Bergstrom's new book is Steal the North, her debut novel. From her Q & A with Caroline Leavitt:
Every novel has a spark. What jump started this one?Visit Heather Brittain Bergstrom's website and Facebook page.
In my short stories, characters are usually trying to leave eastern Washington, just as I did only days after I graduated from high school. My stories are far more autobiographical. It wasn’t until I’d been away from my homeland for a decade or more that I slowly began to miss it. I thought why not write a character, for the first time, who misses eastern Washington instead of another one who is desperately trying to flee it. What if a California girl, who attends an art high school in Sacramento and lives in a midtown apartment surrounded by theatres and ethnic restaurants is suddenly sent north for the summer to eastern Washington to live with her fundamentalist aunt and uncle in a trailer park? And what if, instead of hating it, the girl falls madly in love with the landscape, her aunt and uncle, and the neighbor boy? I wanted to write a novel about a woman who had turned her back completely on her past, including her family, her faith, and the landscape that had shaped her. In doing what Lot’s wife had been unable to do, however, this woman left her daughter without any connections and no sense of herself . Steal the North is a novel of reclamation: a daughter’s journey to steal back her birthright. The idea of birthright—I believe that was the spark.
What was the research like for this novel?
Much of the research for Steal the North had already been done for my various short stories—at least the type of research that comes from books. I grew up...[read on]
The Page 69 Test: Steal the North.
Writers Read: Heather Brittain Bergstrom.
--Marshal Zeringue