Her first novel is How to Eat a Cupcake.
From Donohue's December 2011 Q & A with Johanna Burke at Publishers Weekly:
You write about the professional and personal problems involved in starting a cupcake business. How did you learn about the culture of bakeries?Learn more about the book and author at Meg Donohue's website and blog.
I’m not a baker, but I’m a very avid cupcake eater! I came up with the idea for the book in part because I feel like I’m surrounded by cupcakes. I had a year-old daughter when I started writing and was pregnant with my second daughter, so between birthday parties and playgroups and play dates—and adult functions—there were a lot of cupcakes. From there, I started to do a little research. I had a friend whose sister is a pastry chef, so I invited her over, and we baked cupcakes and talked about the culinary scene. I quickly learned it’s a very small and incestuous world. I also learned about the hours that you have to put in to running a bakery and the number of people who would be in the kitchen and what relationship they would have to each other.
What piqued your interest about the differences in best friends Julia and Annie?
My interest, in part, came from having a nanny who was from Colombia. She had several daughters she would bring with her to play with my daughter. That helped me think about the relationship between these girls. They’re just having fun as children, but what would happen if they grew older and kept—or didn’t keep—in touch, and how would their lives be different? I’m interested in writing about friendship, and how women come together and fall apart over time. I’m more interested in that than specifically...[read on]
The Page 69 Test: How to Eat a Cupcake.
Writers Read: Meg Donohue.
My Book, The Movie: How to Eat a Cupcake.
--Marshal Zeringue