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Joshua Ferris Interview, plus links to author biography, book summaries, excerpts and reviews

Joshua Ferris
Photo: Kelly Campbell

Joshua Ferris

An interview with Joshua Ferris

Joshua Ferris talks about his first novel, Then We Came to the End, set in a Chicago ad agency during the business downturn at the end of the 1990s.

Tell us a little about your writing background up to this point

I lived in Key West as a kid, and there I started writing imitation Alfred Hitchcock stories — not "The Birds" but, given Key West's coastal view, "The Crabs." Many good people, boaters and sunbathers, were eaten alive as Hitchcock turned in his grave. Then in college, at the University of Iowa, I started writing stories again — again imitations but with sights set a little higher, or at least more literary: Nabokov, Barthelme. Shortly after college I got a job in advertising where I wrote ad copy for national brands, which taught me a good many things. And after my time in advertising I enrolled in the MFA program at the University of California, Irvine, where I started Then We Came to the End.


So you had experience working in an ad agency. Is that how you arrived at the setting of your novel?

Ad agencies can be a lot of fun. Creative departments are full of toys and games and wacky surprises, and throwing a Nerf football down the hallway to release tension isn't immediate cause for walking papers. I wanted my characters to have the freedom to do certain things that wouldn't fly, say, in a law firm. But I didn't want that freedom to come at the expense of excluding what's universal about office life. Copywriters, lawyers, financial analysts, accountants, waiters, and construction workers all share in an inescapable group dynamic that includes scuttlebutt, in-jokes, disaffection, camaraderie. I hope Then We Came to the End taps into some of that.

I did yeoman's work in advertising for about three years, and I was fascinated by the behemoth structure in place — the hierarchies, the coded messages, the power struggles. I thought such an awesome, malignant, necessary, pervasive, inscrutable place deserved a novel's attention.

The characters in Then We Came to the End are under the constant threat of layoffs, and that creates a specific group dynamic: the group's unquenchable scrutiny of itself. Who's next on the chopping block? Whom do they value most? What will happen to "us" if the company goes under? Eventually this scrutiny drives the characters in Then We Came to the End to distraction, and they do things that even the more carnival environs of advertising can't abide.


Why the narrative "we"?

Companies tend to refer to themselves in the first-person plural — in annual reports, corporate brochures, within meetings and internal memos, and, in particular, in advertising. What used to be the royal "we" might now be thought of as the corporate "we." It's not just a company's way of showing unity and strength; it's also a matter of making everyone feel as if they're a member of the club. This is especially true in advertising, where the work is dedicated to getting more and more people to join the clubs of various clients, who have dreams of greater market share, bigger profit margins, and, ultimately, global dominance.

In Then We Came to the End, you see just who this "we" really is — a collection of messy human beings — stripped of their glossy finish and eternal corporate optimism. It returns the "we" to the individuals who embody it, people with anger-management issues and bills to pay, instead of letting the mystic "we" live on unperturbed in the magic land promoted by billboards and boardrooms.


But why not tell the story from one office worker's perspective?

My father took a great risk around the time he turned fifty by starting his own company. It was small at first; he was his only employee. Yet his message machine told callers that "we" weren't in right now, but if you left a message, "we" would call you back. Who was this "we"? It was just him! But, of course, he had to be a "we" — few people trust a one-man show. Over time I came to realize that every company refers to itself in the first-person plural. It's not just a way of showing unity and strength; it's also a matter of wanting you to join that club.

So, thematically, the novel's point of view was a no-brainer. Making it work took me up and down a long learning curve.


How does the centerpiece interlude (where the "we" disappears) function in relation to what comes before and after?

The interlude is the book's emotional heart. Without it Then We Came to the End would have been only an elaborate, if amusing, game. Lynn is forced to look at the possibility of death when she's diagnosed with breast cancer, and in turn so is the reader. After the interlude it becomes clear that death qualifies everything that came before it and everything that follows.


The novel seems more like borderline farce at the beginning, and then borders on tragedy as the reader comes to empathize more with the characters. Was this tonal progression part of the plan all along? Was it a challenge to sustain?

The tonal progression was absolutely part of the plan. I had little interest in writing a book that was only about what's funny at work. There are some pretty effective TV shows that do that. A novel asks more time and attention from its readers than a TV show does of its viewers, and the novel's form has always demanded a scope as all-encompassing of life as its practitioners can deliver. So, at the conceptual level, I knew it had to be, one, more than the complexities of its "we" point-of-view and, two, more than the sum of its jokes.

But I had to puzzle out how to make all that work. I initially spent about a year and a half on the book before giving it up. Another year and a half of reflection passed before I returned to it, and I did so only after hearing the voice of the collective in my head and not being able to tune it out. Once restarted, the book was finished in about fourteen weeks. So it took three years and fourteen weeks to gather my wits about me and know how to write a book in the first-person plural that took work as its subject and that included such disparate things as e-mail pranks and the emotional and physical ravages of breast cancer.


Your observations about office life ring so true. Were you working in an office setting when you wrote the book? Or, like your character Hank Neary, did it all come to you after you left office life?

After. Much, much after. Like Hank's fictional book, initial versions of my novel were top-heavy with complaint — the infelicities and pains-in-the-ass that arise day-to-day when working among other human beings and their foibles. Only after a certain remove — in fact, only after I had settled into the relatively solitary routine of a writer — did I realize that office life has a lot to offer: companionship, the opportunity to clown around, lunch mates. I sort of became, to my surprise, nostalgic for it. Only then did I see that work wasn't all misery. For every part dread, there was one part fun. Hopefully Then We Came to the End provides an equal measure.


Almost anyone working in a cubicle world will see her own experiences and thoughts in this book, yet most of us get so caught up in it we don't realize how universal typical office life and behavior is. Would you agree?

You get pretty wrapped up. I left a lot of friends behind when I went off to pursue writing, and it would be dishonest to say that our scope of conversation afterwards didn't narrow. We still talked about all the stuff that went on at my old agency, but those things meant less and less to me. Amazing! Stuff I had lived and died for, now mere reportage on the machinations of a far-off land.

But, as you say, it's universal. It's perfectly human to seek out community, especially at work, and with community comes getting caught up in the community's insatiable gaze inward. Especially when that community is under threat, as the group of employees is in Then We Came to the End. It's hard to think of anything else when every day there's someone new being twirled unwillingly through the revolving doors.


What tagline do you think Benny, Marcia, Joe, Genevieve, Karen, Yop, Jim, and the rest of the creatives would come up with to sell Then We Came to the End?

They wouldn't have a single clue. They would bemoan the assignment while being happy to have a job to bill time to. They would lollygag for a couple of days. Then they'd get down to business and feel woefully inadequate to the task. Jim especially. Eventually something would emerge, but there would be no consensus. Then We Came to the End would disappear from bookstores within two weeks and the agency would go bankrupt.


What authors and books are among your favorites?

I mentioned Nabokov and Barthelme. I read and reread Chekhov and Kafka. Same with Philip Roth and Thomas Pynchon, twin engines of a dark machine. I filched the title for Then We Came to the End from DeLillo's Americana, one of my favorites. I recently read a wonderful book by John Haskell called American Purgatorio, which is one of my favorites in recent memory. And it seems to me that the often maligned short story is having a renaissance of sorts, from masters of the craft like Edward P. Jones and George Saunders and Jim Shepard to younger writers like Karen Russell and Miranda July.


Are you working on a second novel? If so, can you share any details with us?

I am. I'm trying out a narrative technique called the "third person." We'll see how it goes.


Some of Joshua Ferris's Favorite Books

  • The Emigrants by W. G. Sebald
  • Project X by Jim Shepard
  • All Aunt Hagar's Children by Edward P. Jones
  • Sixty Stories by Donald Barthelme
  • Jesus' Son by Denis Johnson
  • Molloy, Malone Dies, The Unnameable by Samuel Beckett
  • Sabbath's Theater by Philip Roth
  • White Noise by Don DeLillo
  • Gravity's Rainbow by Thomas Pynchon
  • The Complete Essays and Poems by Ralph Waldo Emerson
  • Great Tales of Terror and the Supernatural, edited by Phyllis Cerf Wagner and Herbert Wise
  • Pale Fire by Vladimir Nabokov
  • M31: A Family Romance by Stephen Wright
  • Slaughterhouse Five by Kurt Vonnegut
  • The Ambassadors by Henry James
  • A Sport and a Pastime by James Salter
  • Ask the Dust by John Fante
  • Play It As It Lays by Joan Didion
  • The Complete Works by Nathanael West
  • The Dog of the South by Charles Portis
  • The Collected Stories by Amy Hempel
  • The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald
  • The Complete Stories by Anton Chekhov
  • Bleak House by Charles Dickens
  • One Hundred Years of Solitude by Gabriel García Márquez
  • Girl with Curious Hair by David Foster Wallace
  • Airships by Barry Hannah
  • Travesty by John Hawkes
  • Catch-22 by Joseph Heller
  • The Complete Stories by Franz Kafka
  • Birds of America by Lorrie Moore
  • The Things They Carried by Tim O'Brien
  • The Collected Stories by Grace Paley
  • Gilead by Marilynne Robinson
  • The Age of Innocence by Edith Wharton
  • Mrs. Dalloway by Virginia Woolf
  • The Duke of Deception by Geoffrey Wolff
  • The Good Soldier by Ford Madox Ford
  • The Moviegoer by Walker Percy
  • The Corrections by Jonathan Franzen
  • The New York Trilogy by Paul Auster
  • The Complete Works by Michel de Montaigne
  • The Complete Poems by Emily Dickinson
  • We Have Always Lived in the Castle by Shirley Jackson
  • Blood Meridian by Cormac McCarthy

Unless otherwise stated, this interview was conducted at the time the book was first published, and is reproduced with permission of the publisher. This interview may not be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the copyright holder.

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Books by Joshua Ferris at BookBrowse
A Calling for Charlie Barnes jacket The Dinner Party jacket To Rise Again at a Decent Hour jacket The Unnamed jacket
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