delores =
Delores Phillips
(Author) The Darkest Child : A Novel
The Darkest Child: A Novel
Click to order via Amazon or
Barnes and Noble
ISBN: 1569473455
Format: Hardcover, 388pp
Pub. Date: January 2004
Publisher: Soho Press, Incorporated
Thumper:
Hello Miss Delores. How are you
doing this evening?
delores : Fine, happy to be here. .
Thumper:
Hello Anita, how are you doing
this evening?
delores : Hi Anita
anita: Hello. I'm fine.
Thumper:
Hello Shevi.
delores : Hi Shevi
Thumper:
Delores, how did you come to
write The Darkest Child? Was it something that you had been thinking about for a
while?
delores : It started out as a poem that filled a 500 pg composition book. I wanted to explore what happened to abused children in the rural south before child protection laes.
Thumper:
Rose was something else. I
thought she was evil. To you, did she have any redeeming qualities?
delores : Not really. She was a product of the times, and of the things that happened to her.
Thumper:
Anita and Shevi, you two can jump
in any time you like.
Thumper:
I'm having a time figuring out
what could have happened to her that was so severe that she would make her
daughters into prostitutes?
anita:
I
loved the book and want a sequel. I promise, when Judy was tossed from the
porch, I WENT NUTS!!!!! That's powerful writing when your words effect a reader
on such a deep level.
delores : Nothing happened to her to make her do that. She did it because she wanted to and because she could. She did it for the money. Most of what rozelle did was out of her own meaness.
Thumper:
Anita: I agree with you. I must
have re-read that part three times before I finally believed it.
delores : Anita, I am planning a sequel.
shevi: I was so sad about Judy,it actually made me cry. I could feel Martha Jean's pain.
anita:
WONDERFUL..I can't wait.
Thumper:
Tangy was a complex character.
Was she really that naive about what was going on with her mother or was she
trying to see the good side to her and pretending the bad away?
delores : I think it's wonderful when a reader is touched on an emotional level by my writing.
delores : Tangy knew her mother was evil. She had known it since the age of six. She did not want to believe it. Tangy wanted desperately to love her mother.
Thumper:
Delores: When did you say, "I'm
going to turn this into a book"? And by writing the novel, did the story move
into territories that you hadn't planned on?
anita:
How
did you create such a realistic world? How long did it take you to complete the
novel?
delores : I worked on the novel for two years while working full time in a psychiatric hospital. I had to create a world and step into it. I watched the characters grow, then allowed them to do as they pleased.
delores : Thumper, the story did get away from me. As I began writing I had no idea just how evel Rozelle would become.
Thumper:
Were you surprised by Rozelle?
delores
:
To
all, please forgive the slip of my fingers and the misspelled words that are
jumping up on this screen.
Thumper:
Delores: Don't worry about that.
I've never been hung up on correct spelling and all that.
delores
:
I
knew from the start that Rozelle was a mean woman. I worked without an outlne,
and certainly there were unexpected surprises.
Thumper:
What I loved most about Rozell
was that I didn't get the sense that you were making her evil for evil sake. I
was really surprised that her kids, at some point, didn't strangle her in her
sleep.
delores : They thought about it.
anita:
I
didn't think they'd strangle her; I got the sense they just wanted her to open
up and love them.
shevi:
Bye, bye!
Thumper:
I have to applaud you on
Rozelle's children. Each had their own personalities and tragedies that you
conveyed very well.
delores : Rozelle had brainwashed her children with "honor thy mother."
Thumper:
Anita, I have to agree with you.
But I would think that there would come to a point where a person would get
tired of the abuse and either rise up against her or leave her.
delores : Mushy, Harvey, and Sam managed to get away from her. Even Martha Jean.
delores : Wallace left at a young age, and found a way to stay away from her.
anita:
Of
course, Delores, I have the standard question: What advice would you give
aspiring authors?
Thumper:
But Mushy came back. Harvey was
gone for a second, but he was still giving her his money. And Sam got carted off
to jail. And Martha Jean she sold off. But none ever managed to finally break
away from her, except Wallace.
delores : Hang in there, stick with it, write, write, write, and never give up.
Thumper:
Delores, our time is up. What's
next on your agenda?
delores : Working on a second novel at this time.
anita:
Thanks, Delores.
delores : Thanks, Thumper, for allowing me to share.
Thumper:
Delores, thanks for stopping by.
Gawd, I so loved this book! I'm looking forward to the next one.
delores : Thanks, Anita. Bye
anita:
Bye, bye!
Thumper:
Thanks for stopping by Anita.
*smile*
Thumper:
Good night Delores. Thanks again.
Thumper:
Bye, bye!
Thumper:
Bye, bye!
Thumper:
Bye, bye!