details I might not catch if I'd grown up here.
I went to Goddard College in Plainfield, Vt., where there were ghost
stories aplenty. There's a building called the Manor that now houses
faculty offices and classrooms--it used to be the grand home of the
Martin family, who owned the farm that would eventually become the
Goddard campus. (I just looked it up, and believe it or not, the Manor
was built in 1908--
the year of Sara's diary.) It was full of curving
hallways and alcoves, as well as some big echo-y rooms with old tile
floors. If you went in there at night and sat quietly, you could just
tell you weren't alone; doors would open, you'd hear the creak of what
you'd swear were footsteps, and every now and then catch a shadow moving
in the corner of your eye.
Here in Vermont, in all of New England, we have a lot of old houses
and I have to believe that if a house is well over a hundred years old,
there may well be a ghost or two hanging around.
Hopefully we don't have any sleepers hiding in closets, but you never know....
If you're interested in reading The Winter People, you can find my full review of it at Shelf Awareness. I was compensated for the interview - but my opinions are all my own!
Rating: 4 out of 5
Should I recommend this to my grandma? Well, I'd say no. But I'm a pretty big wuss. So if your grandma likes horror movies, then yes!