Author Susan Meissner: Q&A and Giveaway

 

One of my favorite things about being an author is that sometimes, we get to meet our favorite authors and sometimes we even become friends. I met Susan Meissner back in 2007 at a writing retreat when I was newly contracted and Susan already had several books under her belt. I remember that she was encouraging and inclusive to me, and that meant a lot at that stage in my writing career. She had no idea how starstruck I was, and I admit, still am. I’m very excited to have Susan on the blog today, and she is kind enough to offer a signed copy of her novel Stars Over Sunset Boulevard to giveaway to one lucky reader.

**To enter the giveway, please leave a comment on this post and tell us if you have seen the movie Gone With the Wind. We would love to hear any of your thoughts about The Golden Age of Hollywood, including any of your favorite actors and movies. The contest ends at midnight pacific time on Friday, March 11th**

**Congratulations to the winner, Vicki Lesage! Thanks to everyone who entered the contest. I hope you’ll all check out Susan’s books. Please come back to visit,**

Please welcome our guest, Susan Meissner:

Susan Meissner is the multi-published author of eighteen books, including Secrets of a Charmed Life, a 2015 Goodreads Choice Award finalist, and A Fall of Marigolds, named to Booklist’s Top Ten Women’s Fiction titles for 2014. She is also a speaker and writing workshop leader with a background in community journalism. She and her husband make their home in Southern California.

 Susan, tell us where the idea Stars over Sunset Boulevard came from.

I’ve only read Gone with the Wind once, but I’ve probably seen the movie a dozen times. There’s something about those characters, the cinematography, the costumes and that sound track that have always wooed me. I’ve wanted to set a story on the 1939 movie set of this film for a long time; I knew it would provide a detail-rich environment. Gone with the Wind is not very often described as being a story about friendship, but the more I’ve watched the film version, the more I’ve seen how complex Scarlett O’Hara and Melanie Hamilton’s relationship was. I long wanted to explore how these two characters seem to be polar opposites but are actually both fiercely loyal and unafraid of making hard choices to protect what they love. I knew I could use Scarlett and Melanie’s fictional friendship as a template for telling a story about two studio secretaries who, like Scarlett and Melanie, are not as different from each other as we might first think.

Susan Q&ACurtaindress

What is the story about, in a nutshell?

Christine McAllister owns a vintage clothing store on West Sunset Boulevard in Hollywood. When the iconic curtain-dress hat worn by Vivien Leigh in Gone with the Wind ends up in her boutique by mistake, her efforts to return it to its owner takes the reader on a journey to the past. It’s 1938 and Violet Mayfield sets out to reinvent herself in Los Angeles after her dream of becoming a wife and mother falls apart. She lands a job on the film-set of Gone with the Wind and meets the enigmatic Audrey Duvall, a once-rising film star who is now a fellow secretary. Audrey’s zest for life and their adventures together among Hollywood’s glitterati enthrall Violet…until each woman’s deepest desires start to collide. What Audrey and Violet are willing to risk, for themselves and for each other, to ensure their own happy endings will shape their friendship, and their lives, far into the future.

Is this a book about friendship, then?

Most definitely. I think friendship is the most remarkable of human relationships because it is completely voluntary. We choose our friends. There is no civil or legal code that demands we stay friends; no vows are spoken and no contracts are signed to be or remain in relationship with each other. And yet most of us have friends whom we love as deeply as those people we are legally and morally bound to. I know I have friends like that.  C.S. Lewis aptly describes friendship this way: “I have no duty to be anyone’s Friend and no man in the world has a duty to be mine. No claims, no shadow of necessity. Friendship is unnecessary, like philosophy, like art, like the universe itself… It has no survival value; rather it is one of those things which give value to survival.”  I love writing novels about relationships, and friendship is a relationship unlike any other.

What is the significance of Scarlett’s curtain dress hat?

Scarlett’s curtain-dress hat is emblematic of what dire circumstances can lead someone to do when what she loves most is in danger of being lost. If you’re familiar with that scene in the movie, you know that Scarlett is in a place of decision when she pulls down her dead mother’s curtains so that she can dress the part of being someone she is not. When we’re afraid of losing what we treasure most, we sometimes choose to do things that we would never do in an ordinary situation. I don’t think it’s any accident that that hat is part rich velvet and gold braid and part barnyard rooster feathers. It’s an amalgam of Scarlett’s strength and her weakness. She will do what no one else will do because of how afraid she is of losing everything.

What were you most surprised by most during the writing process for this book?

Hollywood was like a dream factory in the 1930s and ‘40s. It was a place that produced in fantasy what people imagined life could be like after the horrors of the First World War and the demoralizing years of the Depression. The Golden Age of Hollywood was a chance to indulge again in beauty and wonderment. This era also interests me because Hollywood’s Golden Years ended so suddenly and without any warning. After World War II, most in Hollywood thought they could just pick up where they left off before the war started. But the arrival of television just a few years later changed everything. The beginning of WWII was actually the beginning of the end of Hollywood’s Golden Age. No one saw it coming. I also didn’t fususan Q&ASusanatCulverlly appreciate how much easier it is to write a book in which the setting is hostile! I wrote SECRETS OF A CHARMED LIFE against the backdrop of World War II. A FALL OF MARIGOLDS employed the historical Triangle Shirtwaist Fire as well as 9/11 as settings. Hollywood in its heyday was a glamorous and benevolent location, so all of my tension had to come from within the characters. Yikes! I had forgotten how helpful it is to have a setting provide some of the angst.

What would you especially like readers to take away from Stars over Sunset Boulevard?

I hope the theme that will resonate most is that love and fear can sometimes feel the same, though they influence our choices differently. When I have a decision to make that involves another person, fear often motivates me to choose what’s best for me. But love motivates me to choose what is best for the other person. Fear urges me to hang on to what is mine, while love can actually lead me to let go. My hoped-for takeaway from the novel is the idea that when you hold something you love tightly to your chest for fear of losing it, you actually risk crushing it.

What are you working on right now?

I am two-thirds through the book I am writing next, which is tentatively titled A BRIDGE ACROSS THE OCEAN. One of its key settings is the HMS Queen Mary during one of its many GI war brides crossings. The Queen is such a perfect place to set a story, because she has such a marvelous past. She started out as a luxury liner, was remade into a troop carrier during the war, and has been a floating hotel here in California since 1967. She is also fabled to be haunted by numerous ghosts, a detail I simply cannot ignore. So there will be a ghost or two in this next book! This story thematically, though, is about is about three female characters, two of whom are war brides who meet on the Queen Mary in 1946. The current-day character, Brette, has the family gift of being able to see ghosts though she very much wishes she couldn’t. She also doesn’t want to pass along that hereditary gift to a child but her husband is anxious to start their family. All three characters will face a bridge they need to cross where the other side is hidden from their view. The concept of a bridge across the ocean – which seems impossible — speaks to how difficult it is to go from one place to another when you can’t see what awaits you. This book will release in 2017.

Thanks for giving us your time, Susan! 

Readers, don’t forget to leave a comment to enter the giveaway! You can learn more about Stars Over Sunset Boulevard and Susan Meissner’s other novels at her blog: www.susanmeissner.com

Happy Reading!


28 thoughts on “Author Susan Meissner: Q&A and Giveaway

  1. I only have 5 books on my keeper shelf and GWTW is one of them. I read it back in 8th grade since we had to read a “long” book. My Mother had a copy so I read it then, and probably another 4 or 5 times since.
    Love a strong, motivated woman story.

    Liked by 1 person

  2. I love “Gone With the Wind”! I remember the first time I saw it. I was in Monroe, Michigan visiting family. I think I was maybe 10. They showed it on the big screen in the theater and I was entranced by the story. Amazing!

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  3. I have seen Gone With the Wind a few times but not recently. I must admit I don’t know much about Hollywood’s Golden Age. I’ve heard many wonderful things about this book though. In particular about friendships between women.

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  4. I’d like to win but I live in Canada. If I win would I get a paper copy of the book?

    I have seen GWTW and it certainly breeds a love-hate relationship with characters. Rhett can be a troll sometimes! (the internet meme kind, not the mythological figure) Have you ever seen the episode of “Here’s Lucy” called “Lucy and Flip Go Legit”? There’s a hilarious parody of GWTW in the second half of the episode. 🙂

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  5. Love Gone with the Wind–probably my favorite movie of all time. It was a time when characters were truly developed and there were story lines within story lines. We need more movies like this one. I’m looking forward to reading Susan’s book!

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  6. I have been waiting to read this book! So excited to hear more about it. Gone with the Wind is one of my all time favorite movies, unfortunately I only own the VHS set and no VCR! I remember watching it with my mom when I was six years old and my dad had to work late.
    As an adult, I’ve often thought of Melanie as the perfect example of a real friend who looks at the good in others regardless of their many flaws (oh Scarlett)! Friendship truly is complex at times, isn’t it?
    I’ll never think of the golden age of Hollywood again, without the sweet tune Miles played for Arthur in the movie ‘The Holiday’! Just love it! Great interview, Susan!

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  7. I love Gone With The Wind and watch it regularly. I love the costumes and the plantation homes. I would love to do a tour of the south and see some of those gracious homes. My sister is coming to visit next week and we are going to visit Goodwood in Tallahassee. A plantation home from 1830. I would love to read this book. I love all the old Hollywood glamour days.

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  8. I can’t give too much away about my reaction to this book and the talk Susan Meissner gave in Georgia, because I’m writing a blog post about it. Suffice it to say, she’s the only living soul to ever talk me into almost LIKING Melanie!! Believe me. This is a miracle.

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  9. Gone With the Wind was one of my favorite books to read as a teenager. The Civil war and the South always seemed so romantic, although now as an adult I realize how awful that war was. Thanks for your insight and the giveaway!

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  10. Oooh! Pick me! I’m a huge Susan Meissner fan as well. As to Gone with the Wind, it’s been years since I’ve seen it, but I have a favorite story about the movie that involves me neighbor, who is now with Jesus. She was family to me. Anyway, she wanted to see Avatar when it came out in 3-D. It seemed fun to me that it was so important to her at her age, and we went together. Afterwards I asked her what she thought, “It was too long,” she said in that decisive way of hers. “They should have had an intermission. That’s what they did when I saw Gone with the Wind in the theater in New York.” Wow! To think she saw the original at theater back then and was seeing the first big 3-D blockbuster now. What a lot of changes she saw in her lifetime. I was so honored to walk those last years with her and experience life from her perspective.

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  11. I love your love and fear analogy. How fear makes you do what is best for you and love makes you do what’s best for another person, That is going to stay with me for quite some time if not forever. I have never heard it explained like that and it makes a lot of sense to me.

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  12. Gone With The Wind is my favorite book. I read it many years ago and have seen the movie more times than I can count. I always wanted to be a costume designer for the movies due to seeing the costumes in this movie. The closest I got was becoming a sewing teacher and making clothes.

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  13. Gone With the Wind was one of my favorite books as a teenager and I don’t know how many times I’ve seen the movie. Growing up in the 60s-70s I was drawn to the strength of Scarlett. Funnily enough when my 3 girls read it with me one summer (in their teens), they thought she was awful and that Melanie was the one to admire (they have a much better worldview than I did at their age!) 😊 Looking forward to reading this one.

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