Kim Martin
asked
Bonnie Garmus:
I was thinking about your use of humor and how to classify it- it seems to have some qualities of absurdism but it doesn’t feel quite like satire. How would you classify it? The novel had an almost Vonnegut- feel, like it’s the novel he’d write if he was a woman living through sexism today. I was floored to listen to your interview and learn that you share a copywriting background.
Bonnie Garmus
I have no idea how I'd classify it so your guess is as good as mine! But Vonnegut--that's a very generous comparison--thank you. Copywriters get a lot of practice writing, and it does seem like a lot of novelists got their start there--Patterson, Heller, Burroughs, Fitzgerald, Helen Gurley Brown, etc. I think copywriting is so much like novel writing in one critical way: the rewrite. Every copywriter I know rewrites constantly. It's not unusual for me to return to the same sentence over and over until it feels right, then find myself deleting it a week later because I realize it does nothing for the story. So annoying.
More Answered Questions
Judy
asked
Bonnie Garmus:
I am the administrator for a reading group in the Los Angeles area called The Bookie Babes. We have been together for years. This month we read Lessons in Chemistry and all 12 members gave it thumbs up. We had a rousing discussion. I personally loved so many things: the characters, the story, the mystery and the unabashedly feminist approach! Thank you for such a wonderful read. Will you publish another novel?
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