How to pronounce Kathy Hepinstall: HEP-in-stall (rhymes with pep)
Kathy Hepinstall writes about her childhood, which provided the inspiration for The House of Gentlemen, and her love of Louisiana and the south.
Life is That Big
I lived in Texas and Oklahoma until I was about six years old. Then my father
moved us to New Jersey. My Texas accent never recovered from the two years I
spent there. The rest of my childhood I lived in Spring Texas, a couple hours
from the Louisiana border.
After I received my bachelor's degree from The University of Texas in Austin,
Texas, I moved to Houston to try to join the creative writing master's program
at The University of Houston. Being declared "marginal," I never got
into the program. Instead, I took the literature route and received my master's
degree two and a half years later.
I then moved to Los Angeles and entered the world of advertising - doing work
for Coca-Cola, Nike, Ortho Weed Killer, and just about any other product you can
name. Then three or four years ago, I moved to Austin, Texas and began writing
seriously. Much of the time I drew heavily on my relatives from Louisiana.
Every year the relatives get together in Louisiana and clean out the family
graveyard. Last year we had our first official graveyard softball game because
we liked the sound of it. Currently I'm working on a book set in a graveyard
because the subject fascinates me. Our family cemetery is very spiritual and
contains the grave of Rosella Havens Peddy, family saint and beloved grandmother
of my childhood.
The House of Gentle Men came out of this part of the world. The
historical society of neighboring Merryville helped me out with some of the
stories, and I did some research at Fort Polk on the great maneuvers of 1941.
There are really two Americas to me: The America of the big cities, where
technology prevails, and rural America, a truer form of country where people
live much the same as they always have. I've been tempted to live in New York
but I could never be far from these people for long. Someone asked Toni Morrison
once what she thought of the criticism that her characters were bigger than
life. She said, "No, they are as big as life. Life is that big."
That's why I love writing about the south so much. Life is that big.
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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