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Q. You write about Paris in such detail—we even get some advice on how to navigate a notoriously congested area: “The trick at the Arc de Triumphe is to stay in the outer ring of cars around the first half and then veer off quickly—as if shot from a cannon—over to the wide start of Victor Hugo.” How did you come to know the city so well?
A. Well I wrote my memoir, The Foremost Good Fortune, about the years I lived in Beijing, China, during the Olympics. In that book I decided to map Beijing really closely, almost obsessively, so that the city came very alive on the page. I’m completely interested in place and in locale in any narrative I encounter. I think place does an enormous amount of work to both contextualize and propel any story forward.
In Paris Was the Place I took my love of Paris and my minor in French in college and my experiences in the city (my junior year of college I lived very close to Avenue Victor Hugo for a time, and I’ve taken other trips to Paris as an adult) and tried to weave that all into the story so that the reader really believes he or she is in Paris. I also read a whole lot of other novels set in France.
My craziest Francophile moment came when I found myself making these gigantic maps of the Paris neighborhoods covered in my novel. I used indelible markers on poster board in my little rabbit warren of an office on the third floor of our old house, and I tried to recreate the streets that Willie and Macon walked on in Paris. These hand-scrawled maps were my blue print of the city. They’re almost illegible but they gave me access to the parts of the city I really had to make sure the novel rendered fully. I needed to make the maps to feel like I was there in Paris. Then I knew that the reader would (hopefully!) feel like they were there too.
Q. Tell us a bit about one of the book’s central issues: immigrant girls who have requested French asylum. What process must they go through, and what flaws are inherent to the system?
A. Immigration rights are buzz words these days. In the U.S. the media and the government are covering the unfolding new immigration bill in a relentless twenty-four news cycle. But what gets lost are the personal stories of youth immigrants—teens and pre-adolescents who make border crossings alone at night only to be caught up in an even bigger trauma, which is the judicial system.
I wanted to look hard at the stories of these immigrant teens. In my book, they are girls who arrive in France. But they could be boys or girls from any country, arriving unwanted in any nation. The teens’ journeys of escape from their home countries come at great expense. The media is now beginning to really talk about the human costs of incarcerating and deporting refugee teenagers and the great injustice being done to these kids. The biggest flaw that I see in asylum proceedings is that the cards are stacked against the refugee. Often the refugee never even makes it to a court of law where they can be heard. Instead their case is dismissed summarily on lack of evidence. But so often there’s no evidence because the detainee can’t speak the proper home language of the country they’ve been locked up inside, or they haven’t been given any storytelling tools and have never gone to school.
Rajiv, a good friend of the narrator’s, is an advisor to the asylum center in the novel and he’s fed up with the system. He finally starts to lose it during a scene in an Indian restaurant and yells, “No one knows what to do with teenage girls who can’t go back to their home countries but don’t have French passports…the French government says that every child in France is redeemable, even the ones who come illegally. But then they lock them up.”
Q. Why is it so important for these girls to learn to tell their stories? What compelled you to write about them?
A. Stories are what give us all a compass. They give us what I like to call emotional literacy. Stories are central to our life experience. I think we live our days in an endless loop of storytelling. We tell stories to ourselves, to our kids, and to friends and strangers. Stories are about the power of language to communicate some essential truths that we know about ourselves and our world.
In the novel, stories are essential to the girls at the asylum center. The storywriting itself helps keep the girls sane. It allows them a small departure from their locked up lives. They get to travel back in time. The stories are also key pieces in the machinations of the French justice system. When they tell their stories in court, the girls may be granted their freedom.
I was compelled to write about these girls when I began working with refugee teens and realized that so often the kids didn’t have access to their own stories. No one had ever said to them, “your story matters. I hear you. I see you. Let’s get something down on the page.” And the power of that—of getting to tell your own story—cannot be underestimated. I have seen it change so many lives. In the novel, the girls at the asylum center have to be able to tell the court where they’ve come from and what happened to them in their home countries that forced them to flee. If they can’t tell their own stories, then they have no chance of being allowed to stay in France.
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Book Description Soft Cover. Condition: new. Seller Inventory # 9780307739872
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Book Description Paperback. Condition: new. Paperback. ""Sensual and seductive, Paris Was the Place pulls you in and doesn't let you go. Find your nearest chair and start reading. With her poet's eye, Conley has woven a vivid, masterful tale of love and its costs." -Lily King, author of Father of the Rain"When Willie Pears arrives in Paris, she's looking for adventure and to reconnect with her brother, Luke. Even so, when she takes a job teaching at a center for immigrant girls who are all hoping for French asylum, she does not expect to feel so connected to the ups and downs of their lives-or to find romance with their attractive and committed lawyer, Macon. But as Willie learns the girls' histories, the lines between teaching and mothering quickly begin to blur, leading her to make a risky move that will threaten to upend the life and relationships she's found. Shipping may be from multiple locations in the US or from the UK, depending on stock availability. Seller Inventory # 9780307739872
Book Description Condition: New. pp. 368. Seller Inventory # 2697026779
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Book Description Condition: New. Num Pages: 352 pages. BIC Classification: FA. Category: (G) General (US: Trade). Dimension: 134 x 204 x 21. Weight in Grams: 288. . 2014. Paperback. . . . . Seller Inventory # V9780307739872
Book Description Condition: New. Num Pages: 352 pages. BIC Classification: FA. Category: (G) General (US: Trade). Dimension: 134 x 204 x 21. Weight in Grams: 288. . 2014. Paperback. . . . . Books ship from the US and Ireland. Seller Inventory # V9780307739872
Book Description Paperback. Condition: Brand New. reprint edition. 353 pages. 8.25x5.25x0.75 inches. In Stock. Seller Inventory # 0307739872