‘Good House’ author coming to library

Ann Leary, author of the recently released “The Good House,” a New York Times Sunday Book Review “Editors Choice” will talk about her latest novel on April 6 at Town Hall from 3 to 5 p.m.The reading is hosted by the Kent Memorial Library. Copies will be available for purchase and signing.Leary will be introduced by her friend Susanna Salk, a designer, author, journalist and television show contributor. Leary, who wrote two previous books, “An Innocent, A Broad” and “Outtakes from a Marriage,” spoke with The Lakeville Journal about her life and work.In addition to writing books, Leary is also the co-host of the weekly NPR radio show Hash Hags, with authors Julie Klam and Laura Zigman. She is a Connecticut resident and an EMT on her town’s ambulance squad.When asked where the idea for “The Good House” came from, Leary said, “Parts of it had been in my computer since 2007. Originally I started out to write a different book.“The original idea came from an article I read in a newspaper, about a psychiatrist and his patient. It was a true story. The psychiatrist became suicidal when a former patient threatened to reveal their affair.“I was interested in the fact, which I had not known before, that there are actually people in modern society who are forbidden by law from having consenting adult relations with each other.”Although the idea intrigued her, the writing didn’t flow easily.“At the beginning,” she said, “I wanted the story to be about the psychiatrist and his patient, with Hildi Good just as a peripheral character.“I started it in 2007 but didn’t work on it every day. I’d get frustrated after a few months and leave it, then go back to it after some weeks and attack it again.”Ultimately, she said, “I finally realized that when I was writing about Hildi, the writing came easily. It felt like I knew her character better than the others, that I really understood her. “So I decided to make her the narrator, because I found the narrator I had been using wasn’t that interesting to me.” “The Good House” is set in a rural area on Boston’s North Shore. “I love New England,” Leary said. “I moved from Wisconsin to Marblehead, Mass., on Boston’s North Shore when I was 14 years old, and it was quite different. I was really taken with the New England scenery, and with the New England people and their personalities, which I think are unique. Because that area was my introduction to New England I wanted to set a story in a North Shore town.”In “The Good House,” Hildi Good is a 60-something real estate broker who is wry and deeply complicated. She is a mother, a grandmother and a successful businesswoman. She is a trusted neighbor and friend and she is a character that readers can love and find compelling.“I love her, too,” Leary said. “I wish I could be a human like Hildi in some ways — but not in the drinking in the basement way. Hildi is a pretty strong person, pretty confident and on the ball in most ways. I would like to be more like her. She is very wise about people, shrewd, and has a sense of humor. She looks out for herself in a way I wish I could do more, be a little more assertive like Hildi is.”Asked why Hildi is a real estate broker, Leary said, “A lot of my friends are real estate brokers. And I follow real estate online with a passion bordering on obsession.”Leary was asked if her family is supportive of her writing. Leary lives in Roxbury with her husband, the actor and comedian Denis Leary; four dogs; and three horses. The Learys have two grown children, who currently live in New York City.She responded, “Definitely. My kids are grown up now, but when they were younger I wrote my first two books while they were still living here at home. The only thing they don’t love is, if I’m deeply into a book, I become obsessed and am ruminating about it most of my waking hours.” Leary said she tends to write in the mornings and, “If I am stuck there are always some errands that need to be run and I’ll get in the car, which is where I like to think things through.”Leary said she is working on a new book that is “actually closer to home. It’s a story set in northwestern Connecticut and it’s about a family trust. It’s an old-money family with a trust fund, and it’s about the children and stepchildren. It’s set on a fictitious lake in a fictitious town in this area.”One of the characters in the book is an architect. Leary said she loves houses and is particulary interested in the work of the late Ehrick Rossiter, who designed many homes in Litchfield County, especially Washington, at the turn of the last century.“There are a handful of the homes he designed that people still live in,” Leary said, adding that she thinks this side of the book “will be interesting to people who live here. This has also been an opportunity for me to explore the local history more than I have in the past.”Leary enjoys doing research. “Not just the formal history of the towns,” she said. “I also love the oral histories people tell me about what it was like years ago.”The reading is free and open to the public. Register in advance at www.kentmemoriallibrary.org.

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