Category Archives: Jean Zimmerman

Reading Room/Word for Word Event

Please join me and some other great new fiction writers at the

 Bryant Park Reading Room

Word for Word Author Event

Debut Novelists Panel:

Cristina Alger, Karl Taro Greenfeld, Karen Walker Thompson & Jean Zimmerman

Hosted by Catherine Chung

Wednesday, August 1, 2012

12:30pm – 1:45pm

Bryant Park Reading Room (behind the New York Public Library on 42nd Street)

The Darlings Cristina AlgerTriburbia: A Novel author Karl Taro GreenfeldThe Age of Miracles Karen Walker Thompson, and The Orphanmaster Jean Zimmerman tell all on what it’s like to be new writers on the author’s block. Hosted by Catherine ChungForgotten Country.

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Hedge Fun

Petted a hedgehog today at a nature center. They are born with all their quills, which push out gradually until they have a full set. They can eat 1,000 insects a night. They are unrelated to porcupines. And one day I will keep one as a pet. That is all I know about hedgehogs.

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Iconography/Orphanmaster

Watchung Booksellers in Montclair last night was cool, with a crack of thunder and streaks of lightning out the window just as I was reading a scary passage from the book.

A lot of people wanted to know where I did the research for The Orphanmaster. The easy answer is: The Iconography of Manhattan Island, the brilliant compendium of all maps, views and information about New York from long before it was called New York. Published in 1926 and still available in research libraries (and my home library, I’m happy to say), it is a Manhattan history lover’s dream. And did I mention that the huge tome’s creator was I.N. Phelps Stokes, subject along with his beautiful wife Edith Minturn of my recent book Love, Fiercely: A Gilded Age Romance. Theirs was a charmed, fabulously wealthy life that had impossible highs and ultimately spiraled down into difficulty and poverty, largely because of Stokes’ obsessive love affair with The Iconography. The fact remains that without The Iconography there would be no Orphanmaster. I obtained so much period detail from this masterful, 30-pound set of volumes.

An Original Set, circa 1926

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The Orphanmaster in New Jersey

New Jerseyites! Tomorrow at 7:00 pm I will be visiting Watchung Booksellers in Montclair for a talk and signing. Please join us, it’s an excellent bookstore, a nice place to visit on a summer evening to browse for those books you didn’t know you needed. And it’ll be fun to converse with you about The Orphanmaster, how I came to write a novel, how I do my research, how I get going in the morning and stuff like that.

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A Slow Day

Gone fishin’.

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The Orphanmaster Origins

A little bit about how The Orphanmaster came to be: For years I have written nonfiction. Never a novel. If I ever thought about writing fiction, I pushed it out of my head, saying, That’s not me, that’s not something I could ever do.

I began to think of myself as a writer when I was small, and experimented with different forms, getting a Masters of Fine Arts in Poetry before turning to the world of facts, of reality, of history and biography, of nonfiction. Which I love.

A few years ago I wrote a book like that, a work of colonial history that featured a strong, determined woman in 1660s New Amsterdam. Margaret Hardenbroeck worked brilliantly in the fur trade, She was so driven that by the time she died she was the richest woman in New York.

I enjoyed writing about that era, when fur was king, and when Manhattan featured a fluid, uneasy mix of peoples—eighteen languages spoken on the street! A threshold time, just before the British invasion, brutal and exciting at once. But I was frustrated by the paltry amount of personal information I could get about Margaret. I wanted to go deeper.

The Orphanmaster’s central character, Blandine van Couvering, came out of that desire. Creating the fictional persona of Blandine, I could write around the gaps of history, fill in the psychological spaces of my character. I could deepen and enlarge upon the strength and intelligence of this real woman, plumb her soul, discover her sense of humor. And give her the wardrobe she deserved.

At the same time, something else about the period haunted me—the idea of the orphanmaster, which I’d come across in writing about New Amsterdam, a real government post that to me sounded spooky and vaguely nefarious. An orphanmaster is actually someone charged with protecting the many children on Manhattan who have lost their parents. But I always felt there was a mystery here, a story that was not all sweetness and light.

Still I hesitated. I was sitting on all my notebooks filled with rich details about New York before it was called New York, I had a heroine, a theme, even the beginnings of a plot. Why don’t you use all that stuff? my encouraging husband kept asking. Could I possibly write fiction? Just write me a murder, he said.

That was the beginning. Many chapters and plot twists later, I am here to tell you that writing The Orphanmaster was as challenging as I’d imagined it would be, but far more rewarding. There is nothing like seeing your characters spring up out of the ground as you go along, to feel every morning as you sit down at your computer that, Today, anything can happen!

October 8, 1663, the island of Manhattan. An early blizzard….

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A Home an Aesthete Would Love

The bullfrogs are raging and I can’t sleep. Instead I wander through the intricate rooms of the house The New York Times asked me to profile, with its endless range of color and pattern, its glowing woodwork and sturdy china. An 1880s home on 72nd Street totally refurbished according to the principles of the Aesthetic Movement. Complete with twin gaslights outside. Oscar Wilde would be crowing.

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USA Today Visits Cabin World

USA Today goes to press today (online edition) with what I think is a pretty sharp profile of me as well as a portrait of Cabin World!

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This is…

what 55 looks like. Blowing out candles.

 

 

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Hello, Savage Girl

After a string of many unbirthdays I am finally having my birthday, a double-digit extravaganza which I am so far marking with house cleaning, phone interviews and pancakes at a local diner with Maud.

Really, the finest present I have received so far is yesterday’s news that Savage Girl has been accepted for publication by Viking.

Savage Girl begins in 1875 in Virginia City, Nevada, at the height of the silver boom. A teenaged girl is being exhibited as a sideshow attraction — promoters advertise her as a wild child raised by wolves. An extremely wealthy couple comes from New York City to inspect their mines; they adopt the girl and bring her back to Manhattan with the idea of raising her up as a debutante. Murder and mayhem follow.

The novel is narrated by Hugo Delegate,  a sensitive, brooding 22-year-old anatomy student and son of the wealthy mine owners, who  gets drawn into the hectic events surrounding the savage girl’s immersion in New York’s Gilded Age.

Everyone involved is so excited to see the public birth of Hugo and Savage Girls’ story.

Happy birthday.

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Journal News profile

I meant to post this profile from The Journal News but got swept away  by other things. I like the reporter’s emphasis on bullfrogs. In general, I thought she was pretty sharp. Thanks!

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Chappaqua Talk

I’ll be giving a talk with slides about The Orphanmaster at the Chappaqua Library tonight at 7:30. Hillary and Bill are welcome!

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Iconography of a Dog

Digging through Google Images, subject head Iconography of Manhattan Island, to collect some pictures for a presentation about Love, Fiercely, I wade through intricate vintage maps of New York to find, surprisingly, a cover of my book, and then my own photo. What really shocks me is coming upon this picture of Oliver. Looking up as if he has just skimmed the Iconography for some fascinating details of Manhattan’s past pets over a modest snifter of brandy. He doesn’t know he’s there for the Googling.

Oliver, literary lion

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A Personal Creation Myth

Aspiring historical fiction writers assembled at the Merritt Bookstore in Millbrook, NY today and I was flattered to be included as their guest. Their questions really ran the gamut, but the gracious people there seemed most interested in the why’s and how’s of getting started on a novel that is based in historic fact. I always say that I was spurred on my way by working up the portrait of Margaret Hardenbroeck, the real-life fur trader in my book The Women of the House, and wanting to further develop that character. To invent, where I only had the bare facts to begin with. She became Blandine. Then, I was attracted to the spookiness of the term “orphanmaster” itself, and thought it would be a terrifying concept to build a mystery around. Finally, Gil gave me a push, when he saw how much material I had left over in my notebooks and computer files after learning so much about 1660s New Amsterdam for The Women of the House. Why don’t you use some of that stuff in a novel, he said. And when I protested that I never had written a novel and couldn’t write a novel, he said, Well, write me a murder. And that I found I could do — the result was the unfortunate demise of Piddy Gullee in The Orphanmaster‘s prologue. Everyone has their own creation myth and that’s mine, but it of course was just the pinch that got me moving.

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Snake Story

Two garter snakes, black with a yellow stripe, one big, one small — mother and child? — entwined near the garden hose, where they can sip off the condensation when they get the chance…

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