Daily News (Los Angeles)

First ‘The Exiles,’ then the party

The pandemic gave Christina Baker Kline her book promotion recipe: Invite friends, add wine

- By Peter Larsen plarsen@scng.com

In “The Exiles,” a young governess named Evangeline is wrongly convicted of stealing a ruby ring and sentenced to be shipped from Victorian England to Australia for 14 years of labor.

It’s a journey into the unknown for Evangeline and the other women she meets onboard a slave ship turned convict transport in Christina Baker Kline’s most recent novel.

And in its own way, the book itself traveled stormy seas to an uncertain destinatio­n, given its arrival in August 2020 in a literary world turned upside down by pandemic and lockdown.

“It was such an interestin­g and difficult time to have a book come out,” Kline says of the way in which the pandemic forced authors out of their usual book tour routines.

By the time “The Exiles” arrived, Kline had time to see which kinds of virtual events worked or didn’t. One, a conversati­on between writer-chef Ruth Reichl and author Bill Buford, became the template for her own virtual programs.

“The two of them are old friends and had a glass of wine, both sitting in their kitchens, one in California, one in New York,” Kline says. “Their families were roaming around in the background and they were just having the best time, gossiping about chefs and talking about food and regaling people with stories.”

That seemed like a fun way to converse about books and writing, so for the initial hardcover release of “The Exiles,” Kline enlisted writer friends from Amor Towles and John Grisham to Claire Messud and Jodi Picoult to chat with for virtual audiences.

Now, as “The Exiles” arrives in paperback, Kline has taken all the lessons she’s learned during the pandemic and created a one-night literary variety show. (It begins at 4 p.m. Wednesday. For details go to christinab­akerkline.com/events.)

Writer and book critic John Searles will serve as emcee, with Kline bopping from conversati­on to conversati­on with authors Elin Hilderbran­d, Chris Bohjalian, Kristin

Hannah and Paula McLain.

Her composer son scored a book trailer. A video on Kline’s research into the history behind her fiction is featured. And her sons will sing an Australian sea shanty.

Of course, we wondered: Will there be wine?

“There will definitely be wine,” Kline says, laughing. “Unquestion­ably. Or maybe a gin and tonic. I think gin is more of the convict’s drink.”

Setting sail

The spark that started Kline on the path to “The Exiles” ignited from a New York Times article on convict women shipped to Australia.

“When you’re writing novels, you draw inspiratio­n from all different sources,” Kline says. “You don’t always quite know why things appeal to you.”

She’d first read about the convict transports in her historian father’s copy of “The Fatal Shore,” Robert Hughes’ landmark history of the settling of Australia, a country where she briefly lived as a graduate student.

With her mother, a professor of English and women’s studies, she’d collaborat­ed on an oral history on feminist women. In her own career, she taught writing to women inmates.

“So that experience of reading that piece, I realized now, tapped into all of these things,” Kline says. “The fact that I spent six weeks in Australia when I was in my 20s. The fact that I wrote a book where I interviewe­d 60 women about the sort of hidden secrets in their lives. And then also this teaching in two different women’s prisons, which made me really interested in why and how women end up incarcerat­ed.”

And while the story is set in the 1840s, Kline says its themes of race and class and gender felt fresh and relevant in today’s world, a point that’s been important in her work, especially as more recent work such as the bestseller “Orphan Train” has shifted from contempora­ry stories to historical fiction.

“I didn’t think I had any interest in writing novels set in the past, and in fact, ‘Orphan Train’ is a 300-page novel or something, and two-thirds of it takes place in the present day,” Kline says. “I didn’t even think of that as a historical novel — I was always surprised when people said it was.”

Her interest in historical settings grew, though the stories were never stories stuck in the past.

“For me, the whole goal of writing about the past is making the novels feel contempora­ry,” she says. “I want to write stories that people fall into. That they feel that they’re immersed in, not that you’re seeing through some kind of sepia, you know, sentimenta­l scrim.”

Shifting perspectiv­es

“The Exiles” begins with Evangeline but shares its perspectiv­e with Hazel, a Scottish teen convict, and Mathinna, an Aboriginal Tasmanian child who is removed from her people and forced to live with the territoria­l governor upon a whim of his wife.

“As I was tackling this story, this research, it’s such a big story,” Kline says. “How do I find a way in that feels intimate? And so I created the character of Evangeline as sort of a stand-in for the reader. She herself is literate. She’s a governess. She’s a fish out of water, doesn’t have anything to do with this world. Every single thing that happens to her is a fresh shock to her system.

“And then I sort of envisioned the novel as a passing of the baton from one woman to the next,” she says. “So Hazel to me was the perfect next step because she has lived in this world forever. She has this sort of superpower, this skill that she can use to barter for other things. She knows how to heal people. She also knows how to use medicine for ill. And she’s very scrappy — she’s really street smart.”

Evangeline is pregnant by her former employer’s son, who gave her the ring she was accused of stealing, when she meets Hazel on the transport ship, a journey during which a shocking event occurs.

“George R.R. Martin said when he was writing those ‘Game of Thrones’ books that he wanted to create a world in which nothing is certain, and anything can happen,” Kline says. “And when I was researchin­g ‘The Exiles,’ I was struck by how true that was for the convict women. They had been thrust into this world where, as I said, anything could happen and did.”

Chapters from Evangeline’s and Hazel’s perspectiv­es are joined by those told by Mathinna, a real-life figure whose story was the most challengin­g for Kline to write, she says.

“I didn’t want to be accused of appropriat­ion, but I ultimately felt it would be irresponsi­ble not to address the story,” Kline says of the treatment of Aboriginal people within their native country.

“She’s actually pretty famous in Australia because she’s come to represent what happened to the Tasmanian people, and her real-life story was terrible and tragic.”

A party and more

“The Exiles” is in developmen­t for a limited series with Made Up Stories, the production company of Australian producer Bruna Papandrea, who in a long collaborat­ion with Reese Witherspoo­n successful­ly adapted for film and TV books such as

“Big Little Lies,” “Gone Girl” and “Wild.”

“I’m really excited about it,” says Kline, an executive producer on the project.

 ?? PHOTO BY BEOWULF SHEEHAN ?? Christina Baker Kline will chat with fellow authors online Wednesday about “The Exiles,” whose protagonis­t is transporte­d from Victorian England to Australia after a conviction.
PHOTO BY BEOWULF SHEEHAN Christina Baker Kline will chat with fellow authors online Wednesday about “The Exiles,” whose protagonis­t is transporte­d from Victorian England to Australia after a conviction.

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