Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

IT STARTS WITH A BIG QUESTION

THE APPALACHIA­N AUTHOR ON BUILDING A STORY AND TAKING ON THE OPIOID EPIDEMIC

- BY MEREDITH MARAN

IN 19 8 8 , a friend passed me her tubbubbled copy of Barbara Kingsolver’s first novel, “The Bean Trees.” The book had me at Line 1. “I have been afraid of putting air in a tire,” Kingsolver wrote, “ever since I saw a tractor tire blow up and throw Newt Hardbine’s father over the top of the Standard Oil sign.” ¶ “The Bean Trees” was a surprise hit, clearing a path for its author, then 34, to spend the next three decades racking up bestseller­s, melding elegantly crafted, straightfo­rward prose with complex characters, politics and plots. Her 1998 novel “The Poisonwood Bible” was an Oprah Book Club pick and a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize. Founder and funder of the Bellwether Prize for Socially Engaged Fiction, Kingsolver has also authored two books each of essays and poetry and three nonfiction works.¶ A former biologist raised in Kentucky, Kingsolver

tends to bind her writing to the dirt beneath her feet. During her years living in Tucson, her palette was the red Southwest soil. Since moving in 2004 to southern Virginia, she has set two books there: “Animal, Vegetable, Miracle,” a polemical account of her family’s year as locavore farmers; and now, “Demon Copperhead,” a contempora­ry reimaginin­g of Dickens’ “David Copperfiel­d.” Last Tuesday it was made an Oprah pick as well.

As usual, Kingsolver’s 10th novel gives voice to her political positions — in this case, Big Pharma’s opioid assault on Appalachia­ns. “Copperhead” is a compelling exposé of the twisted cruelties that make Kingsolver’s real-life neighbors susceptibl­e to addiction’s grip: abject poverty, the broken social services and public school systems, the agricultur­al-industrial complex, “hillbilly” stereotypi­ng and the devaluatio­n of human skills other than football (boys) and “putting out” (girls). Layered and multidimen­sional, her characters’ quirks and strivings shine a light on the wrongs that wound and thwart them.

The novel’s protagonis­t is the redheaded, artistical­ly gifted, stunningly resilient Damon, a.k.a Demon, born in a trailer to a teenager whose addiction quickly overtakes her capacity to provide maternal care. From Kingsolver’s trademark gut-punch of a first sentence — “First, I got myself born” — we follow Damon through 560 pages of what “growing up” looks like for a kid whose external resources amount to less than zero.

Because she cares about a lot of things, Kingsolver knows about a lot of things. “Demon Copperhead” is a characterd­riven novel, its narrative arc convoluted by more potholes and switchback­s than a country road. Yet the book is also packed with so much informatio­n that Kingsolver could have shifted her lens from people to problems and called it journalism instead. Consumer warning: If you don’t want to trade in your beliefs for the truth about Appalachia and its people, avoid this book.

But if you agree with Kingsolver’s fans, including me, and the National Endowment for the Humanities, which awarded Kingsolver our nation’s highest honor for service through the arts, our email conversati­on — edited for length and clarity — is for you.

Do you have a secret method for sucking the reader into the vortex of your imaginatio­n?

My secret is boring: I spend thousands of hours with my hands on a keyboard. At the end of a first draft, I go back and write it all again, and again, with a better sense each time of where I’m headed. I read it all aloud to myself. Every sentence gets revised until it feels perfect to me, even if that takes 50 tries. The ridiculous thing is, I love every minute of this. I love the characters, the world-building and that huge, heady feeling of bringing home an ending as if I’m landing an aircraft. Maybe that’s the secret to any success: to chase a vocation you can embrace so hard, you’ll give it your absolute everything. And feel lucky to do it.

What comes first when you’re creating a novel? The issues? The characters? The plot?

My novels always start the same way: with a question. It needs to be a big question — worrisome, complicate­d, relevant — because look, I’m asking you to put down your life for a while and hear me out. I devise a plot that will make this question manifest and invent all the characters I need to serve my plot.

What was the big question behind “Demon Copperhead”?

Right now we need to talk about the opioid epidemic, a calculated exploit by Purdue Pharma that has left us with a generation of damaged and orphaned kids. How did this plague of prescripti­on drug abuse come here, what made us vulnerable, how is it connected with history, how have Appalachia­n people been kept poor on purpose? Huge questions, no easy answers. My job is to make sure you enjoy the time we spend walking around in there, watching lives, listening to creative language, seeing things from fresh angles. That’s what literature can do.

How did you build your plot and characters to ser ve that question?

I spent years looking for a way into this story that could get past hillbilly-drug-user prejudices and dig into a deeper emotional landscape. The solution came to me via Charles Dickens. Orphaned kids and institutio­nal poverty were totally his wheelhouse. “David Copperfiel­d” is so grim. How did he pull it off? Through the urgent, unbearable truthtelli­ng of the child himself. I decided to let that kid tell the story: David Copperfiel­d, my version, nicknamed Copperhead because he’s a redhead and slightly dangerous. His funny, pissed-off voice came alive and refused to shut up until I gave him his due.

Damon strikes me as your bravest, most ambitious creation yet. How did your life in Appalachia impact his character?

This novel exists because I’m Appalachia­n and fed up with the way mainstream media portray us as dumb jokes or objects of pity. (If we show up at all.) I’m committed to honest representa­tion of the beauty and complexity of this place.

Were you concerned that your characteri­zation of the addicts in the novel might contribute to stereotype­s about Appalachia­ns?

The bedrock of Appalachia is community, and my portrait of it is a complex ecosystem of roles and personalit­ies: Even the addicted teen mom is more nuanced than a stereotype, as I hope readers will see. This story has philosophe­rs, narcissist­s, caretakers, opportunis­ts, teachers and artists of many kinds. We’re some of everything in Appalachia. We have startling geniuses and sadly damaged brains. If I had to generalize, I would say we’re just shorter on resources than people in other regions — and longer on resourcefu­lness.

Do you consider the marketabil­ity of a book as you’re conceiving it?

I don’t really worry about being marketable, but I think every minute about staying accessible. Characters have to be as vivid as your own friends. Scenes have to be visible to your mind’s eye. Plot has to be like gravity, a constant, pulling on you to turn every page. And since ebook readers can sample before they buy, I’ve got to get all this done in the first 30 pages. Now, even a novel has to elevator-pitch itself !

Maran is the author of a dozen books, including “The New Old Me” and “Why We Write.”

 ?? HarperColl­ins ?? A NEW novel by Barbara Kingsolver aims to show the complexity and beauty of her beloved Appalachia.
HarperColl­ins A NEW novel by Barbara Kingsolver aims to show the complexity and beauty of her beloved Appalachia.
 ?? Evan Kafka ??
Evan Kafka

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