Date: Fri 24-Apr-1998
Date: Fri 24-Apr-1998
Publication: Bee
Author: SHANNO
Quick Words:
Basch-Katie-child-welfare-book
Full Text:
Fiction Blends With Fact In Sandy Hook Author's First Novel
(with cut, book cover)
BY SHANNON HICKS
An 18-month-old girl manages to work her highchair across a kitchen floor
close enough to a stove to pull a pot of boiling water onto herself. In the
split second it takes for the scalding liquid to begin melting through the
tray of the highchair the baby is sitting in, the world she lives in is
changed forever.
The 18-month-old is Katie, a fictional character in the new release Degrees of
Love (W.W. Norton & Company, New York, 281 pages, April 1998). The book is the
first published novel of Rachel Basch, a Sandy Hook resident. Publisher's
Weekly has already credited Mrs Basch for writing a "rich, surprising
page-turner."
The novel tells the story of Katie's accident from the viewpoint of both her
parents, Lily Sterne and Jack Heliher. Lily is involuntarily thrust into the
public spotlight, while her marriage is quietly falling apart. Jack is
struggling with his own feelings, and silently making his wife feel more
guilty than any of the incorrect and misread reports being filed by
well-meaning ER doctors and social workers.
On the surface, Degrees of Love is about baby Katie's accident and the
repercussions her parents go through. Author Rachel Basch says the book's
story is much deeper.
"It's very superficially about a case of mistaken child abuse," the author
said. "I really think this book is about marriage and parenting. It's about
work and the way families negotiate work and work lives and privacy. It's also
about the issue of privacy in society at all levels.
"The minute you have children, you are no longer anonymous," she believes.
"Whether you think you do or not, you become part of something much greater
after having children."
Mrs Basch, the mother of two young children, says she began with the story
being told only from the mother's point of view. She found that by 50 pages
into her manuscript, though, the problem was the narrative sounded like the
voice of a victim, which Lily is not.
"I was really worried about that," Mrs Basch said. "That's how all these
stories are told, from the side of the underdog. In order to really flush out
the full story, I needed to get inside his head. He's the one who makes her
feel the guiltiest."
While researching the story, Mrs Basch worked closely with two local social
workers, including one pediatric social worker. Both were instrumental in
providing ideas and even old guidebooks for background material. The research
was extremely disturbing at times.
"There are things I heard on that ward [at Shriners Boston, the hospital where
part of the story takes place]... you hear things and you don't forget them,"
she said. "And some of the stuff I read... You really have to give these
workers enormous amounts of credit. It takes an incredible amount of strength
and compassion to handles those jobs."
Mrs Basch began writing Degrees of Love in 1993. It took about 2« years before
she felt she had something worth sending off. Fortunately, the manuscript
wound up in the hands of W.W. Norton & Company, an independent publisher with
offices in New York and London.
"It was my first novel and it needed a lot of editing," Mrs Basch can admit
now. Mrs Basch discovered some of the child welfare laws she originally used
in her book were erroneous, after finding an attorney who was willing to read
the manuscript for accuracy. "Child welfare laws are made state-by-state," she
said. "My mistake was I did a lot of my research in Connecticut, thinking they
were federally mandated."
Before being given the final go-ahead, the publishing company put the
manuscript through the rigors of at least four copy editors.
The editing efforts paid off. The result is a very well-written book. The
novel is a very engrossing, but easy read. The details of Katie's accident,
the events each member of the family goes through, the thoughts of both major
adult characters are all cleanly knit together into a cohesive quilt that
could have been a tough story to read. Under Basch's pen the novel is very
enjoyable, and the topic could be straight out of today's headlines.
Rachel Basch has been writing as long as she can remember. She won prizes for
poetry as a child and wrote a collection of short stories as her thesis before
graduating from New York University. She has published fiction in Redbook .
She and her husband, David Gould, have been living in Sandy Hook for ten
years.
Even though the subject matter itself is somewhat frightening -- there are
people in the world who intentionally harm children -- Mrs Basch said writing
her book was not formidable.
"This was not really that difficult to write," Mrs Basch said this week. "That
was the joy of working on this: I tapped into something very good.
"It was the easiest thing I ever wrote."
Rachel Basch will be at The Book Review in Newtown for readings and to sign
copies of her book on Thursday, April 30, at 7:30 pm. The store is in Sand
Hill Plaza, 228 South Main Street/Route 25 (telephone 426-1711). Refreshments
will be served.
She will also be at Hickory Stick Book Shop, 1 Greenhill Road at Route 47 in
Washington Depot (860/868-0525), on Saturday, May 2, from 2-4 pm.
