The Biographies of Ordinary People by Nicole Dieker

My second guest today is Nicole Dieker, author of The Biographies of Ordinary People, a two-volume series telling the story of one family over three decades. You can find an extract from Volume 1 below along with a fascinating guest post from Nicole about her inspiration for the book.

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TheBiographiesofOrdinaryPeopleAbout the Book

The Biographies of Ordinary People is the story of the Gruber family: Rosemary and Jack, and their daughters Meredith, Natalie, and Jackie. The two-volume series begins in July 1989, on Rosemary’s thirty-fifth birthday; it ends in November 2016, on Meredith’s thirty-fifth birthday. When the Grubers move to a small Midwestern town so Jack can teach music at a local college, each family member has an idea of who they might become. Jack wants to foster intellectual curiosity in his students. Rosemary wants to be “the most important person in her own life for the length of an afternoon.” Meredith wants to model herself after the girls she’s read about in books: Betsy Ray, Pauline Fossil, Jo March. Natalie wants to figure out how she’s different from her sisters—and Jackie, the youngest, wants to sing. Set against the past thirty years of social and cultural changes, this story of family, friendship, and artistic ambition takes us into intimately familiar experiences: putting on a play, falling out with a best friend, getting dial-up internet for the first time. Drinking sparkling wine out of a paper cup on December 31, 1999 and wondering what will happen next.

Format: ebook Publisher: Pronoun Pages: 378
Publication: 23rd May 2017 Genre: Fiction

Purchase Links*
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*links provided for convenience, not as part of any affiliate programme

Find The Biographies of Ordinary People on Goodreads


Guest Post: ‘Why I Wrote The Biographies of Ordinary People’ by Nicole Dieker

I don’t know about you, but I grew up reading novels that followed girls’ lives from childhood to adulthood: Little House on the Prairie, Anne of Green Gables, Ballet Shoes, Betsy-Tacy, Little Women. Although I read voraciously, in all genres, I kept coming back to these stories of girls growing up – even after I had grown up myself.

I used these novels as guides: I studied Pauline Fossil’s audition experiences before trying out for plays and read about Betsy Ray’s first dance before attending mine. When I got my first full-time job, I went back to Little Town on the Prairie and comforted myself with the knowledge that Laura Ingalls had also felt as shocked as I was; the repetition, the querulous bosses, the outside world that was now only glimpsed in sunrise and twilight.

So I knew, for years, that I wanted to write a book like that—but I wanted to set it in a contemporary time period.

The Biographies of Ordinary People tells the story of three sisters—Meredith, Natalie, and Jackie Gruber—growing up at the turn of the millennium. The book is not autobiography, but it draws from many of my own experiences. I grew up in a small Midwestern town, my parents were both musicians, and my life was as ordinary as Meredith’s: I went to the library, I acted out imagined narratives with my sister and my friends, I wrote stories.

Like Meredith—and like Pauline, Betsy, Anne, and Jo—I was also ambitious. The first volume of The Biographies of Ordinary People is about childhood, family, and learning who you might want to become. The second volume is about working towards those ambitions. I include the first chapter of Volume Two at the end of Volume One because it sets the tone for what is coming next: Meredith, about to graduate from college, asking a professor why they’ve only studied the lives of famous artists.

“Everything we’ve studied—in theater, and in my English classes, and in art history and music history and everything else—has been about famous people.”

“Okay,” Gina said, smiling. Sometimes Meredith looked at her and saw the person she hoped she might become, smart and calm and patient in an office surrounded by bookshelves that reached up to the ceiling. Meredith expected she would have students someday—it was one of the better ways for artists and writers to make money—and she thought about what she would put in her own office. The students who came to visit her might see all the books, memorize the titles, and look them up later, just like she had done.

“And then when we go to the library it’s the same thing. There are all these biographies of famous people and how they lived their lives, but most of us aren’t going to be famous. It’s like we’ve gotten these models for life that aren’t applicable.” Meredith didn’t need to think about how to phrase her thoughts, because she had planned them out before she climbed the stairs. “We’ve learned about all of these well-known artists and how they did their work, but we don’t ever study how the rest of us do it. Where are the biographies of ordinary people?”

Gina didn’t answer right away, and when she did she said “I don’t know,” and Meredith could tell that it wasn’t a question she had ever really thought about before. “There’s Studs Terkel—”

“Well, sure—”

“But that’s not what you mean. I’m not sure they exist. Maybe it’s something everyone has to figure out on their own.”

My series doesn’t offer all the answers. But I could see someone reading it the same way I read Betsy In Spite of Herself or Anne of Windy Poplars: to learn how another young woman figures it out, and to know that another person feels the same way they do.


Extract from The Biographies of Ordinary People, Vol 1 – Chapter 1

The last night before they left was Rosemary Gruber’s thirty-fifth birthday.

It had, of course, been her birthday since the morning, and the girls had duly remembered to call out “Happy birthday, mommy!” when they came out of the bedroom. Meredith did the bulk of the remembering, and had written it on her chart by the door, but after they were finished the chart came down and was thrown away, and Rosemary dug her nails gently at the bits of Scotch tape stuck to the hollow door’s wooden veneer, because they did not want to lose their security deposit. Jack had assumed they would lose it, with the three girls, but Rosemary knew better. Teach a child that food is only served at the table, and they’ll never try to eat it over the carpet. It hadn’t been like that in her house when she was a child, but she had made this home with her own words and will. (And now she was unmaking it and stacking it in boxes, and that chart was finally coming down.)

“Were you born on a Friday?” Meredith asked, as Rosemary brushed her hair.

“No,” Rosemary said. “I was born on a Saturday.” She was pretty sure of this. It sounded like it could be true. She was thinking about everything that still had to be finished before they left, and only partially thinking about Meredith’s hair, and it was a good thing the mirror had been packed away or her daughter would have noticed.

“Saturday’s child works hard for a living,” Meredith recited. That’s true enough, Rosemary thought, with the part of her mind that wasn’t worrying about packing and cleaning and whether it was worth it to bathe all three girls one more time before they left. “What day was I born on?” her daughter continued.

“Tuesday,” Rosemary said, and this she did remember, because she had been watching Laverne and Shirley in the hospital while she waited for her contractions to continue.

“Tuesday’s child is full of grace,” Meredith said, and smiled at herself, and at the idea of being graceful. It was a real smile, because Meredith was happy, not one of the posed ones she put on for pictures. Rosemary’s oldest daughter was not yet eight years old and she would tilt her head and widen her eyes whenever anyone pulled out a camera, imitating the child models she saw in Rosemary’s issues of Ladies’ Home Journal. Rosemary had thought about tossing the magazines out before Meredith could get to them, but her weirdo kid read everything that came into the house, often before Rosemary herself could read it. She’d be making dinner and the kids would have PBS on and Meredith wouldn’t be watching; she’d be squatting on the carpet in front of the sofa with one knee tucked under her chin, studying “Can This Marriage Be Saved?”

“What day was Natalie born on?” Meredith asked, and Rosemary said “Sunday,” because she remembered that day too—and then she suddenly remembered she was wrong about Meredith, that she had gone into the hospital on Tuesday but Meredith had been born at night, when it was Wednesday.

“Nat, hair,” Meredith called out, and Rosemary’s second daughter took her place in front of what would have been the mirror but was now just a blank wall, with a mom and her little girl cross-legged on the carpet and facing the empty space. Rosemary did not need to look in the mirror on her thirty-fifth birthday; she had not showered that day and probably wouldn’t until the evening, and she had stopped wearing makeup years ago, but she was still thin, and Jack smiled when he looked at her, and nobody else really looked at her besides her daughters.

“Sunday’s child—no, wait, the child that’s born on the Sabbath Day is blithe and bonny and good and gay,” Meredith sang, and Natalie echoed “blithe and bonny” the way she always imitated her sister, and Rosemary looked at her happy baby, the one who came home from preschool with stories about new friends and games, and thought again: true enough. Her middle daughter had Rosemary’s own golden-brown wavy hair, though the girls only knew that from photos because Rosemary had cut it all short right before Meredith was born. All three of her children had been born with hair that clustered in tiny dark sweatlocks, but Natalie’s hair was the only one to thicken and curl.

“Blithe and bonny,” Natalie continued to sing, turning the words into nonsense, and Rosemary could see Meredith stiffen slightly with frustration. The two of them were close, but Meredith very much wanted to be her own person. The nursery rhyme was something she had memorized.

“When was Jackie born?” Meredith asked, over Natalie’s song.

“I don’t remember,” Rosemary said, even though it would have been easy enough to count backwards; Jackie had just turned three a few weeks ago. On a Tuesday.

“We don’t know who you are yet,” Meredith said to Jackie, and Rosemary thought this was also true; she was pretty sure she knew who her two older daughters were, but Jackie was still toddling between babyhood and personality. Watching the two girls who had already gone ahead of her and figuring out how she was going to be similar to—and different from—them.


NicoleDiekerAbout the Author

Nicole Dieker is a freelance writer, a senior editor at The Billfold, and a columnist at The Write Life. Her work has appeared in Boing Boing, Popular Science, Scratch, SparkLife, The Freelancer, The Toast, and numerous other publications. The Biographies of Ordinary People is her debut novel, if you don’t count the speculative fiction epic she wrote when she was in high school.

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Interview: Sarah Franklin, author of Shelter

Today I’m thrilled to welcome Sarah Franklin to What Cathy Read Next and bring you a fascinating interview about her debut novel, Shelter. You can read my review of this wonderful book here.

ShelterFinalCoverAbout the Book

Early Spring, 1944. In a clearing deep within an English forest two lost souls meet for the first time. Connie Granger has escaped the devastation of her bombed out city home. She has found work in the Women’s Timber Corps, and for her, this remote community must now serve a secret purpose. Seppe, an Italian prisoner of war, is haunted by his memories. But in the forest camp, he finds a strange kind of freedom. Their meeting signals new beginnings. In each other they find the means to imagine their own lives anew and to face that which each fears the most. But outside their haven, the world is ravaged by war and old certainties are crumbling. Both Connie and Seppe must make a life-defining choice which threatens their fragile existence. How will they make sense of this new world, and find their place within it? What does it mean to be a woman, or a foreign man, in these days of darkness and new light? A beautiful, gentle and deeply powerful novel about finding solace in the most troubled times, about love, about hope and about renewal after devastation. It asks us to consider what makes a family, what price a woman must pay to live as she chooses, and what we’d fight to the bitter end to protect.

Book Facts

Format: Hardback Publisher: Bonnier Zaffre Pages: 432
Publication: 27th July 2017 Genre: Historical Fiction    

Purchase Links*
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Interview with Sarah Franklin, author of Shelter

Sarah, without giving too much away, can you tell us a bit about Shelter?

Shelter is the story of Connie Granger, a Coventry factory worker in World War Two who is forced by circumstance to find work as a ‘lumberjill’. She’s determined to stay for a short while and then move on to the more exotic, glamorous life she thinks is around the corner.  Connie’s matched up for tree felling duties with Seppe, an Italian Prisoner of War who’s held at a nearby camp and let out into the woods for war work. Unlike Connie, Seppe, although he’s a prisoner, is finding the only true peace he’s ever known in the woods. The story’s about what happens to each of them and to the local people they get to know. On a broader level it’s about differing perceptions of freedom and captivity, and about what self-determination can look like depending on where you stay.

Where did you get the inspiration for the book?

I grew up in the Forest of Dean, and adore the place. In 2010, David Cameron announced plans to sell off various forest lands around the UK and I was absolutely shocked by the idea that something I’d always considered common ground could be sold from under us. It got me thinking about the situation in the Second World War, when officials in London decided (a) to send numerous disparate populations (evacuees, war workers, POWs) to the Forest for safety, thus completely upending life there for people who’d lived there for generations and (b) that the very forest land they’d decided was a sanctuary needed to be cut down in the name of ‘protecting the country’. It struck me as a situation full of tension, and perhaps a less familiar part of Britain’s war story.

Although you have written non-fiction and short stories, Shelter is your debut novel. Can you tell us a bit about your writing journey?

I’m one of those who always fiddled with writing – as a kid, I somewhat obnoxiously wrote a book of short stories and requested that my teacher read these at story time rather than the more boring things she was reading. I wrote various things for school magazines and the requisite bad teenage poetry and then somehow lost my nerve in my twenties – a classic case of ‘people like me don’t do things like that’. In my early thirties I moved to Seattle and wrote non-fiction for the papers there, which resulted in making that easier to do later on in Ireland and then England. Seven years later we were back in England and I was just *sick* of hearing myself say I really would write a novel one day. So I told myself to just get on with it. Basically the fear of never having done it became greater than the fear of not doing it.

How did you approach the research for the book? Do you enjoy the process of research?

I’m an unashamed nerd and I *love* research – my other job is as a university lecturer so it’s quite an ingrained habit. I read many, many local histories of the ‘lumberjills’ and the POWs and talked to people who’d been around then – something you can still just about do with WW2. Once I started to understand what I didn’t know, I spent time in the archives of the Imperial War Museum and the Dean Heritage Museum reading living histories of people who’d done these jobs.

What was the most surprising fact you came across during your research?

The sheer scale of the POW camps in the UK still takes me aback. 400,000 Italian and German POWs were held in more than 500 camps all around Britain – basically, everyone would have been near one. I was also surprised (and pleased!) by just how relaxed the whole thing seemed – prisoners really were allowed quite a degree of freedom to wander around. It’s heartening to think of Britain receiving so many people who were the actual enemy and then doing so with such care and humanity.

What was the biggest challenge you encountered when writing the book?

I had so many rigid timelines that were sometimes tricky to balance with my urge to make things up. We needed to be aware of the British war effort, what was happening in Germany, what was happening in Italy, and one other quite unmoveable timeline that would be too much of a spoiler to reveal. But in a way that’s a nice problem to have.

Reading the book, I felt the forest was almost a character in its own right. Is that something you consciously intended?

Ha – I’m really glad to hear that. I think, because the forest was my starting point, and I know it so well, there was never any doubt in my mind that we needed to know what happened to it, too. And because a forest is so organic, it’s a fantastic way to show how things change and yet are in some ways completely immutable, and how the effects of war in Britain didn’t just decimate cities, but had a really profound effect on rural communities, too.

If Shelter was to be made into a film, who would be your choice of actors to play Connie and Seppe?

Seppe has always partly been Ben Whishaw in my mind, even though he’s not Italian. Connie needs to be someone with spirit who isn’t afraid of the outdoors – Jennifer Lawrence in her Winter’s Bones guise would be amazing. Amos could be played by John Thaw, not least for the Goodnight, Mr Tom connections, though obviously that’s impossible…

Which other writers do you admire and why?

So, so many. In terms of people who’ve written beautifully about the Second World War, I adore the work of Jason Hewitt, whose novels take you to parts of the war you have no idea about and are just exquisitely written. Lissa Evans, whose novel Their Finest Hour and a Half was recently made into a film, has an incredible knack of making you howl with laughter and then pulling the rug out from under and showing you the huge poignancy of the scene.  I read probably as much non-fiction as fiction, and the non-fiction book I’m currently raving about to anyone who stands still enough is Lynsey Hanley’s Respectable, an examination of social mobility which I honestly think everyone in Britain should read. Hanley’s an academic who previously worked for Heat magazine and the combination is exactly what the topic needs – it’s an immaculately-researched piece of social commentary that reads like a thriller.

What are you working on next?

It’s still very much in the early stages; a novel about two women from very different backgrounds who end up sharing a house together in a small town, and the tensions this brings. It’s a theme about going away and coming back, about class and about expectation and what this does for everyone involved. And it’s back in the Forest of Dean, because I love it so much.

Thank you, Sarah, for such fascinating answers. As someone who adored Shelter, it’s great to find out more about the inspiration behind it.  I shall definitely be looking out for your next book…


Sarah FranklinAbout the Author

Sarah Franklin grew up in rural Gloucestershire and now lives with her family between Oxford and London. She has written for the Guardian, Psychologies magazine, The Pool, the Sunday Express and the Seattle Times. Her creative non-fiction has been published in anthologies in the USA and appeared on radio affiliates there. Sarah is founder and host of popular Oxford literary night, Short Stories Aloud, a Senior Lecturer at the Oxford International Centre for Publishing Studies, and a judge for the Costa Short Story Award. She was awarded a mentorship under the Jerwood/Arvon scheme to work on her debut novel, Shelter, which will be published by Bonnier Zaffre in July 2017.

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ShelterFinalCover