I’ve felt as though I took a journey with The Beautiful American before I set eyes on the lovely ARC which arrived from the author for this blog tour. I remember finding out about this novel at least a full year before I knew of this tour and throughout the past year, I know I have happily come across readers who have appreciated the breadth of work Mackin has left for us to enjoy finding. It’s hard to say exactly when I caught sight of this story – but as I lament to my readers both on my blog and in the twitterverse, even if a book cover is fetching to my eye, catching me at a junction where curiosity has a will to bloom and a heart has the will to take the journey with the writer – I must find a connection somewhere within the synopsis in order to pick up the book directly.
Further still, when I formulate the questions I want to ask an author, sometimes I deviate a bit from the book in order to get a more personal accounting of the writer’s path. Other times, I feel my own writerly heart emerges through the questions I seek out of fellow writers, as it’s quite difficult to ‘hide’ the fact your a writer, even if your in the season of being a book blogger! I did attempt it initially back in 2013 before I launched my blog but after I started to work on this niche in the book blogosphere, I realised sharing a part of who I am as a writer would become a part of the background of who I am as a book blogger until the path emerges in front of me to walk into a new journey of my own.
Therefore, you might notice some of my questions move from interview to interview, as I like to get different thoughts and perspectives on certain questions which are curious to me whilst the rest of the questions I do try to draw out more about the central heart of the novel I’m reading for review or giving my readers and myself a chance to get to know the author I’m interviewing on a personal level. In this particular interview, I found a happy balance, and although, my interviews are on the longer side normally – due to all my tech woes between July – September, I’m simply thankful the author had time to squeeze me in after I could get my questions to her!
It was a pure delight to host Ms Mackin and I hope you’ll find joy in reading this interview with her as much as I had in receiving her replies! I will say too, I have a soft spot for two aspects of this story: war dramas and biographical historical fiction! Combine the two?
You’re golden!
As recovery from World War II begins, expat American Nora Tours travels from her home in southern France to London in search of her missing sixteen-year-old daughter. There, she unexpectedly meets up with an old acquaintance, famous model-turned-photographer Lee Miller. Neither has emerged from the war unscathed. Nora is racked with the fear that her efforts to survive under the Vichy regime may have cost her daughter’s life. Lee suffers from what she witnessed as a war correspondent photographing the liberation of the Nazi concentration camps.
Nora and Lee knew each other in the heady days of late 1920’s Paris, when Nora was giddy with love for her childhood sweetheart, Lee became the celebrated mistress of the artist Man Ray, and Lee’s magnetic beauty drew them all into the glamorous lives of famous artists and their wealthy patrons. But Lee fails to realize that her friendship with Nora is even older, that it goes back to their days as children in Poughkeepsie, New York, when a devastating trauma marked Lee forever. Will Nora’s reunion with Lee give them a chance to forgive past betrayals, and break years of silence?
A novel of freedom and frailty, desire and daring, The Beautiful American portrays the extraordinary relationship between two passionate, unconventional woman.
Biographical Historical Fiction is an intrinsic and interpersonal exploration into a living person’s soul and the hours in which they lived their life. Your novel The Beautiful American takes us front and center into the life of Lee Miller; when did you feel within your research and writings that her spirit touched you and left you keenly aware you were on the right path for this story?
Mackin responds: What a beautifully expressed question! There was a moment, early in the story, a scene with Lee and the novel’s narrator, Nora, playing together as little girls, climbing trees and chasing with Lee’s brothers around the yard. I felt a very strong connection then; it was so similar to my own childhood. Later, Lee’s and Nora’s joy at being in Paris; their deep but troubled friendship; a moment later in the story when they accidentally bump into each other in front of a store…they were all moments that seemed familiar to me, as if I had experienced them along with Lee and Nora. I felt as if I were remembering those moments, not inventing them, and those are the moments, as a novelist, when the work feels truest to me.
I love how you took us back through how the characters and the story alighted through your mind’s eye and how the realism of those moments drew your own spirit directly into their world. Almost as if as you said your revealling a part of your own lived past, where their lives intersected with yours – and in many ways, they did! Novelists have a beautiful cornucopia of experiences – the ones they live truly and the ones they feel within their souls as they pen the stories which speak to them to write.