While we do find out the protagonist’s name, it’s rarely mentioned throughout the book. Walley shared that this was done intentionally. “I’m always straddling with, ‘Is it real or is it not? Is it in her mind?’ because it has many magical things going on, unrealistic things. Like, when she meets that man who gives her a heart, you know, glass heart…. her mind is the real thing, but… I wanted to keep it in the imagination.” As far as similarities, Walley does share some commonalities with the heroine. “Well, what is similar to me is she’s a writer in New York and she seems to be editing and writing stuff for other people, as I do, and she… I wrote it during Covid so basically I had a desire to leave, but I couldn’t, so I decided to imagine it all. She’s like me in temperament, and she’s like me in imagination, I guess, obviously, but I have never run off to the coast of England and I’ve never met the characters that I meet there…. unfortunately, I quite like them, and so that part is not true. Some of the stuff that she internally wrestles with, obviously, is a bit true… I think we pick subjects that we like to wrestle with.”
With other novels, I kind of knew what I was doing. With this one, I let it go and let it happen on the page.”
You find peace not by rearranging the circumstances of your life, but by realizing who you are at the deepest level.”
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