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Burned: A Memoir. Louise, Anne and Dad One year before the accident—Jones Beach, N.Y. My Story. When I was four and my sister, six, my parents Hank and Dorothy Nayer were severely burned in the basement of our rented Cape Cod summer cottage.
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Louise, Anne and DadOne year before the accident—Jones Beach, N.Y.
My Story • When I was four and my sister, six, my parents Hank and Dorothy Nayer were severely burned in the basement of our rented Cape Cod summer cottage. • My sister and I lived on a farm in upstate New York with our aunt, uncle and cousins. We didn’t see our parents for nine months. • I spent over ten years writing this story until it found a home at Atlas and Co. in New York.
Louise, Anne and cousin, Jean, on a farm in Sherbourne, New York Halloween
Writing the Story • I revised the book three times, changing point of view—ultimately creating a “bigger” book by including the stories of all four of the members of my family. • I worked hard on language—using sensory detail which came naturally to me since I had been a poet for many, many years. • Creating conflict, suspense, back story and structuring the book was a challenge—but a good challenge.
Time Shifts • The book really consisted of many stories which I had to merge: • back story to give context to my parents’ lives • panic attacks and fear of crossing the bridge • my parents story—before and after the accident—their hospitalizations • the story of the two sisters—Anne and me—and how we coped • I decided to end the book when I was still young and then create an epilogue with facts up to the present time.
Research • I needed to research the time period—cleaning products such as Bon Ami vs. Ajax! • What movies did my parents go to in the 50’s? What books were they reading? • I interviewed my parents, sister, friends of my parents and cousins. • I went to the UCSF medical library and learned about burn treatments in the 1950’s. I visited the St. Francis burn center.
Writing “The Truth” • On the third and final revision, I tried to get everyone’s “truth.” My sister, though devastated initially by reading about the accident and reliving that period of time—felt I had accurately portrayed her. The book ultimately helped both of us heal. • My cousins, as well, were happy with the book. My cousin, Robert, was annoyed I had said the dog was a Bassett Hound when in fact he was a Beagle—a small bit of misinformation! • My parents both died before I wrote this final version. Though I believe they would have been proud of the book—I could not write certain scenes while they were still alive. • Ethical concerns loom large when writing a memoir. I was glad, ultimately, not to seriously offend anyone.
Ending quote • “I want hard stories, I demand them from myself. Hard stories are worth the difficulty. It seems to me the only way I have forgiven anything, understood anything, is through that process of opening up to my own terror and pain and reexamining it, re-creating it in the story, and making it something different, making it meaningful—even if the meaning is only in the act of the telling.” Dorothy Allison
The Book’s Success Burned: A Memoir was a finalist for the USA Book News Award Burned…was listed as one of ten upcoming titles in Oprah Magazine along with Ian McEwan and Annie Lamott! I did readings all over the country—at bookstores and on radio shows, including NPR I was a speaker at the World Burn Congress(Phoenix Society), leading a workshop for burn survivors and their families. People have written to me from all over the country about the book and how much it moved them.
Thank you to WLA • I am honored beyond words to have had my book Burned: A Memoir chosen for the 2011 WLA Literary Association award. • Thank you Jean Anderson and Amy Lutzke and to all the committee members for choosing my book and for all the work you do. • Please stay in touch through my website and feel free to ask me any questions about my book and/or memoir writing. • www.louisenayer.com