One Day Among the
Ruins: A Lesson in Love and
Friendship, one of the six novels that I rewrote between 2022 and 2024 and
blogged about,
was named a finalist by The
Pirate’s Alley Faulkner Society’s The William Faulkner
– William Wisdom Creative Writing Competition.
This was also my COVID-19 pandemic project that I finished in 2022 then rewrote this year for the competition. Here is the pitch I’ve been sending to agents:
One Day Among the Ruins: A Lesson in Love and Friendship (111,985)
An American backpacker and a British expatriate widow experience a lifetime in one day at Pompeii and a night in Naples. Eat, Pray, Love meets The Graduate meets Indecent Proposal
One autumn day in 1978, between college and career, Maddox, an American backpacker in a funk about missing a love-interest in Rome, meets Alexis, a middle-aged British widow teaching literature in Malaysia. Their unlikely, cross-generational friendship is forged among the ruins of Pompeii as they share their personal tragedies and troubled families, filling a void in each other’s lives. Yet who is the teacher…who is the student? Eager to learn more about her near-death experience, Maddox dares Alexis to join him for pizza in Naples. Later he dares her to dance and dares her to accept an unusual birthday present, teaching him about love. For Alexis, the dare feels like an opportunity to recover some loveless years, if only she could forget about the gut-wrenching dilemma that she had to face in the waning days of her son’s life.
Alexis and Maddox came from different generations, different worlds: Alexis, born in India, the pampered daughter of British Raj officer, married off young only to become a widowed war bride at eighteen, then a survivor of the London Blitz, while Maddox hails from a dysfunctional, blue-collar Midwestern family with multiple divorces and parasitic stepsiblings. One thing they do share, other than their company, is their brutal honesty.
“People—all of us, I suppose—tend to see the world in black and white,” Alexis informs him. “Most of life falls into a gray realm. Rarely are there right answers.” She later adds, “For both of us, this was our journey that we had to make…to find ourselves in Pompeii—one the teacher, the other, the student. Only God knows which is which. In life, as you will discover, each of us teaches and learns, often at the same time.”
Having backpacked three months in Europe in 1978 (and a month in Italy in 1985), having visited Pompeii (with journal, guidebook, and Bulwer-Lytton intact), having lived for twenty years in Penang as an expatriate (like Alexis), I have tried to show how that one day—a time capsule, really—can resonate in unexpected ways in world events being played out today.
—Borneo
Expat Writer
My interviews with other Malaysian writers:
Ivy Ngeow author of Cry of the Flying Rhino, winner of the 2016 Proverse Prize.
Golda Mowe author of Iban Dream and Iban Journey
Preeta Samarasan, author of Evening is the Whole Day, finalist
for the Commonwealth Writers Prize 2009.
Chuah Guat Eng, author of Echoes of Silence and Days of
Change.
MalachiEdwin Vethamani, author of Complicated Lives and Life
Happens.
No comments:
Post a Comment