Interview with an Author

Vivian McInerny
5 min readJul 6, 2023

Q&A

AI generated with NightCafe by author

Q. Why did you start writing?

A. I felt I had something to say.

When I look at the novels that have stuck with me for decades, the common thread is that the characters grapple with ethical conundrums. Nick in Gatsby, Scout in Mockingbird, Holden in Catcher, Pip in Great Expectations, or Huckleberry Finn — and on-and-on — all struggle to become good people. They aren’t effortlessly kind or self-aware or heroic but fumble about a bit before finding their paths.

I’m not sure exactly why that theme appeals to me, only that it does.

Q. So what issue does the main character in Water Damage face?

A. Liv Edlen is fairly naive art student when she lands in England in the mid-1970s. For the first time in her life she’s exposed to fascinating people and extreme wealth, the kind that goes back centuries and comes with titles and stately homes and ridiculous privilege. She has the opportunity to grab some of that for herself. But only if she is willing to turn a blind eye to questionable practices.

Many writers, musicians, artists struggle with the idea of being true to the creative process — and survival. The temptation in Liv’s case is she could enter this world on her talent but would have to disregard the amoral creep factor of her benefactor.

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Vivian McInerny

Career journalist, essayist, fiction writer, and life-long spirit-quester.