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It’s A Book Thing Presents: An Interview with Linda Murphy Marshall, author of Ivy Lodge: A Memoir of Translation and Discovery

Author’s Bio:
Linda Murphy
Marshall has a Ph.D. in Hispanic Languages and Literature and an MFA in
Creative Writing. Her memoir, Ivy Lodge: A Memoir of Translation and
Discovery
received a starred review from Kirkus. She is an Associate
for the National Museum of Language and a docent at the Library of Congress in
Washington, D.C. 

Her second memoir, Immersion: A Linguist’s Memoir,
comes out September 24, 2024 and has already garnered a gold medal (2024 Next Generation Indie Book Awards Winner in Travel/Travel Guide) and has been reviewed by Kirkus (“A fluent and far-reaching celebration of communication and world travel.”).
 Her essays have appeared in numerous
publications, including the Los Angeles Review, Dorothy Parker’s Ashes, The Catamaran
Literary Reader, Maryland Literary Review, Brevity’s Nonfiction Blog, and
elsewhere.
 

Deliah Lawrence:
What inspired you to write your book?

Linda Murphy
Marshall:
I wanted to write the truth about my life and my childhood, how I
survived living in an abusive, patriarchal and toxic environment and,
ultimately, escaped by Moving away. 

DL: What is your
writing process?

LMM: I
usually have an overarching idea in mind and then write very loosely within
that idea. I need some type of structure, but then meander here and there
within it, depending on the discoveries I’m making along the way. If I were
dogmatic about everything I write, plotting it all out in advance, I don’t
think the result would be nearly as interesting or truthful. 

For example, in Ivy
Lodge
, the large structure of the book consists of the rooms in my
childhood home, Ivy Lodge, so I started with that, and then I wrote about
objects in those rooms, experiences that happened in those rooms, memories it
all evoked, people in those rooms, etc. It became more manageable and organic when
I had this overarching structure to begin with. 

DL: What obstacles
did you encounter while writing this book?

LMM: I
knew many people in my family of origin and in my hometown were not happy with
my memoir. I had several family members say/write hurtful things, and I believe
I’ve lost some friends back in my hometown because of my book. But that was one
of the points of my book: I was living in a family where much of it was
appearance-oriented, and no one really knew what went on inside our home. 

DL: What was
the most valuable piece of writing advice you’ve ever been given?

LMM: The
most valuable piece of writing advice I’ve been given is to expect that the
first (and second and third….) drafts of your book are going to be terrible,
but you have to believe that, with hard work, the book will be the way you want
it to be. 

DL: What tips
would you give to aspiring writers?

LMM: The
one tip I give to aspiring writers is to be persistent and to write and submit
as much as you can (but don’t just submit to submit; make sure that you’ve
carefully edited your work and that it’s the best you can do). You have to be
willing to be rejected over and over and over again and just keep going back to
the drawing board, just keep on writing and on submitting. 

DL: What are
three books you’ll never part with?

LMM: I
would never part with a tiny volume containing Rudyard Kipling’s poem “IF.” I
discovered it when I was a young girl in my maternal grandparents’ home, and
have always loved the words. When both my grandparents died, I inherited the
little book and would never give it up. Nor would I ever give up my copy of A
Little Princess
by Frances Hodgson Burnett and illustrated by Ethel Betts. I
received it from my grandparents when I was about the age of the protagonist,
Sara Crewe, and it’s a treasure. The last book I would never part with is a
handmade book of pictures made by my Aunt Jane, my mother’s sister. It’s an
incredibly intricate and beautiful book I’m so grateful to own. 

DL: What are
three fun facts about yourself?

LMM: A)
I played the piano on a classical radio
station when I was 11. B) I’m a painter and three of my paintings have appeared
either on the cover or inside literary magazines in the last few years. C) I’ve
studied 15 languages. 

DL: Would
you like to share an excerpt from Ivy Lodge: A Memoir of Translation
and Discovery
?

LMM:
Sure, here you go:

“Translation
involves more than the deciphering of words, words strung together in
sentences, in paragraphs, in dialogue, in the years of a life. After all, a
machine can do that if you feed all the data into it. Translation also involves
making sense of what’s left unspoken, those ellipses, blank spaces , the
dot-dot-dots when you have to guess what’s happening in the person’s mind, what
the silent messages mean. It calls for the translation of surrounding events,
the cultural context, as well as the translation of nonverbal communication.
What was being said through that certain look, that ever-so-tiny smile, that
flash of a grimace? That spark of anger? Those sarcastic comments? Those
prolonged silences? What did it all mean? 

The most
difficult thing for me to translate to date, has been my own life. To return to
Ivy Lodge: trying to make sense of what my parents and siblings said and did,
how I fit into that picture of that family in that home. I never found it easy,
although I think I began observing them when still very young, long before I
became a professional translator. I learned to look for signs, for clues, for
subtexts in their behavior. Signs in what they didn’t say, didn’t do. In what
was hiding between the lines, in what went on when a disconnect between their
behavior and words could be observed, in their language, their attitude toward
me.” 

DL: What new
projects are you currently working on?

LMM: I’m
compiling dozens of essays I’ve written, and adding more, to put into an
anthology of my work. 

DL: Where
can readers learn more about you and purchase your book(s)?

LMM: Readers
can get more information here:

DL: Thanks
so much for being here with us today. I know my readers will enjoy getting to
know you and your work.

LMM:
Thanks very much for the opportunity! 

It’s A Book Thing Presents: An Interview With Linda Murphy Marshall, Author Of Ivy Lodge: A Memoir Of Translation And Discovery &Raquo; Linda%20Marshall%20Ivy%20Lodge%206 29 24
It’s A Book Thing Presents: An Interview With Linda Murphy Marshall, Author Of Ivy Lodge: A Memoir Of Translation And Discovery &Raquo; Linda%20Marshall%20Immersion%20Book%20Cover%207 1 24
It’s A Book Thing Presents: An Interview With Linda Murphy Marshall, Author Of Ivy Lodge: A Memoir Of Translation And Discovery &Raquo; Avvxseh5Gmazef9B6Fjfcy Oxbcef8Hqhicsc0Rx4Qfy6Oorz936Cx 7Po86Euaq7Lawse24Ng9Fmywg8J5Mwtwg5Gjxerizdqm5Muwwrxeytqqx3Qolyi826F J Xhd8S84Tvtxr

Originally Published on https://vocalexpressions.blogspot.com

Deliah Lawrence Attorney, Author, Blogger, Workshop Facilitator

Deliah Lawrence is a Maryland-based attorney and award-winning author of two romantic suspense novels (Gotta Let It Go and Gotta Get It Back) set in Baltimore. She’s also a blogger and workshop facilitator who writes poetry and short stories.

When Deliah isn’t writing, you can find her reading a book, indulging in her addiction to investigation discovery shows; or painting her yet-to-be exhibited oil artworks of landscapes, portraits or whatever else comes to her creative mind. Constantly on the go, she is also a member of the Black Writers’ Guild of Maryland and Sisters in Crime.

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Deliah Lawrence
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