
Everyday Creation
This show has to do with different kinds of creation: human, divine, and a third kind that connects the two. Our human creativity is easy to talk about because clearly we're prolific creators. We make music, we write, we cook; we establish businesses, we design gardens, we invent things. The list goes on and on. Another kind of creation is divine. We feel its presence when, for example, we contemplate birth, death, our life purpose, or have a quiet realization that there's something bigger than us. The third kind is perhaps a little more difficult to grasp and yet, with a little practice, it's easy to put into action. This is the personal power each of us has to direct our thoughts, words and actions every day toward what we want in our life and world, rather than what we don't want.
This sounds heavier than it is. For me, this show is an acknowledgment that while we're all here to learn and grow and do our best, there's still plenty of opportunity to relax, laugh, love, and enjoy this playground we call life. So my hope is that you'll get some enjoyment and illumination out of these episodes. Here you'll find interviews with delightfully creative individuals; short stories about some who have passed away; and essays about personal power.
I'm Kate Jones, host and creator of Everyday Creation. Thank you for following my show.
Everyday Creation
Five Books and Counting: the Novels of Patricia Falvey
Hello, I'm the host of Everyday Creation. Not too long ago, I had the pleasure of interviewing author Patricia Falvey. She and I covered a lot of territory in the full episode, including her successful 30-year career in accounting before she took a leap of faith to become a full-time writer.
In this excerpt, Patricia talks about each one of her five books. All are historical fiction with a connection to Ireland, where she lived until she was about 8 years old. To listen to "Orphan Girl," which is referenced in the interview, go to @watch?v=-zlUEhxDDhg&list=RD-zlUEhxDDhg&start_radio=1. The song is performed by the Choral Scholars of University College Dublin.
If this episode piques your interest enough to learn more about Falvey and how she's had success in two very different careers, please check out the full interview. It's Episode 116 titled "Author Patricia Falvey on Being Brave, Resilient, and Focused on Your Dream."
Three more excerpts are publishing this week: "Always a Writer at Heart," "Goodness, Resilience and Paying it Forward," and "The Courage to Embrace Your Second Act."
To learn more about Falvey's books, visit patriciafalveybooks.com. And if you read any or all, please write a review.
This is Kate Jones. Thank you for listening to Everyday Creation, available on YouTube and in podcast directories including Apple, Audible, iHeart and Spotify.
Patricia:
00:00:00.080 --> 00:00:00.980
"The Yellow House"
00:00:01.760 --> 00:00:04.740
was based on stories my grandmother told me.
00:00:04.742
Kate:
Really?
00:00:05.200 --> 00:00:07.060
Yes. And during that
00:00:07.520 --> 00:00:10.020
time of writing that I, again,
00:00:10.560 --> 00:00:11.780
eccentric, crazy,
00:00:12.815 --> 00:00:14.915
but I could hear her voice
00:00:15.535 --> 00:00:17.295
telling the story and I could hear her
00:00:17.295 --> 00:00:20.175
voice in my ear. Ostensibly, what I started
00:00:20.175 --> 00:00:22.335
out to do was write this story about
00:00:22.335 --> 00:00:23.395
the Irish uprising
00:00:23.855 --> 00:00:24.510
and when
00:00:24.990 --> 00:00:28.370
Southern Ireland gained its independence, but Northern Ireland
00:00:28.510 --> 00:00:29.730
remained part of Britain.
00:00:30.270 --> 00:00:32.110
And part of it was that I would
00:00:32.110 --> 00:00:34.910
get so many questions about, well, "all the
00:00:34.910 --> 00:00:36.830
Irish people in the south of Ireland seemed
00:00:36.830 --> 00:00:38.670
to get along. What's wrong with you people
00:00:38.670 --> 00:00:40.005
up in the north?" You know, this is
00:00:40.005 --> 00:00:42.165
when the Troubles were raging. And I said,
00:00:42.165 --> 00:00:44.805
well, the history is very, very different.
00:00:44.805 --> 00:00:47.365
And mostly it's because of something called the
00:00:47.365 --> 00:00:47.865
plantation
00:00:48.645 --> 00:00:50.185
where Southern Ireland,
00:00:50.645 --> 00:00:52.805
the land was taken but it was taken
00:00:52.805 --> 00:00:53.305
by
00:00:53.685 --> 00:00:54.120
dukes
00:00:55.000 --> 00:00:58.120
and aristocrats and people who had, you know,
00:00:58.120 --> 00:00:59.880
fought for the king and all of that,
00:00:59.880 --> 00:01:02.040
and they would get land grants. So they
00:01:02.040 --> 00:01:03.800
were always the ones with the big manor
00:01:03.800 --> 00:01:06.315
houses and so on and so forth. But
00:01:06.555 --> 00:01:08.875
the plantation in the north of Ireland was
00:01:08.875 --> 00:01:10.815
when the British government sent
00:01:11.115 --> 00:01:11.615
farmers
00:01:12.475 --> 00:01:13.615
and steel workers
00:01:14.075 --> 00:01:17.375
and, you know, people of the working class
00:01:18.155 --> 00:01:18.655
and
00:01:19.380 --> 00:01:22.440
gave them land to pursue whatever
00:01:22.820 --> 00:01:23.320
their
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talent was.
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And so they became part of that fabric
00:01:29.220 --> 00:01:32.500
down with the working-class people, as opposed
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to just these sort of absentee
00:01:34.420 --> 00:01:34.920
landlords.
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And they did that because the British government
00:01:37.675 --> 00:01:39.695
was having a lot of trouble suppressing
00:01:40.275 --> 00:01:40.775
the
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uprisings
00:01:42.155 --> 00:01:44.155
that were happening in the north. A lot
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of them were Scottish Protestants,
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Presbyterians,
00:01:47.720 --> 00:01:50.760
and, and they grew and multiplied and so
00:01:50.760 --> 00:01:52.860
on. That's why they became the majority.
00:01:53.320 --> 00:01:55.480
And it was very, very hard, I think,
00:01:55.480 --> 00:01:57.960
for the Catholics to then end up dealing
00:01:57.960 --> 00:01:59.880
with that. I explained an awful lot of
00:01:59.880 --> 00:02:02.095
it in the book, but that was the
00:02:02.095 --> 00:02:05.055
reason I did it. My grandmother, she was
00:02:05.055 --> 00:02:06.175
in the thing called,
00:02:07.215 --> 00:02:08.815
well, I forgot now the name of it,
00:02:08.815 --> 00:02:11.875
but the Irish Women's Group sort of equivalent.
00:02:12.255 --> 00:02:15.235
And my grandfather fought with Michael Collins.
00:02:15.870 --> 00:02:18.590
My grandmother used to tell stories about him.
00:02:18.590 --> 00:02:20.510
She would say things like, "He would come
00:02:20.510 --> 00:02:21.950
home in the middle of the night, and
00:02:21.950 --> 00:02:23.810
I'd hear the knock on the back door
00:02:24.030 --> 00:02:25.630
and I'd open it up and there he
00:02:25.630 --> 00:02:27.250
was running from the bastards,"
00:02:27.550 --> 00:02:29.665
excuse my French. And she said, "And
00:02:29.665 --> 00:02:31.425
I'd have to pull the thorns out of
00:02:31.425 --> 00:02:33.585
his feet because he had no shoes on"
00:02:33.585 --> 00:02:35.345
and dah, dah, dah, dah. So all these
00:02:35.345 --> 00:02:37.585
great stories. I wove a lot of that
00:02:37.585 --> 00:02:38.085
into
00:02:38.625 --> 00:02:40.385
the first book, "The Yellow House." And that
00:02:40.385 --> 00:02:42.740
is the book I think is truly
00:02:42.800 --> 00:02:43.860
from my heart.
00:02:44.240 --> 00:02:46.400
And it's still selling. Even though it came
00:02:46.400 --> 00:02:48.420
out in 2010,
00:02:48.880 --> 00:02:51.600
it's still selling. So that was followed by
00:02:51.600 --> 00:02:54.355
"The Linen Queen." The first book, "The Yellow
00:02:54.355 --> 00:02:57.335
House," the heroine in the book, Eileen O'Neill,
00:02:57.875 --> 00:02:59.015
aka my grandmother,
00:02:59.315 --> 00:03:00.915
she worked in a linen mill. A lot
00:03:00.915 --> 00:03:02.535
of the Catholic women,
00:03:02.995 --> 00:03:03.895
the only jobs
00:03:04.195 --> 00:03:06.435
they could get, because there was a great deal
00:03:06.435 --> 00:03:07.255
of job discrimination
00:03:07.715 --> 00:03:08.215
anyway,
00:03:08.640 --> 00:03:10.820
but the only jobs they could get were
00:03:10.960 --> 00:03:12.100
in spinning factories
00:03:12.480 --> 00:03:13.940
and weaving factories.
00:03:14.320 --> 00:03:15.940
Turned out that my
00:03:16.320 --> 00:03:17.140
my mother
00:03:18.000 --> 00:03:18.740
worked briefly
00:03:19.120 --> 00:03:22.145
in a linen mill. My grandmother worked
00:03:22.145 --> 00:03:24.225
in a linen mill. My great-grandmother worked
00:03:24.225 --> 00:03:26.865
in a linen mill. And so I became
00:03:26.865 --> 00:03:29.585
fascinated by the linen mills, and they were
00:03:29.585 --> 00:03:31.825
mostly owned by Quakers, which I thought was
00:03:31.825 --> 00:03:32.645
rather interesting.
00:03:33.480 --> 00:03:36.200
And so I was back in Ireland and
00:03:36.200 --> 00:03:37.260
talking to somebody,
00:03:37.800 --> 00:03:39.960
and I'd changed the name of the mill
00:03:39.960 --> 00:03:42.280
and so on, but everybody recognized where it
00:03:42.280 --> 00:03:44.280
was and everybody had a story of somebody
00:03:44.280 --> 00:03:46.120
in their family who worked in the
00:03:46.120 --> 00:03:46.620
mill.
00:03:46.995 --> 00:03:49.255
And so then I ended up
00:03:49.635 --> 00:03:52.115
just talking to somebody, I think when I
00:03:52.115 --> 00:03:54.115
did a launch of "The Yellow House" in
00:03:54.115 --> 00:03:54.615
Ireland,
00:03:55.315 --> 00:03:57.575
and I think the nice thing was that
00:03:57.635 --> 00:03:58.775
while I was there,
00:03:59.260 --> 00:04:00.000
I finally
00:04:00.540 --> 00:04:02.380
was able to find the grave where
00:04:02.380 --> 00:04:05.020
my grandmother had been buried because nobody
00:04:05.020 --> 00:04:05.520
really knew.
00:04:06.140 --> 00:04:08.860
And we found it and we erected a
00:04:08.860 --> 00:04:11.500
headstone, and I felt like I had done
00:04:11.500 --> 00:04:14.125
the full circle at that point. But anyway,
00:04:14.125 --> 00:04:15.885
so somebody was talking about it and they
00:04:15.885 --> 00:04:17.565
said, "You know, they used to have beauty
00:04:17.565 --> 00:04:20.605
competitions in the linen mills all across the
00:04:20.605 --> 00:04:22.925
north and whoever won it was known as
00:04:22.925 --> 00:04:23.985
the Linen Queen
00:04:24.445 --> 00:04:26.290
for that period of time.
Kate:
00:04:26.290 --> 00:04:29.730
And they were beauty competitions?
Patricia:
00:04:29.730 --> 00:04:32.770
Yeah. Well, beauty and grace and good behavior like what Miss America's
00:04:32.770 --> 00:04:34.150
supposed to be. I thought, you know, that would make a great title.
00:04:34.930 --> 00:04:36.710
So then I set the book
00:04:37.170 --> 00:04:38.870
in 1942
00:04:39.315 --> 00:04:39.815
because
00:04:40.115 --> 00:04:41.735
I knew a lot of stories
00:04:42.115 --> 00:04:43.415
of young American
00:04:44.195 --> 00:04:44.695
soldiers
00:04:44.995 --> 00:04:47.575
who camped out around Northern Ireland
00:04:47.955 --> 00:04:50.855
during World War II. And many of them
00:04:50.995 --> 00:04:53.400
who had been there were part of the
00:04:53.400 --> 00:04:54.300
D-Day landing.
00:04:55.000 --> 00:04:57.180
And so that's really the story
00:04:57.640 --> 00:04:58.860
of how a small
00:04:59.400 --> 00:05:01.900
town in the north of Ireland was changed
00:05:01.960 --> 00:05:03.420
by the soldiers
00:05:03.880 --> 00:05:06.115
coming there. And they all got to know
00:05:06.115 --> 00:05:08.515
them. And many of the American soldiers would
00:05:08.515 --> 00:05:09.015
go
00:05:09.315 --> 00:05:12.515
to dinner every Sunday with some family. So
00:05:12.515 --> 00:05:13.895
when D-Day happened,
00:05:14.435 --> 00:05:15.575
it just shook
00:05:15.955 --> 00:05:19.190
that part of the country to, to its
00:05:19.190 --> 00:05:22.070
knees because they knew all these kids and
00:05:22.070 --> 00:05:24.710
they were all very upset. They could, they
00:05:24.710 --> 00:05:26.310
could quote you the names of all the
00:05:26.310 --> 00:05:29.030
beaches, you know, like Juno Beach and so
00:05:29.030 --> 00:05:31.110
on. And it was a very
00:05:31.110 --> 00:05:33.430
interesting time and I just thought, well, that
00:05:33.430 --> 00:05:35.655
might make a good story. But what I
00:05:35.655 --> 00:05:38.855
usually do, the reason it's historical fiction, as
00:05:38.855 --> 00:05:40.395
well, is that I take
00:05:41.175 --> 00:05:42.075
real events
00:05:42.615 --> 00:05:44.955
and then I take ordinary characters,
00:05:45.655 --> 00:05:47.600
and I tell the story of what it
00:05:47.600 --> 00:05:50.980
was like for these ordinary characters living through
00:05:51.120 --> 00:05:52.580
these major events.
00:05:53.040 --> 00:05:55.360
And that's really the theme that goes through
00:05:55.360 --> 00:05:56.420
all of my books.
00:05:57.040 --> 00:05:58.880
The third one is The Girls of
00:05:58.880 --> 00:05:59.380
Ennismore."
00:05:59.795 --> 00:06:02.135
That story was the first one I set
00:06:02.435 --> 00:06:04.755
in the west of Ireland in County Mayo,
00:06:04.755 --> 00:06:07.315
where my father's family came from. My mother's
00:06:07.315 --> 00:06:09.795
family is from the north. It's been called like
00:06:09.795 --> 00:06:12.370
an Irish "Downton Abbey." It's set in a
00:06:12.370 --> 00:06:15.010
manor house but against the backdrop of World
00:06:15.010 --> 00:06:15.670
War I
00:06:16.130 --> 00:06:19.830
and the Easter uprising, which was 1916
00:06:20.690 --> 00:06:21.350
in Dublin.
00:06:21.650 --> 00:06:24.790
And I have Rosie, who is the tenant
00:06:24.850 --> 00:06:28.325
farmer's daughter who was brought to take lessons,
00:06:28.385 --> 00:06:31.025
to be a companion for the young girl
00:06:31.025 --> 00:06:31.525
Victoria,
00:06:32.225 --> 00:06:35.105
who is from the aristocratic family. So they
00:06:35.105 --> 00:06:36.165
grow up together.
00:06:36.785 --> 00:06:38.545
But then, of course, when it's time for
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Victoria's coming out and she goes off
00:06:41.185 --> 00:06:41.845
to London
00:06:42.370 --> 00:06:45.010
or wherever, and then Rosie is like, well,
00:06:45.010 --> 00:06:47.330
you get back to the farm. And
00:06:47.330 --> 00:06:49.890
so Rosie ended up going to Dublin and
00:06:49.890 --> 00:06:51.730
the girls do meet up at some point,
00:06:51.730 --> 00:06:53.510
but it's like the different paths
00:06:53.810 --> 00:06:54.870
that they take.
00:06:55.365 --> 00:06:58.265
And then, you know, hopefully, there's some reasonably
00:06:58.405 --> 00:07:00.805
nice ending for it. In that one, I
00:07:00.805 --> 00:07:02.025
referenced the Titanic
00:07:02.725 --> 00:07:05.205
because a lot of young people had sailed
00:07:05.205 --> 00:07:06.025
on the Titanic
00:07:06.725 --> 00:07:08.885
out of Ireland. There's one little village, which
00:07:08.885 --> 00:07:10.185
was right down the street
00:07:10.610 --> 00:07:13.650
from where I set this book and from
00:07:13.650 --> 00:07:15.830
where I had spent summer childhoods
00:07:16.530 --> 00:07:18.950
at my father's family's farm.
00:07:19.490 --> 00:07:21.830
And it's a little village called Lahardane,
00:07:22.635 --> 00:07:23.135
and
00:07:23.435 --> 00:07:23.935
17
00:07:24.555 --> 00:07:25.935
young people died
00:07:26.315 --> 00:07:27.215
on the Titanic
00:07:27.755 --> 00:07:30.095
in, in that one little tiny village.
00:07:30.795 --> 00:07:33.275
Some part of that is in "The Girls
00:07:33.275 --> 00:07:34.335
of Ennismore."
00:07:34.690 --> 00:07:35.430
And interestingly
00:07:35.810 --> 00:07:36.310
enough,
00:07:36.690 --> 00:07:39.270
my next book was called "The Titanic Sisters."
00:07:39.890 --> 00:07:41.730
So that was the first time I tell
00:07:41.730 --> 00:07:44.050
people that I let my characters off of
00:07:44.050 --> 00:07:45.670
the island of Ireland.
00:07:46.130 --> 00:07:48.615
They got to leave Ireland. And in this
00:07:48.615 --> 00:07:51.735
case, the Titanic sisters are two sisters from
00:07:51.735 --> 00:07:52.715
County Donegal,
00:07:53.175 --> 00:07:55.675
which is Southern Ireland but it's
00:07:56.135 --> 00:07:58.775
geographically in the north, if you can imagine.
00:07:58.775 --> 00:07:59.915
It's all very
00:08:00.455 --> 00:08:00.955
complex.
00:08:01.520 --> 00:08:04.560
But one sister, the mother loves her and
00:08:04.560 --> 00:08:06.480
she can do no wrong. And the other
00:08:06.480 --> 00:08:06.980
sister
00:08:07.520 --> 00:08:09.360
has a hard time of it, but they
00:08:09.360 --> 00:08:11.140
both end up going to America
00:08:11.760 --> 00:08:14.100
and headed to New York on the Titanic
00:08:14.320 --> 00:08:14.820
because
00:08:15.225 --> 00:08:17.625
a wealthy cousin has sent some money. He
00:08:17.625 --> 00:08:19.405
needs a nanny for his daughter.
00:08:19.785 --> 00:08:23.305
So they get there. Neither sister knows whether
00:08:23.305 --> 00:08:24.445
the other one survived,
00:08:25.145 --> 00:08:27.065
and one takes the place of the other
00:08:27.065 --> 00:08:29.680
one. But then I move it to Texas
00:08:29.740 --> 00:08:31.420
and I've been in Texas so long, and
00:08:31.420 --> 00:08:33.180
I thought, you know, I really know a
00:08:33.180 --> 00:08:35.680
lot about what went on in Texas history.
00:08:35.900 --> 00:08:38.080
Might be kind of fun to do that.
00:08:38.460 --> 00:08:40.880
So I had these two Irish girls
00:08:41.475 --> 00:08:44.835
end up just as the oil rush was
00:08:44.835 --> 00:08:45.895
starting to happen
00:08:46.355 --> 00:08:47.015
in Texas.
00:08:47.715 --> 00:08:50.435
And so I had some fun bringing
00:08:50.435 --> 00:08:53.555
in some real Texas characters and one woman
00:08:53.555 --> 00:08:56.515
in particular named Mayflower who has all these
00:08:56.515 --> 00:08:57.880
great Texas sayings.
Kate:
00:08:58.260 --> 00:09:01.160
I loved her character.
Patricia:
00:09:01.380 --> 00:09:01.860
Yeah. Wasn't she lovely?I mean,
00:09:02.820 --> 00:09:04.680
well, what did she say? Her mother
00:09:05.140 --> 00:09:07.860
was so full with pride that she carried
00:09:07.860 --> 00:09:10.660
her nose so high that she might've drowned
00:09:10.660 --> 00:09:11.560
in a rainstorm.
00:09:11.940 --> 00:09:14.945
I mean, just some real great things that
00:09:14.945 --> 00:09:16.465
I was able to do with that. I
00:09:16.465 --> 00:09:18.545
just enjoyed that. And that book was
00:09:18.545 --> 00:09:19.365
pretty popular...
Kate:
00:09:19.367
Oh, yeah.
Patricia:
00:09:20.065 --> 00:09:22.625
...with the local Texan people. And
00:09:22.625 --> 00:09:24.465
you know, I'm always waiting for that one
00:09:24.465 --> 00:09:26.670
person who says you got that wrong. And
00:09:26.670 --> 00:09:28.770
that's the problem with historical fiction.
00:09:29.150 --> 00:09:31.150
I was asked the other day at my
00:09:31.150 --> 00:09:32.130
Suffolk University
00:09:32.590 --> 00:09:33.090
reunion
00:09:34.030 --> 00:09:34.530
event,
00:09:34.990 --> 00:09:37.630
why is it called historical fiction? And I
00:09:37.630 --> 00:09:39.150
said, well, in a way, it's kind of
00:09:39.150 --> 00:09:39.890
an oxymoron.
00:09:40.765 --> 00:09:42.925
How can it be historical and fiction? And
00:09:42.925 --> 00:09:44.785
I said it's kind of like fake news.
00:09:44.845 --> 00:09:46.845
But first of all, people have to realize
00:09:46.845 --> 00:09:49.005
it is fiction. Some part of it is
00:09:49.005 --> 00:09:49.505
fictionalized,
00:09:50.045 --> 00:09:52.045
but I always try to keep the actual
00:09:52.045 --> 00:09:55.770
events and places and whatever details I can,
00:09:55.850 --> 00:09:57.230
I try to keep those
00:09:57.610 --> 00:09:58.750
as genuine
00:09:59.130 --> 00:10:00.990
and accurate as I can.
00:10:01.530 --> 00:10:04.490
In "The Famine Orphans," my latest book, which
00:10:04.490 --> 00:10:05.470
was really
00:10:06.090 --> 00:10:06.830
a marathon
00:10:07.690 --> 00:10:08.350
of research
00:10:08.725 --> 00:10:10.585
because it's set in the 1840s,
00:10:11.605 --> 00:10:12.665
early 1850s,
00:10:13.605 --> 00:10:15.785
and that's going back a long way.
00:10:17.125 --> 00:10:20.245
And my girls had to go on this
00:10:20.245 --> 00:10:21.465
three- to four-month
00:10:21.925 --> 00:10:24.900
ship ride on a very small sailing ship
00:10:25.280 --> 00:10:26.180
from England
00:10:26.560 --> 00:10:27.460
down to Australia.
00:10:27.840 --> 00:10:29.840
So I had to research all this stuff
00:10:29.840 --> 00:10:32.720
about what those ships were like and something
00:10:32.720 --> 00:10:35.280
about how they run and the wind and
00:10:35.280 --> 00:10:38.165
how well this works. And my geography had
00:10:38.165 --> 00:10:40.005
to be improved. I kind of followed the
00:10:40.005 --> 00:10:42.965
route that they went and so on. So
00:10:42.965 --> 00:10:44.725
there was an awful lot, and I'm
00:10:44.725 --> 00:10:47.205
still waiting for somebody from Australia now to
00:10:47.205 --> 00:10:48.745
say, well, you've got this wrong.
00:10:49.360 --> 00:10:51.920
Doesn't happen too often. "The Linen Queen" was
00:10:51.920 --> 00:10:55.040
really interesting because I got challenged a couple
00:10:55.040 --> 00:10:55.780
of times
00:10:56.400 --> 00:10:59.200
on the fact that there were actually little
00:10:59.200 --> 00:11:00.180
Jewish orphans
00:11:01.245 --> 00:11:02.385
from the war
00:11:02.925 --> 00:11:05.325
in Northern Ireland, in this place called
00:11:05.325 --> 00:11:06.145
Millisle. And
00:11:06.925 --> 00:11:09.105
they went to school with the kids there
00:11:09.165 --> 00:11:11.265
and they actually had like a little kibbutz,
00:11:11.805 --> 00:11:13.185
you know, a little farm
00:11:13.640 --> 00:11:15.180
and they had a synagogue.
00:11:15.800 --> 00:11:16.300
And
00:11:16.680 --> 00:11:19.640
I remember one Jewish book club, some lady
00:11:19.640 --> 00:11:22.680
saying, "Well, that's not true." And I said,
00:11:22.680 --> 00:11:24.840
yes, I've been there. I've talked to people,
00:11:24.840 --> 00:11:27.420
who know about it. And she said,
00:11:27.705 --> 00:11:28.205
"Well,
00:11:29.225 --> 00:11:30.345
how come an Irish woman knows
00:11:30.345 --> 00:11:31.945
more about our history than we do?"
00:11:31.945 --> 00:11:34.185
And so she was quite put out, but
00:11:34.185 --> 00:11:35.945
then the better thing was I was at
00:11:35.945 --> 00:11:39.005
a book club signing in Greenwich, Connecticut.
00:11:39.830 --> 00:11:41.670
And I got the same thing from a
00:11:41.670 --> 00:11:44.070
lady who said, "Oh, you made that up,
00:11:44.070 --> 00:11:46.390
right?" And I said, no, it's true. And
00:11:46.390 --> 00:11:47.450
another lady
00:11:47.910 --> 00:11:49.930
who happened to be there in the audience
00:11:50.230 --> 00:11:52.790
said, "Oh, yes, it's true because my great-
00:11:52.790 --> 00:11:53.690
great-grandfather
00:11:54.535 --> 00:11:55.835
was one of the four
00:11:56.535 --> 00:11:57.995
gentlemen from Belfast
00:11:58.375 --> 00:11:59.835
who bought that property
00:12:00.455 --> 00:12:02.855
in Millisle where they set it up
00:12:02.855 --> 00:12:04.635
for all these kids to come to.
00:12:05.175 --> 00:12:07.515
I felt good after that. But, you know,
00:12:07.910 --> 00:12:09.750
it does happen. I mean, you can't get
00:12:09.750 --> 00:12:12.790
everything right but you try. And with this
00:12:12.790 --> 00:12:15.510
book in particular, I think because it's a
00:12:15.510 --> 00:12:18.790
true story, which is kind of interesting because
00:12:18.790 --> 00:12:21.190
everything else I've written about, yeah, they're all
00:12:21.190 --> 00:12:23.530
true stories, but they're known.
00:12:23.885 --> 00:12:27.085
And this story, very few people actually know
00:12:27.085 --> 00:12:29.105
it. And it's about 4,000
00:12:29.645 --> 00:12:33.085
young Irish female orphans between the ages of
00:12:33.085 --> 00:12:34.305
14 and 19
00:12:35.005 --> 00:12:36.465
who were persuaded
00:12:37.670 --> 00:12:39.050
by the English government
00:12:39.750 --> 00:12:42.010
and then the governors of the workhouses.
00:12:42.470 --> 00:12:44.550
They were all in workhouses because of the
00:12:44.550 --> 00:12:47.750
famine. And this was, like, 1846
00:12:47.750 --> 00:12:48.730
or '87
00:12:49.270 --> 00:12:51.770
and on from there. And it was because
00:12:52.135 --> 00:12:53.975
of the famine they had lost their
00:12:53.975 --> 00:12:56.295
parents and so on and all the
00:12:56.295 --> 00:12:59.275
workhouses were very overcrowded. So the Australian
00:12:59.655 --> 00:13:02.855
colonists, the people in charge there, and the
00:13:02.855 --> 00:13:05.735
English — and Australia was a colony, obviously, of
00:13:05.735 --> 00:13:08.230
England at that time. And so they
00:13:08.690 --> 00:13:11.010
said, "Well, have we got a deal for you.
00:13:11.010 --> 00:13:12.230
Why don't we pay
00:13:12.770 --> 00:13:15.650
to take all these girls of a certain
00:13:15.650 --> 00:13:16.150
age
00:13:16.610 --> 00:13:18.690
out of the workhouses and we'll put them
00:13:18.690 --> 00:13:20.370
on a boat and we'll pay for the
00:13:20.370 --> 00:13:22.310
trip and we'll buy them some clothes
00:13:23.045 --> 00:13:24.505
and we'll guarantee
00:13:24.885 --> 00:13:26.905
them jobs as domestic servants
00:13:27.285 --> 00:13:28.265
in Australia"
00:13:28.725 --> 00:13:31.445
because Australia had lots of big houses. There
00:13:31.445 --> 00:13:33.045
are a lot of aristocracy that lived
00:13:33.045 --> 00:13:35.445
there, but they didn't have a lot
00:13:35.445 --> 00:13:36.185
of servants.
00:13:36.950 --> 00:13:38.870
And they thought, "Well, this would be a
00:13:38.870 --> 00:13:40.790
way to do it." And the girls were
00:13:40.790 --> 00:13:41.690
given a choice.
00:13:42.150 --> 00:13:44.010
They were told, you can stay here and starve,
00:13:44.150 --> 00:13:44.810
you know,
00:13:45.190 --> 00:13:47.530
or you can take this. And so
00:13:47.990 --> 00:13:50.550
most of them accepted it. What they didn't
00:13:50.550 --> 00:13:52.735
say, what was kind of a hidden agenda
00:13:53.355 --> 00:13:56.015
was that there were all these male prisoners
00:13:57.035 --> 00:14:00.735
in Australia because Australia had been England's
00:14:01.675 --> 00:14:03.215
outdoor prison basically.
00:14:03.835 --> 00:14:06.315
And a lot of those prisoners had been
00:14:06.315 --> 00:14:08.700
there more than ten years and they had
00:14:08.700 --> 00:14:10.780
sort of earned their ticket of leave. They'd
00:14:10.780 --> 00:14:11.760
served their sentence,
00:14:12.140 --> 00:14:14.300
but they were rough and ready. And the
00:14:14.300 --> 00:14:17.340
Australians wanted to build settlements and to build
00:14:17.340 --> 00:14:19.420
settlements, they had to get these guys to
00:14:19.420 --> 00:14:22.320
settle down and be civilized, quote unquote.
00:14:22.700 --> 00:14:24.835
And so they thought all these girls will
00:14:24.835 --> 00:14:27.235
come and they'll all marry and this will
00:14:27.235 --> 00:14:27.895
be great.
00:14:28.355 --> 00:14:31.235
So a win-win, you know, and that's
00:14:31.235 --> 00:14:34.195
not totally what happened. So anyway, I tell
00:14:34.195 --> 00:14:35.015
this story
00:14:35.780 --> 00:14:37.620
and part of the reason I wanted to
00:14:37.620 --> 00:14:40.340
write it is because two things. One, I
00:14:40.340 --> 00:14:42.260
was born in a town called Newry in
00:14:42.260 --> 00:14:44.340
the north of Ireland, and there were
00:14:44.340 --> 00:14:47.060
workhouses there. And I found out that there
00:14:47.060 --> 00:14:47.535
were
00:14:48.015 --> 00:14:50.995
around 25 girls from the Newry workhouse
00:14:51.535 --> 00:14:53.315
who had gone to Australia.
00:14:53.935 --> 00:14:54.435
And
00:14:54.975 --> 00:14:56.515
I thought that could have been
00:14:57.055 --> 00:14:59.615
me in a different time. That could have
00:14:59.615 --> 00:15:00.915
been one of my relatives.
00:15:01.290 --> 00:15:03.690
So I had a kinship already knowing that
00:15:03.690 --> 00:15:06.110
some of them were from there. And then
00:15:06.170 --> 00:15:08.030
also the fact that I'm an immigrant.
00:15:08.410 --> 00:15:08.910
And
00:15:09.530 --> 00:15:10.830
I thought I could
00:15:11.210 --> 00:15:14.250
at least give some idea to the reader
00:15:14.250 --> 00:15:16.705
of how it would feel for these young
00:15:16.705 --> 00:15:18.705
girls, many of whom had never been off
00:15:18.705 --> 00:15:22.245
their farm or whatever, coming to this really
00:15:22.705 --> 00:15:24.005
strange place
00:15:24.545 --> 00:15:27.105
that they had no idea even existed and
00:15:27.105 --> 00:15:28.805
to try to make their way.
00:15:29.360 --> 00:15:31.060
And so I felt I could
00:15:31.600 --> 00:15:33.140
in many ways speak for them.
00:15:33.600 --> 00:15:36.160
And I think that's why this book has
00:15:36.160 --> 00:15:37.380
meant a lot to me
00:15:37.760 --> 00:15:39.360
to do. It's kind of like up there
00:15:39.360 --> 00:15:41.440
with "The Yellow House." I've tried to give
00:15:41.440 --> 00:15:44.580
voice to these girls. And what's been interesting
00:15:45.015 --> 00:15:47.895
in the last few years, the Australians have
00:15:47.895 --> 00:15:49.915
started to focus on this story
00:15:50.375 --> 00:15:51.835
and they've got a memorial
00:15:52.455 --> 00:15:54.075
museum in Sydney,
00:15:54.535 --> 00:15:56.875
and they've had lots of genealogists
00:15:57.335 --> 00:15:59.495
come and lots of people are tracing their
00:15:59.495 --> 00:15:59.995
relatives
00:16:00.750 --> 00:16:02.210
back through to these girls.
00:16:02.750 --> 00:16:06.110
And they've become known colloquially as the mothers
00:16:06.110 --> 00:16:06.930
of Australia,
00:16:07.630 --> 00:16:09.390
which I think is kind of cool. What
00:16:09.390 --> 00:16:11.490
I haven't said was more than 20
00:16:11.550 --> 00:16:12.050
ships
00:16:12.350 --> 00:16:13.730
sailed with these girls.
00:16:14.275 --> 00:16:15.815
And the first couple
00:16:16.595 --> 00:16:19.495
had a prevalence of people from Belfast.
00:16:19.875 --> 00:16:21.955
So you've got to know the Belfast people.
00:16:21.955 --> 00:16:22.455
They'll
00:16:22.915 --> 00:16:25.715
speak out and so on. And so anyway,
00:16:25.715 --> 00:16:27.795
there was a ship's doctor who was in
00:16:27.795 --> 00:16:29.850
charge of the first set of girls
00:16:29.850 --> 00:16:31.850
who went on this boat called the Earl
00:16:31.850 --> 00:16:34.190
Grey. And it turned out that
00:16:35.610 --> 00:16:38.190
he had a hard time with disciplining them
00:16:38.570 --> 00:16:41.210
and so on. So when they got to
00:16:41.210 --> 00:16:43.630
Sydney, he just put up such a ruckus
00:16:44.175 --> 00:16:46.355
about how terrible they were and
00:16:46.975 --> 00:16:49.775
how low class and low lifes they were,
00:16:49.775 --> 00:16:52.575
and how they would make terrible servants, things
00:16:52.575 --> 00:16:54.015
like that. And it was picked up by
00:16:54.015 --> 00:16:54.675
the press.
00:16:55.215 --> 00:16:56.655
And then when it was picked up by
00:16:56.655 --> 00:16:58.675
the Sydney Herald, then it became
00:16:59.200 --> 00:17:02.560
a story in Melbourne and Adelaide and some
00:17:02.560 --> 00:17:05.220
of the other areas around there. So
00:17:06.080 --> 00:17:08.560
people began to be very wary of these
00:17:08.560 --> 00:17:11.060
girls and the ones who came subsequently
00:17:12.005 --> 00:17:13.925
kind of paid the price for that because
00:17:13.925 --> 00:17:15.785
they found a great deal of discrimination.
00:17:16.165 --> 00:17:17.545
It was anti-Irish.
00:17:17.845 --> 00:17:19.225
It was anti-Catholic.
00:17:19.845 --> 00:17:22.425
Those who didn't get hired right away
00:17:22.725 --> 00:17:25.130
had a very hard time making it. A
00:17:25.130 --> 00:17:26.590
lot of them turned to prostitution.
00:17:27.370 --> 00:17:29.850
That's how it worked. But a lot of
00:17:29.850 --> 00:17:33.530
them did, over time, succeed. And so in
00:17:33.530 --> 00:17:35.950
this story, I follow six girls.
00:17:36.810 --> 00:17:39.870
Kate, my main character is the narrator, but
00:17:40.135 --> 00:17:42.375
I follow six, and they all have somewhat
00:17:42.375 --> 00:17:43.675
different experiences.
00:17:44.375 --> 00:17:47.515
And again, it was interesting that just timing
00:17:48.215 --> 00:17:49.675
was kind of cool because
00:17:49.975 --> 00:17:50.715
the outback
00:17:51.175 --> 00:17:52.795
of Australia, where people
00:17:53.190 --> 00:17:56.310
in and around Sydney and elsewhere were wanting
00:17:56.310 --> 00:17:58.490
to put down roots and
00:17:59.110 --> 00:18:01.530
have farms and so on and so forth,
00:18:01.590 --> 00:18:03.670
and they had no idea really how
00:18:03.670 --> 00:18:06.230
bad the outback could be. And Kate is
00:18:06.230 --> 00:18:07.605
one of the ones who
00:18:08.085 --> 00:18:11.125
ends up out there with her husband trying
00:18:11.125 --> 00:18:13.125
to get a farm going, and then he
00:18:13.125 --> 00:18:15.685
has to take off because they're not making
00:18:15.685 --> 00:18:18.185
it. And she's left with the isolation,
00:18:18.725 --> 00:18:20.485
which was worse than anything. And, you know,
00:18:20.485 --> 00:18:22.265
there's nobody around for miles,
00:18:22.730 --> 00:18:25.870
no other human being. So I use her
00:18:26.090 --> 00:18:28.410
to sort of illustrate how that would have
00:18:28.410 --> 00:18:28.910
been
00:18:29.210 --> 00:18:30.670
for the people. And then
00:18:31.130 --> 00:18:33.770
right on top of that, the Australian gold
00:18:33.770 --> 00:18:34.670
rush started.
00:18:35.405 --> 00:18:37.965
So I moved some of my characters up
00:18:37.965 --> 00:18:41.005
through the experience of the gold rush. And
00:18:41.005 --> 00:18:41.985
that was coincidental,
00:18:42.365 --> 00:18:44.685
kind of like the oil boom here in
00:18:44.685 --> 00:18:47.485
Texas just coincided with what I was writing.
00:18:47.485 --> 00:18:49.840
So I did take a ride through the
00:18:49.840 --> 00:18:52.400
gold fields and discovered how a lot of
00:18:52.400 --> 00:18:54.720
that worked, but I make sure that I
00:18:54.720 --> 00:18:57.440
follow all of the orphans.
Kate:
00:18:57.440 --> 00:18:58.340
And did yougo to Australia?
Patricia:
00:18:59.200 --> 00:19:01.695
No. I meant to go, and that's
00:19:01.775 --> 00:19:03.375
the one thing that I'm really a little
00:19:03.375 --> 00:19:05.535
nervous about, but I'm thinking it certainly can't
00:19:05.535 --> 00:19:06.035
look
00:19:06.415 --> 00:19:08.735
today the way it looked in 1850.
00:19:08.735 --> 00:19:11.215
So I know I have that going
00:19:11.215 --> 00:19:13.395
for me, but I just made up
00:19:13.455 --> 00:19:15.775
for what I could with research. The reason
00:19:15.775 --> 00:19:18.710
I couldn't go, because I was planning to,
00:19:18.770 --> 00:19:19.590
and then
00:19:20.050 --> 00:19:21.990
I was running a little behind
00:19:22.290 --> 00:19:24.950
on my time for the book deadline.
00:19:25.650 --> 00:19:27.890
But on top of that, I had an
00:19:27.890 --> 00:19:30.230
odd accident with an Uber driver
00:19:30.965 --> 00:19:34.105
who backed up over my foot and broke
00:19:34.405 --> 00:19:36.905
my foot in several places. And,
00:19:37.285 --> 00:19:37.785
therefore,
00:19:38.165 --> 00:19:40.165
I wasn't able to travel. I was in
00:19:40.165 --> 00:19:41.865
pain. I wasn't able to write.
00:19:42.405 --> 00:19:43.925
And so there was no way I was
00:19:43.925 --> 00:19:46.400
gonna get to go to Australia and finish
00:19:46.400 --> 00:19:49.040
the book on time. It just didn't happen,
00:19:49.040 --> 00:19:50.260
but I'm still hopeful
00:19:50.640 --> 00:19:53.040
that I'll get to go. Maybe they'll invite
00:19:53.040 --> 00:19:55.520
me over, you know, once they know that
00:19:55.520 --> 00:19:56.580
I've written this.