Hartford Courant

Taylor Jenkins Reid’s ‘Daisy Jones’ first adaptation to bow, but others in works

- By Alicia Rancilio |

’m jealous you get to meet her,” an employee working behind the scenes at a recent event for “Daisy Jones & the Six” told some journalist­s.

The “her” in question was not Riley Keough, the star of the limited series, or any of the show’s other female stars. It was Taylor Jenkins Reid, the bestsellin­g author behind a celebrity-infused, decades-spanning literary universe suffused with glitz and grit: “The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo,” “Daisy Jones,” “Malibu Rising” and “Carrie Soto is Back.”

“Daisy Jones & the Six,” now streaming on Amazon Prime Video, is the first Reid adaptation to hit the screen and others are in the works.

Reid and her husband, Alex, adapted one of her early books, “One True Loves,” into a film that stars Phillipa Soo and Simu Liu and opens in theaters April 7. She has also written a screenplay with her best friend, which Kay Cannon (“Pitch Perfect”) is slated to direct.

Reid says she always knew she wanted to work in Hollywood and calls writing books “a happy accident.” She originally moved out to Los Angeles to work in casting, but when she wrote her first novel, “Forever Interrupte­d,” she knew that was what she was meant to do.

“I found this piece of myself I never anticipate­d,” she says. Now, to have Hollywood come calling for

her work, Reid says, is “really fun.”

This interview with Reid has been edited for clarity and length.

Q: You’ve said that your most recent novel, “Carrie Soto is Back,” is the last in your series of books about celebritie­s. Is that true? A: It’s not something that I come to easily. I ache to return to this world. I ache to return to each one of these books. I miss them when I’m done with them. And they never feel like they feel over for me. It always feels like an opportunit­y to go back to them is so welcome. But I have likened it a little bit to, you know, it’s senior year of high school and ... it’s important that we go expand and do other things and find new challenges. That is what I am planning to do. It is not because I’m ready to go as much as I just know it’s time.

Q: The character of Mick Riva, a playboy, smooth-talking crooner, shows up in each of those books. Why?

A: First and foremost, I write about women, and I’m interested in women, but women are very affected by the decisions of men and a lot of time women are left holding the bag. When men make the decisions that they do, that they sort of escape unscathed. There are a lot of men in our culture who keep making pretty big mistakes, and it doesn’t stick to them, but there are women behind those men dealing with the consequenc­es ... While I do write about women, I wanted to put forth a man who gets away with it. I know people hate him. And I know when they see his name in books, they get mad. But I want you to be mad because there are many, many, many Mick Rivas in the world. I think we would all do well to look out and see if we can spot any of them, because they’re getting away with a lot and they’re allowing the women around them to be the one to pick up the pieces, whether it’s Nina Riva or it’s

Evelyn Hugo or it’s Daisy Jones at a party or it’s Javier Soto finally being the person who calls them out. Not every man is Mick Riva, but there are a lot of Mick Rivas in the world.

Q: Do you agree that there was a change in tone to your writing from “Evelyn Hugo” on? If so, was it intentiona­l?

A: Absolutely. I’m not sure it was intentiona­l as much as it was honestly not too similar to how I feel now with the end of “Carrie Soto.” It was just time. I want to tackle new and different things, and it’s really wonderful when you find this pocket of creativity where you feel like, “Oh, I can live in this space for a little while, and I can tell a lot of stories here,” but I never want to stay at the party too long.

Q: “The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo” blew up in large part due to readers on Tiktok posting about it. What was that experience like for you?

A: You probably heard about it before me, because what happened to me was I’m sitting at my computer. I get an email from my agent with The New York Times list, and she’s like, “‘Evelyn Hugo’ just made The New York Times.” I yelled in my office, and my husband comes rushing in ... and I’m like, “I must be misunderst­anding this, right? Can you read this?” The book had come out many, many years before and had not hit the list when it first came out. My husband read it, and he’s like, “Nope, I think this is real. I think you’re understand­ing this.”

It took us probably two weeks to figure out how it had happened. Everyone kept going, “What led to this bump?” And I’m like, “I don’t know.” Then my manager, Brad, he goes, “I think it was something called Booktok.” I was like, “What’s that?” And he started showing me that there were all these young women talking about “Evelyn Hugo” on Tiktok. I felt very seen because

I’m very, very proud of that book and to have it take off with readers, especially young women, just felt really good.

Q: Netflix is adapting “Evelyn Hugo” into a film. Did you ever wonder how they’re going to fit a story of a woman who had seven husbands into a movie? A: I did. Then I read the script, and I’m not concerned, but I get it. I understand. It’s not dissimilar to the experience on “Daisy Jones.”

You have to pick the right people and trust them. Liz Tigelaar, who wrote the script, is a phenomenal talent, and I said, “I don’t know how you’re going to do this. I think you need to condense the story.” And she said, “No, I don’t.” ... And then she turns in the script, and I was like, “I was wrong. You were right.

You got it.”

Copyright 2023 by Amy Dickinson

Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency

Q: During the height of the pandemic you also wrote a screenplay with your best friend Ashley — who was not a writer prior to this — sold it, and Kay Cannon will direct. Not everyone would take a chance like that.

A: I grew up with very little, and I have so much more than I ever dreamed. I never thought people would read my books at this rate. I never thought that Hollywood would come calling. I have been so blessed that if all I’m doing is taking that in and I’m not using that light to bounce it on others, I’m not sure why I’m doing this.

 ?? CHRIS PIZZELLO/AP ?? Taylor Jenkins Reid, seen Feb. 22, and her husband adapted her book “One True Loves” into a film, out April 7.
CHRIS PIZZELLO/AP Taylor Jenkins Reid, seen Feb. 22, and her husband adapted her book “One True Loves” into a film, out April 7.

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