Revisiting Berkeley Scenes from Boundaries: A Love Story

Cave at Indian Rock Park in Berkeley

Cave at Indian Rock Park in Berkeley

I recently strolled around north Berkeley with my friend Lois on a sunny Saturday afternoon, revisiting a neighborhood where I lived several years ago. I took photos of some of the places that became settings for a number of scenes in my debut novelBoundaries: A Love Story. Some of the places Kaia and Mark frequent in the story are depicted in the photographs included here: Indian Rock ParkSolano Avenue in north Berkeley, and the pathways and neighborhoods near UC Berkeley, where Kaia’s father is a professor at Boalt School of LawIndian Rock Park is still a popular spot for locals and visitors to do some rock climbing, and for young people to gather at night.

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Solano Avenue in Berkeley

Solano Avenue in Berkeley

Pathway in north Berkeley

Pathway in north Berkeley

Indian Rock Park in north Berkeley

Indian Rock Park in north Berkeley

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Burial Rites: a new novel about murder and capital punishment in 19th century Iceland

Burial Rites is brilliantly written by  Hannah Kent, a 27-year-old Australian author who lived in Iceland as a 17-year-old and later returned to Iceland to research the historical subject matter of the book. It’s the story of an Icelandic woman in the early 19th century convicted of a murder of which she may be innocent and her life as she waits execution. Hannah Kent‘s descriptions are wonderful, and she succeeds in creating a rare book that is both literary and riveting. I met her at Bookshop Santa Cruz, where she gave a fascinating talk and read an excerpt. If you have a chance to hear her speak, be sure to take the opportunity, and read this wonderful novel!

As a former attorney representing Death Row and other inmates convicted of murder, I was particularly interested in Hannah Kent‘s book. The novel I’m currently writing deals with the death penalty in California and the ethical and personal issues faced by a female attorney preparing the appeal for a convicted murderer. The last person executed in Iceland was the woman who is the subject of  Burial Rites

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Kissing Cousins

Check out this post on famous cousins in love throughout history. It says that currently 1 in 1,000 marriages in the US are between first cousins. Could that be accurate? What do you think?

 

http://www.babble.com/entertainment/15-famous-kissing-cousins-throughout-history/

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CAREER AND MOTHERHOOD?

In Lynn Messina’s recent article in the New York Times, “Chained to the Hearth or Warmed by It?” she addresses the issue of motherhood vs. career, a question related to the hotly debated Lean InLean Out controversy first named by Sheryl Sandberg in her book, Leaning In (about the challenges faced by women wanting a successful career). Messina writes that she was reluctant to have children but was persuaded when her husband agreed to do 85% of the parenting until their prospective child was a teenager. She concedes that her husband has done more than his share of house cleaning and parenting, especially given his demanding job, and she proclaims that the arrangement has turned out to be “an amazing liberation” for her. “All I have to do is be with [my son]: no work, no e-mail, no telephone calls, no guilt.” Motherhood seems to provide an escape for her from career-related responsibilities (she is a part-time copy editor and novelist); nowhere does she mention, however, the joy and amazement of nurturing a young son and watching him grow and change.

In my new novel, Boundaries: A Love Story, coming out in October, the young protagonist, Kaia Matheson, has strong views regarding motherhood: she vows to have children and never to leave them, a more deeply felt instinct than any desire, at least at the age of sixteen, to have a successful career. She evolves from a teenager feeling abandoned by her workaholic mother (who has moved from Berkeley to Manhattan in furtherance of her high-powered job), into a young woman who engages in an imprudent but profound  love affair and  must decide how much compromise regarding her career path she is willing to make for the sake of this relationship and eventually for motherhood.

Read the New York Times article at http://tinyurl.com/mje3ltc and let me know your thoughts about this very relevant topic in women’s and men’s lives.

 

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Opening scene from Boundaries: A Love Story

The following is the opening scene of my new novel, Boundaries: A Love Story, to be released in Fall 2013:

PART ONE

PINE TREE ISLAND

CAPE COD

SUMMER 1980

1

Afraid she’d been forgotten, Kaia Matheson stepped onto the dock and searched for the boat that was supposed to take her across the channel to Pine Tree Island. Though it was early July on the Cape, the air was cold and damp, and she shivered, hugging her arms in the buffeting wind. Bulging, steel-gray clouds hung in the sky, casting shadows over the choppy waves. She could barely make out the island, obscured in the distance by a white haze.

During the long taxi ride from the Boston airport to the Cape Cod dock, she’d pictured her mother waiting for her at the dock, but when the driver had finally pulled into the gravel lot, no one was there, and it caused an ache in the pit of her stomach; the only car in the lot was a rusted old Saab. Kaia had asked the taxi driver to wait for her until someone came to take her across the channel—he’d snorted in exasperation before turning off the engine.

Now, shifting from one foot to the other to warm herself, she wished she’d worn jeans instead of shorts for the plane trip. Luckily she was wearing her denim jacket. At last she spotted a small boat bucking against the waves, its male occupant rowing in the direction of the dock, and as the boat came closer, she saw that the man appeared to be using his entire strength against the water’s pull. There was a quality of fierceness, an emphatic  determination in his rowing, that made her recognize her cousin, Mark Karadonis.

When he glanced in her direction, she waved, and he continued to lever his upper body resolutely against the waves. She hadn’t seen him in eight years; he would be twenty-two now, a grown man, she realized nervously, and more or less a stranger to her.

She jogged back to the taxi and paid the driver. He drove off, the tires flinging gravel behind the car, as if in reproach.  Returning to the dock, Kaia watched as Mark rowed toward her, and her disappointment at not seeing her mother fell away. When the boat pulled alongside the dock, he stood up, appearing flushed and exhilarated, and grabbed onto a post. Despite the gloom of the afternoon, he was wearing dark shades. A slight growth of beard shadowed the lower half of his face. It amazed her, how tall he was—six feet at least—and massive in the shoulders. When she’d last seen him, he was fourteen and she was eight; she remembered him as rather wild and disobedient—often getting into trouble with his dad—and she’d admired the way Mark seemed to get away with so much.

“There’s a stiff southwesterly,” he said, without any preliminaries, staring at her through his dark glasses.

He was a man, she would learn, who didn’t put much stock in preliminaries. She hesitated a moment, thinking he might offer a hand, but he merely motioned for her to come down, as if he expected a teenage girl to know everything about boats and how to board them. But she sensed a certain restraint in the way he simply watched her, his arms tensed at his sides, as if ready to assist if needed, and this pleased her.

Kaia tossed her duffel bag to him, peering into the algae-green seawater. She stepped gingerly into the boat, causing it to rock unnervingly. Mark reached out and clasped his fingers firmly around her upper arm until she was steady on her feet. He stepped back and did a quick scan of her from her bare legs upward, stopping for a second at her midriff, which was partially exposed beneath her halter top. She buttoned her jacket, her    fingers trembling, then looked up to study his face, his expression hard to read behind the sunglasses. His arms and legs were padded with muscle, his legs sunburnt; he didn’t appear to be the slightest bit cold in his tank top and cut-offs—he was probably used to the cool summer weather here.

She sat down, and he took a seat on the opposite bench. As he pushed off from the dock, she wondered why he wasn’t using the outboard motor; but she didn’t ask, afraid to expose her ignorance.

“California tan,” he commented, flashing a grin at her. “New denims, too,” he added, indicating with a nod her shorts and jacket.

Embarrassed by his scrutiny, she turned her head to the side as the boat moved out onto the waves. “I’m naturally dark,” was all she could think to say.

It would have been easier if her father had flown here with her; she wouldn’t have been so anxious, waiting alone at the dock. Of course he hadn’t been invited, because of the divorce. She’d promised to call him when she arrived at Logan Airport but had forgotten in her frantic search for a taxi. And there would be no phone at the cottage on Pine Tree. She would have to send him a postcard later—otherwise he would be upset about not hearing from her.

Glancing at her cousin, she was sorry she couldn’t see his eyes behind the shades. Her mother had once remarked that Mark’s eyes were as blue as glaciers, exactly like Kaia’s. People always noticed Kaia’s eye color, apparently her one remarkable feature.

“I guess you were the only one who was available to row over to get me.” She cocked her head, trying for a disdainful look, but a gust of wind blew her long hair into a tangle over her face, spoiling the intended effect. She wished she were more in  control, the way Mark was, pulling the oars through the water with such sturdy competence.

“My father’s out boating with my buddy, Monty, so I was the only one around. I don’t mind, though. I like to be out on the water when it’s like this.”

She silently watched him row for a few minutes, then said, “I heard you graduated from Boston University.”

“Yep. Monty and I are both headed for law school in the fall.”

“Dad said you’ll be in Berkeley, going to Boalt.”

“Right. But for now I’m just trying to enjoy the summer while I can. I’m not looking forward to the grind of studying again.” He was quiet for a minute, then broke into a grin. “Last time I saw you, your dad was giving you a spanking.”

“Oh, my God.” It was the summer the Karadonises had come to Berkeley, when she was eight. Her uncle and her father had been lounging on the deck that day, drinking beer and smoking, and Kaia had grabbed her dad’s cigarette pack from his hand and run into the yard with it. Her father had yelled at Mark, who was up in the tree house, to go get her. Mark, a lanky teenager then, had jumped down and begun chasing Kaia through the high grass. When he caught her, he half-dragged, half-carried her over to the deck while she screamed and struggled. Her father reached for her, pried the cigarette pack from her fist, swung her over his knees and slapped her bottom hard a few times while Mark and his father watched.

“I thought I could make Dad quit smoking,” she said, trying for a sardonic tone. “They must have been drunk. It was awful.” Where had her mother and aunt been? They’d never once come outside, hadn’t been around when the men got boisterous. After the humiliation of the spanking, Kaia had been wary, though        intrigued, whenever the men were out on the deck; she always sensed she was in for something when she got too close. She’d been drawn to them out of curiosity, she supposed . . . or was it just boredom? At least her father hadn’t spanked her in front of the relatives again.

“Don’t worry,” Mark said now, barely suppressing a grin. “We won’t try anything like that here. As long as you behave.”

“That’s not funny, Mark. I’m sixteen, you know.”

She leaned over the side and dragged her fingers through the slick saltwater. Where had he learned to tease like that? He didn’t have any brothers or sisters. It was the only thing the two of them had in common—their lack of siblings—except, of course, that their mothers were sisters.

“Where’s my mother, by the way?” she asked, making her hand resist the pull of the water.

“Back at the house with Elisa, drinking iced tea on the porch.”

Kaia lifted her hand from the water and shook it off. She wondered why he’d referred to his mother as Elisa. “Why didn’t my mom come with you?” she asked.

“Jean doesn’t like boating.”

“I suppose that’s true. She likes tennis and golf. Better for business.”

Mark kept his eyes on her, no doubt catching the bitterness in her tone. He looked away and maneuvered the boat over a large swell, then once they were in a calmer stretch of water, he glanced at her and said, “You haven’t seen your mom in a while, have you?”

Startled by his bluntness, Kaia glanced down, focusing on his hands as he rowed; they were an older person’s hands, thick and wide with prominent veins. Still avoiding his gaze, she raised her eyes to the brown tufts of hair sprouting from beneath his tank top. She wasn’t willing  to admit it had been six months since she’d seen her mother—as if that were her own fault.

It was sickening, how swiftly her mother had managed to get a divorce, then relocate to Manhattan—a move she’d claimed would “present more opportunities,” whatever that meant. Kaia recalled her mother standing at the curb beside the taxicab, briefcase in hand, waving good-bye. Her mother had promised to keep in close contact, but of course it hadn’t turned out that way. There had been the sporadic phone calls, and then finally in June her mom had mentioned she was spending a couple of weeks at Cape Cod and didn’t suppose Kaia could fly out on her own.

Kaia remembered how quickly she’d jumped at the offhand invitation—how pitiful. Now she wondered what she could have done to be more exciting, engaging enough to keep her mother’s interest. Even with her father around, their house felt empty. What would have made her mother stay?

Kaia wondered, too, what could possibly make her return.

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BIPOLAR DISORDER IN FICTION AND LIFE

Bipolar disorder, or manic depression (as it was more commonly known a couple of decades ago), is a subject coming to the forefront as more people are diagnosed and treated in a variety of ways. Real Simple features an article in the August 2013 issue, “A Change of Mind”, about how the disorder affects a person’s own life, family, and relationships, http://preview.tinyurl.com/jvhqveu, and O Magazine similarly features an article in the August 2013 issue, “A Saner Approach?” http://oprah.com, about new treatment options, and an interesting grassroots movement called Mad Pride.

Bipolar disorder and manic depression also feature in contemporary fiction, especially psychological fiction. In my new novel, Boundaries: A Love Story, to be released in Fall 2013, one of the characters suffers from manic depression. Her illness and how it was treated by both the medical profession and by her dysfunctional family in the 1980’s, when the novel takes place, is central to the storyline. Elisa is one of the most sympathetic characters in the book, affected by the events and the madness surrounding her. See novel excerpt at http://czmason.com

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Leaning Out: Getting off the Treadmill

Another view on Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg’s recommendation to put more time and  energy into your job in order to move up in the business world (Leaning In) comes from Money magazine in an article by Elaine Pofeldt, Lean Out. She suggests men and women in the workplace ask themselves whether, “. . . depending on what you want and where you are in your life, you’d actually be better off leaning out, directing your best efforts into fulfilling career and personal priorities that you, not your employer, have set. . . . Many people just want to get off the treadmill and have a more satisfying life.”

This idea, of taking into account one’s personal life and relationships, along with career aspirations, is a theme that runs through much of my fiction, including my short stories and especially my forthcoming novel, Boundaries: A Love Story as well as the novel I’m currently writing (Valhalla). In all of my stories the characters face conflicts between their personal lives and the demands of work, and try to find a satisfying solution, which often involves compromise and rethinking values.

Evaluate how you invest your time,” Pofeldt recommends, which is just what Natalya, the protagonist in my new novel is starting to do when, after a harrowing visit to her Death Row client, thinks, “You have to be careful how you spend yourself.”   CNNMoney.com  July 2013

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21st Century Fiction

I’m reading a great book by Donald Maass: Writing 21st Century Fiction: High Impact Techniques for Exceptional Storytelling (2012), which was recommended to me by a writer friend. The thrust of the book is the death of genre, and transcending genre conventions. He has many approaches toward creating compelling fiction that is personal and original. I’ve also just finished reading Kate Atkinson’s Case Histories, which is a beautifully written family story combined with a mystery, but focused more on family dynamics. I’m now reading her Life After Life, which is more experimental (time travel aspects, etc.) but focused again on family dynamics. I think these are examples of what Maass is talking about in his new book on writing.

The novel I’m writing now (I’m about halfway through the first draft) may appear at first glance to be a legal thriller, but as I focus on the main character, Natalya Findlay, a young lawyer, I realize that it’s primarily about her grieving the death of her husband and deciding what she wants from life. There’s also the theme of motherhood vs. career, mixed with the legal/crime aspects of the story. So it’s about idealism and disillusionment, and rethinking  values in one’s thirties, especially after a traumatic event. The novel also involves capital punishment, which is still in effect in California, where the story takes place, and which is of course a controversial topic in the U.S.

So my new novel is not a genre crime thriller; it’s a blend of things, and I hope it will appeal to a wide audience, especially readers of mainstream and literary fiction, but also to readers who enjoy stories involving legal cases and crime. Likewise, Boundaries, which my agent is now marketing, is a blend of literary fiction and a non-genre love story.

 

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The Mommy Wars and Boundaries

The Mommy Wars Rage On, as evidenced in the feature article in the latest issue of More magazine (April 2013). Stay-at-home mothers battle it out with mothers in the workplace, and it’s been going on for decades. In my upcoming novel, Boundaries, which takes place in the 1980’s, the conflict is between a workaholic mother and her daughter, who as an adult, faces the challenge of a meaningful career while raising a young child. Is compromise possible, and how much should a woman give up in order to spend more time with her children? What about men—what kind of compromises in lifestyle and career advancement are they willing and able to make when they are parents? Can women see eye-to-eye on this fraught subject? These questions run throughout my novel about cousins who fall in love. Read the article in More and see if anything hits a nerve.http://www.more.com/reinvention-money/careers/why-mommy-wars-rage-0

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Downton Abbey and Cousins in Love

In the enormously popular PBS series, Downton Abbey, cousins Mary and Matthew fall in love and eventually marry. In England through the time of Downton Abbeyit wasn’t unusual for cousins to marry, and many of the Jane Austen novels involved cousins marrying. Many countries and about a third of the American states allow marriage between first cousins. It’s become more controversial in recent years because of the slight genetic risks involved.

In the opening scene of Boundaries, there is a hint of attraction between 16-year-old Kaia and her 22-year old cousin Mark which develops into something more. Through their story and the interwoven subplots,  Boundaries tracks the conflict between personal desire and societal expectations.

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