O’Hara's debut novel is Cascade.
From her Historical Novel Society Q & A with Stephanie Renee dos Santos:
Stephanie Renée dos Santos: Why did you choose to make your protagonist in Cascade an American female painter in the 1930’s?Visit Maryanne O'Hara's website and Facebook page, and view the Cascade trailer.
Maryanne O’Hara: I was originally interested in writing a short story about artists who painted for Roosevelt’s New Deal arts projects during the Depression. Then I saw a wonderful exhibit at Boston’s Museum of Fine Arts: A Studio of Her Own, Women Artists in Boston, 1870-1940.” I realized I wanted to write about the particular struggles of the female artist.
SRDS: What compelled you to include and focus on art and artists in your historical novel?
MO: I’ve always been fascinated by the human impulse to create art. And I’m fascinated, too, by what cultures deem worth saving. I liked the idea of using a doomed town threatened with extinction as background for a story about an artist trying to create lasting works of art. I hoped that this juxtaposition would give readers a lot to think about.
SRDS: What drew you to your specific visual art medium, art work, and characters?
MO: I never really decided that Dez would be a painter. She just kind of was one, from the start. The way Dez paints and thinks about painting is the way I write, so it was easy to substitute one art form for the other. I think that all creative expression comes forth from...[read on]
The Page 69 Test: Cascade.
Writers Read: Maryanne O'Hara.
My Book, The Movie: Cascade.
--Marshal Zeringue