The Drowning Girls (31 page)

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Authors: Paula Treick Deboard

BOOK: The Drowning Girls
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QUESTIONS FOR DISCUSSION

  1. Why is Liz so concerned about fitting in with her neighbors at The Palms? How does this change, and why? Does Liz’s desire to fit into this fictional world resonate with real life?
  2. As a parent, Liz is torn between wanting what’s best for Danielle and wanting to control (or at least influence) certain aspects of her daughter’s life—such as her friends and social contacts. Compare this to the approach other parents (such as the Jorgensens and the Sieverts) take toward their children. How much control can or should parents have over their teenagers’ lives, especially when it comes to technology and social media?
  3. Phil begins his narration by insisting that he isn’t a pedophile, and is merely trapped in a “lose-lose”
    situation. Do you think he has an accurate understanding of the dilemma? Would problems have been avoided if he had tried to seek legal action such as a restraining order against Kelsey from the very beginning?
  4. Kelsey is presented as deeply troubled in this book. What might be the cause of these problems? Why do her parents continue to believe and support her in the face of contrary evidence?
  5. At the end of the book, Liz is unsure of the role Danielle has played in what happened to Kelsey, but seems determined to protect her daughter (and therefore her daughter’s dark secrets). What motivates Liz at the end of the book? Is it the same thing that motivates the Jorgensens relating to their own daughter?
  6. Phil tells Liz that he believes they’re the same kind of awful, but Liz disagrees. Is Phil merely a helpless victim of circumstances brought on by his life at The Palms? Is Liz?

A CONVERSATION WITH
PAULA TREICK D
E
BOARD

The Drowning Girls
is an unsettling story about the dark underbelly of an idyllic neighborhood, and how one family finds themselves sucked into a world of secrets and lies just below the community’s seemingly flawless surface. What was your inspiration for this novel?

For years I was a freelance writer for a real estate publication, and once or twice a month I would visit these fantastic new home communities that were each promising the world to their clients—not only the granite countertops and the six-panel interior doors, but the implicit guarantee of happiness. Deep down, those physical things can’t matter too much; they’re just the circumstances of our lives. There’s that saying that “wherever you go, there you are”—meaning that our problems and insecurities have a way of following us anywhere, no matter the change in location.

The Palms is a perfectly manicured, incredibly wealthy gated community—a big departure from the rural communities and lower middle-class families that featured in your earlier novels. Why the change? What similarities and differences do you see between the people in these communities?

Ultimately, I’m interested in the many varieties of the human experience—what makes us tick, and what pushes seemingly average or happy people over the edge? In my first novel,
The Mourning Hours
, the book revolved around a small, tight-knit community in Wisconsin.
The Drowning Girls
might be set in a gated community near Livermore, California, but in many ways the main characters are facing the same pressures: the scrutiny of their neighbors, the importance of their reputations, the personal secrets of marriage and family.

All of your novels center on everyday families placed under an enormous amount of pressure from extenuating circumstances. What draws you to family dramas, and how do you decide which perspectives will narrate their experience?

I’ve always been interested in the dynamics of family life. That’s not rooted in any deep-seated issues with my own family, but really just out of a curiosity about what makes people’s lives work. When it comes down to it, most of our joys and sorrows are connected with our families—those few people on earth who know the best and worst of each other. In my first two novels, I gave the young characters a voice in the narration, but in this book, the story seemed to belong to Liz and Phil. And actually, Phil’s voice didn’t come into the story until after the first draft. Once I started writing from his perspective, the whole story suddenly came together.

Can you describe the writing process for this novel? How did the story evolve as you worked through it?

This story went through several twists and turns in my mind before becoming the final version of
The Drowning Girls
. When I began writing, I saw The Palms much as it would have looked on one of the builders’ glossy brochures. With each draft, the place became a little darker in my mind, the characters more complicated, the stakes higher for Phil and Liz. When I look back on it now, it’s almost as if I approached the story from the outside and circled it in increasingly narrow loops until I knew exactly who the characters were and where their conflicts rested. This book really wouldn’t have come together without some wise advise from my beta readers, including my editor, Michelle Meade, who freed me to go further, push harder. In my mind, I needed that permission to go to the dark place where the story had to go.

Do you read other fiction while you’re doing your own writing or do you find it distracting?

I read constantly, even while I’m in the middle of a draft—but I’m careful not to focus too heavily on one writer or style of writing, as that has a way of influencing my own writing voice. I love to teach Hemingway, but there’s a problem when I start to sound like him. The trick for me has been to select at random from my massive “to be read” pile and approach each new book as an escape from my own writing. I’ve become hooked on audio books as well, which makes me pay attention to the sounds of individual words. That’s something I pay attention to as the story approaches its final draft.

What was your greatest challenge in writing
The Drowning Girls
? What about your greatest pleasure?

I juggle a few different lives at once—writer, teacher, wife/daughter/sister/friend—so sometimes it gets a bit tricky. I’ve learned to dedicate blocks of time specifically to writing, so when I sit down at my laptop, I’m entering a period of “hyperfocus.” You could stand in front of me and wave your hand in my face, and I might not notice—this has happened. I’m also learning not to feel guilty when I’m writing. There are a dozen little things demanding my attention, and just about all the time, those things can wait.

My breakthrough with
The Drowning Girls
actually came while I was on a plane, traveling approximately five hundred miles an hour and 35,000 feet above my regular life. My husband was in the seat next to me, asleep, and I opened up a notebook and wrote for about four hours straight. Normally, I’m a laptop and neatly ordered folder-and-file type of writer, but there was something that was just so
right
about this moment, that I knew I had tapped into the heart of the book. Before that,
The Drowning Girls
was just a file with a lot of words. After that, it was a story.

“Tautly written and beautifully evocative.”

Bookreporter.com
on
The Mourning Hours

Discover more emotionally powerful and compelling reads from Paula Treick DeBoard:

The Mourning Hours
The Fragile World

“Exquisitely told, [
The Fragile World
] is a study in grief and the transforming power of love. Absolutely unforgettable.”

New York Times
bestselling author Heather Gudenkauf

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Find the perfect book and be the star of your book club.

The Next Page: A Fiction Sampler for Book Clubs

Enrich your discussions with chapter excerpts and bonus material from the following:

The Gilded Life of Matilda Duplaine
by Alex Brunkhorst
Come Away With Me
by Karma Brown
Pretty Baby
by Mary Kubica
The Good Girl
by Mary Kubica
The Wonder of All Things
by Jason Mott
Little Mercies
by Heather Gudenkauf
Madame Picasso
by Anne Girard
The Returned
by Jason Mott
The Last Breath
by Kimberly Belle
The Mourning Hours
by Paula Treick DeBoard
Teatime for the Firefly
by Shona Patel

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ISBN-13: 9781459293915

The Drowning Girls

Copyright © 2016 by Paula Treick DeBoard

All rights reserved. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the non-exclusive, non-transferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on-screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, down-loaded, 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 hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of publisher, Harlequin Enterprises Limited, 225 Duncan Mill Road, Don Mills, Ontario, Canada M3B 3K9.

This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents are either the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events or locales is entirely coincidental. This edition published by arrangement with Harlequin Books S.A.

® and ™ are trademarks of the publisher. Trademarks indicated with ® are registered are registered in the United States Patent and Trademark Office, the Canadian Intellectual Property Office and in other countries.

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