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Authors: Lisa Ballantyne

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BOOK: Everything She Forgot
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Songs

“And I Love You So,” by Don McLean, 1970,
Tapestry
, writer Don McLean, label Mediarts.

“I've Been Loving You Too Long,” by Otis Redding, 1965,
Otis Blue: Otis Redding Sings Soul
, writers Otis Redding and Jerry Butler, label Volt/Atco.

“Like a Virgin,” by Madonna, 1984,
Like a Virgin,
writers Tom Kelly and Billy Steinberg, label Sire Records.

“Save All Your Kisses for Me,” by Brotherhood of Man, 1976,
Love and Kisses from Brotherhood of Man
; writers Tony Hiller, Lee Sheriden, and Martin Lee; label Pye Records.

“Song Sung Blue,” by Neil Diamond, 1972,
Hot August Night
, writers Neil Diamond and Leon Russell, label MCA, Universal.

“Sweet Caroline,” by Neil Diamond, 1968,
Brother Love's Traveling Salvation Show
, writer Neil Diamond, label Uni Records.

P.S. Insights, Interviews & More . . . *

About the author

Meet Lisa Ballantyne

About the book

Q&A with Lisa Ballantyne

Reading Group Questions

Read on

Books on My Shelf

About the author

Meet Lisa Ballantyne

LISA BALLANTYNE
was born in Armadale, West Lothian, Scotland, and studied English Literature at University of St. Andrews. She lived and worked in China for many years and started writing seriously while she was there. Her first novel,
The Guilty One,
has been translated into more than twenty-five languages, long-listed for the International IMPAC Dublin Literary Award, and short-listed for an Edgar Allan Poe Award.
The Guilty One
was also the autumn 2012 Richard and Judy Book Club winner.
Everything She Forgot
is her new novel.

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About the book

Q&A with Lisa Ballantyne

Both
Everything She Forgot
, and your first novel,
The Guilty One
, deal with questions of nature vs. nurture. Do you believe one plays a more important role than the other?

I think the interplay between nature and nurture and free will is endlessly fascinating, and I continue to hope for the power of human choice to overcome, but oftentimes this proves futile. George and his family of Glaswegian gangsters came to me instinctively. I was attracted to the idea of someone growing up amid great violence but refusing to be inured, broken by it. George is an example of the tragic questing hero, struggling to escape his environment and, to a large extent, himself, but who ultimately fails. I think George is the soul of this novel, and his failure is heartbreaking.

What was the first creative seed for
Everything She Forgot
? Did a character or a storyline come to you first?

When I first began to work on
Everything She Forgot,
I was interested in post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and the mechanism of memories from the past impacting on the present. The first scene of the book—involving the car crash and the strange savior—came to me quite quickly and I knew that the burned man who rescues Margaret would be the key to her past. In writing the 1980s scenes, I knew I wanted to write about a man who steals his daughter and for the journey they took to be a redemptive one, spanning the whole country. I wanted the relationship between father and daughter to gradually soften as the road trip progresses, from one of captor and captive to one of genuine affection and love.

Did any of your initial ideas change as you wrote?

In the early beginnings of the novel, the father-abductor that I sketched was too harsh and faceless and I had trouble with the relationship between him and his stolen daughter. I started over, and concentrated on George himself, his past and what he had been through to take him to the point where he would want to steal his daughter after all these years. It was then that Big George was born and I fell in love with him straightaway.

Children play an important role in your books, why do you think that is?

In my writing, I always return to relationships between parents and children because they are such fertile ground. Families in general are a wonderful resource for novelists, but children in particular are interesting because their personalities are still developing.

I was also interested in the child, Moll, teaching her newfound father something—as all children are important teachers of adults. It was then that I hit on the idea of George being illiterate because of the institutional violence that he had experienced at school. Moll's patient teaching not only liberates George but also repairs some of the damage that was done in his past.

You grew up in the eighties like Moll. What, if anything was taken from your own memories of childhood at that time?

I enjoyed plundering my memory for the quirky details of those times, such as the insalubrious Tennent's lager cans with the underwear models on the side. The ubiquitous powder-blue Volkswagen camper van that features in the road trip was something I remembered from childhood, as close family friends used to transport their seven children around in an olive-colored VW. It was fun for me to revisit those years, with real telephones and telephone directories, and Angel Delight desserts.

Do characters ever take you by surprise while you are writing?

The scene where the teenage George and his loan shark father visit a debtor on a building site was an interesting one to write. It was one of the rare occasions when a character takes over and I as the writer watched the scene I was writing unfold. I knew George intimately, and I knew that he couldn't do what his father was demanding of him. The outcome of the scene was George's only choice and so he made it for me.

Did you ever imagine the book ending another way?

It is hard for both the writer and her readers when the hero dies at the end of the book, and for me I wanted to literally bring George back to life—not just as he had become, but as he had been, all those years ago, in the dark recesses of Margaret's memory. Ghosts are tricky to render if not infrequent in novels, but the ghost's manifestation at the end
of Everything She Forgot
is exactly how one of my aunts described her husband appearing to her, soon after he died. It was an image that has always stayed with me and so I chose it for the ending of my novel. It seemed right that the love between my main characters would survive in some tangible way.

Reading Group Questions

   
1. Memory plays a significant role in this book; in what ways does it inform identity? Do you think even the things you don't remember can affect who you become?

   
2. Big George wants desperately to change his path, and yet can't seem to stay on the right side of the law. Do you believe people can change, that they can escape the circumstances they come from?

   
3. How do the events of the “road trip” affect George? How do they shape Moll's future?

   
4. Have you ever been in a bad accident? Did it change anything for you?

   
5. The novel involves a road trip from the most northern point of the UK to its southern tip, from John o' Groats to Land's End. How does that relate to the journey that each of the characters undertakes?

   
6. How does the book comment on the relationship between parents and children?

   
7. Which character did you sympathize most with, and why?

   
8. This novel is written almost as if it were a fairy tale or a fable. What do you think the author is trying to say?

   
9. Everything She Forgot
was published in the UK under the title
Redemption Road.
What would you have called this book, and why?

  
10. Would you have given the story a different ending?

Read on

Books on My Shelf

The Complete Poems of John Donne

Dear Life
by Alice Munro

Gilead
by Marilynne Robinson

The Humans
by Matt Haig

The Human Stain
by Philip Roth

Lisey's Story
by Stephen King

The Little Friend
by Donna Tartt

The Rainbow
by D. H. Lawrence

Rapture
by Carol Ann Duffy

The Rebel
by Albert Camus

The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde
by Robert Louis Stevenson

Tamburlaine Must Die
by Louise Welsh

What I Talk About When I Talk About Running
by Haruki Murakami

Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance
by Robert M. Pirsig

Discover great authors, exclusive offers, and more at
hc.com
.

Credits

Cover design by Mumtaz Mustafa

Cover photograph © by Christian Plochacki / Plainpicture

Copyright

A trade paperback edition of this book was published in 2015 by Hachette UK.

This is a work of fiction. The characters, incidents, and dialogue are drawn from the author's imagination and are not to be construed as real. Any resemblance to actual events or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

P.S.™ is a trademark of HarperCollins Publishers.

EVERYTHING SHE FORGOT.
Copyright © 2015 by Lisa Ballantyne. All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the nonexclusive, nontransferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on-screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, decompiled, reverse-engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereafter invented, without the express written permission of HarperCollins e-books.

FIRST WILLIAM MORROW EDITION PUBLISHED 2015.

ISBN 978-0-06-239148-3

EPub Edition OCTOBER 2015 ISBN 9780062391490

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BOOK: Everything She Forgot
7.2Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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