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Telling the Truth of Family History in Fiction
September 25, 2002
Bo Caldwell has written fiction for years, publishing about a dozen short stories
in Ploughshares and other literary magazines.
But she's also written an equal amount of nonfiction, in the form of personal
essays for the Washington Post's Post Magazine and other publications.
When Caldwell came into possession of a fascinating cache of autobiographical
material from a recently deceased uncle with a colorful Shanghai past, her first
impulse was to use the material for a nonfiction work. It was a fiction-writer
who suggested that what she really had in her uncle's story was the framework
for a novel.
The
fiction-writer was her husband, novelist Ron Hansen. And the book Caldwell wrote,
after that helpful suggestion, was The Distant Land of My Father -- her
first published novel, and a Book Sense 76 pick in both hardcover (Chronicle
Books) and, now, in trade paperback (Harvest). In nominating the book for the
September/October 2002 list, Kathy Ashton of The King's English Bookshop in
Salt Lake City wrote, "Anna is a child of privilege and her father a millionaire,
but those riches become ephemera as the Japanese threaten to invade Shanghai,
and Anna and her mother are forced to flee to California. This is a novel writ
large, a saga of love and war, but also a story about the ties that bind generations
together."
Writing the novel, Caldwell found, was both similar to, and different from,
writing nonfiction.
"It was like nonfiction," she said, "in that I kind of had the
plot: I used (my uncle's) life as the skeleton for the book; and plot is the
hardest part for me about fiction; so that was a big help. I had this timeline
I could follow." The difference, she said, was in getting the details about
life in Shanghai in the 1930s: "My nonfiction has always been personal
essays about people close to me, and that kind of thing. I really hadn't done
research like this before, and I loved it. I really enjoyed it."
Also helpful, Caldwell said, was having another writer in the house.
"That's great," she said. "We always read each other's work
first, chapter by chapter usually."
Of Ron Hansen's many and varied novels (The Assassination of Jesse James
by the Coward Robert Ford, Hitler's Niece, Atticus), Caldwell
said: "His stuff is very good, right off the computer! He certainly polishes
it and revises, but it's always fascinating, and he writes so differently from
book to book, that I'm always kind of in awe."
When her husband reads her pages, Caldwell said, she thinks he is "probably
very gentle with me." Though Distant Land "wasn't really my
first time out," as she put it. (Caldwell had written one and a half unpublished
novels, years earlier) She noted that, on the other hand, "it kind of was.
So, he's very encouraging, and just kind of marks places where it doesn't make
sense, or places where I could cut."
Caldwell began her first draft of Distant Land in March of 1997 and
finished it in December of 1999: "I think I figured out once that it was
989 days!" she noted. During that period, she said, she also did freelance
nonfiction writing, including helping Charles Schwab compose the books Charles
Schwab's Guide to Financial Independence and You're Fifty: Now What?
Alternating between her novel and these other projects was not a distraction,
but, rather, a help, Caldwell said: "If I have unlimited time (to work
on a novel), I get nervous about money. So, if I have another lengthy project
I'm doing that's paid work, I can kind of rest easy, and switch back and forth."
Born in Oklahoma City and raised in San Marino, California, Bo Caldwell said
she first got hooked on prose through a creative-writing class in high school:
"I just loved it, and got a lot of encouragement, and just enjoyed it so
much and felt like I was kind of good at it. So that was the start."
Later, at Stanford, she took creative-writing classes from Tobias Wolff, Al
Young, and Nancy Packer.
After graduating from Stanford in 1977, Caldwell worked for IBM as a technical
writer, and wrote short stories by night.
"My first story was published right after my daughter was born, in '83,"
she said. Caldwell also has a son; both children are from a previous marriage.
"Once I had kids, I was able to cut back work to part-time, and I was able
to get a lot more writing done.... Then in 1989, I got a Stegner Fellowship
to Stanford. So, I had two years where I could really concentrate on writing."
She also taught at Stanford for three years, and there she began writing nonfiction
pieces.
Around 1981, Caldwell became closely acquainted with her uncle, "the black
sheep of the family," after his second wife died. "He lived in San
Francisco, and I was in the Bay Area.... He would come down for dinner, or I'd
go up for lunch.... We stayed close for the rest of his life, and he was very
close to my kids."
When the uncle died in 1995, Caldwell and her mother had the task of cleaning
out the uncle's San Francisco apartment. "There was a ton of stuff,"
Caldwell said. "All kinds of stuff. And in one box, on the last day we
were there, I found a bunch of transcripts of tapes he'd made, I think in the
late '70s, about his experiences. I knew enough to keep them, and then, sometime,
later I started looking at them."
What she found was absorbing material regarding her uncle's years in Shanghai,
a period in which he was imprisoned first by the Japanese and then by the Chinese.
"It was really fascinating stuff, to a writer. And I fooled with it in
terms of nonfiction for a while, but it just didn't add up to enough for nonfiction.
And I knew one thing: telling your uncle's story didn't have much oomph."
Then, she took Ron Hansen's suggestion (she and Hansen were married in 1998),
and the true story of her real-life uncle became a novel about a fictional father.
The Distant Land of My Father was published by Chronicle Books in hardcover
in October 2001. It made the bestseller lists of the Washington Post
and the San Francisco Chronicle, and the Los Angeles Times named
it one of the best books of the year.
But for Bo Caldwell, maybe the most memorable thing that happened in connection
with Distant Land was reading novelist Carolyn See's review of it in
the Washington Post.
"It was the first big newspaper review (of the book)," she said.
"I knew it was coming, and I think I figured out I could maybe see it online
before it came out [in print]. So, I was sitting in my study late at night,
when it was posted. She gave it a wonderful review; it was beautiful.... That
was the high point."
Now Bo Caldwell is working on "kind of a prequel" to Distant Land,
she said: "A novel based on the lives of my missionary grandparents, who
went over to China in 1906. I may have my characters go a little bit earlier,
right after the Boxer Rebellion, when a lot of Protestant missionaries were
going over."
It sounds like just the sort of balance of fact and fiction at which Bo Caldwell
excels. -- Tom Nolan
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