From her Q & A with David Medaris at The Daily Page:
The Daily Page: What was the genesis of But Not for Long -- where were you and what were you doing when you conceived it?The Page 99 Test: You’re Not You.
Wildgen: It evolved rather slowly. I was experimenting with these new characters in various scenes, just to see if any ideas got traction. I wrote a scene that later I deleted of the three co-op members in their living room, revolving through their heads while they all refused to state aloud what they were thinking. The book took shape through a few more scenes like this: Will showing up on the porch, Hal and Will's ill-advised visit to Mrs. Bryant, while I started to see where it might go.
Why the Monday/Tuesday/Wednesday structure?
As I kept writing it became clear that the book would take place over a pretty condensed time period. I kept tightening up the time frame so I could stay within the confines of the blackout and the immediate crisis. Actually, it wasn't until the very end that I added in the days to divide the sections.
As you were writing But Not for Long, which of your principal characters proved the...[read on]
The Page 69 Test: But Not for Long.
--Marshal Zeringue