While Aimee’s character is questionable throughout the story, Macallister found her to be interesting and actually loved several things about her. “She made a lot of terrible decisions, but don’t we all? …I think particularly for the time in which she had what we would consider a pretty modern outlook about international travel and other cultures. She would travel to these places and she had that, sort of… ‘I don’t want to be tourist. I want to go live among the people and do what they do and understand them better because I am trying to be one of them,’ with the understanding you never can truly, but you learn more about other cultures by immersing yourself and not just going and pointing at the tallest mountain in Japan, so I loved that about her… I think she could’ve been a little bit smarter about her love affairs, and particularly the way that she tells things in her memoir, And I’d Do It Again. She was just falling left and right for like a whole bunch of terrible men, whether that’s true or not, I don’t know. Whether that’s part of the legend that she wanted to do, but if I had been her friend I would have definitely had some advice to give her…”
[I] research and then write, and then research again once I know what the shape of the book is… I find that the detail research has to be done after I’ve already written the book, but I don’t interrupt my writing in order to go find details anymore.”
If you obey all the rules, you miss all the fun.”
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