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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: how to eat a cupcake, Most Recent at Top [Help]
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1. Bookfinds Interview with Meg Donohue

HOW TO EAT A CUPCAKE by Meg Donohue

Funny, free-spirited Annie Quintana and sophisticated, ambitious Julia St. Clair come from two different worlds. Yet, as the daughter of the St. Clair’s housekeeper, Annie grew up in Julia’s San Francisco mansion and they forged a bond that only two little girls who know nothing of class differences and scholarships could—until a life-altering betrayal destroyed their friendship.

A decade later, Annie is now a talented, if underpaid, pastry chef who bakes to fill the void left in her heart by her mother’s death. Julia, a successful businesswoman, is tormented by a painful secret that could jeopardize her engagement to the man she loves. When a chance reunion prompts the unlikely duo to open a cupcakery, they must overcome past hurts and a mysterious saboteur or risk losing their fledgling business and any chance of healing their fractured friendship.

 

INTERVIEW WITH MEG DONOHUE:

1. Tell us the story behind the story. How did HOW TO EAT A CUPCAKE come to be?

I really wanted to write a story about friendship and food—two things that bring me great joy. I think a lot about how friendships shift over time as people grow and change. While I was brainstorming the book I was going to a lot of showers and birthday parties and I was pregnant—all of which is to say I was eating a lot of cupcakes. I started envisioning two former best friends who are brought back together years after a falling-out by their mutual love of cupcakes. Those were the early seeds of the story.

Once I had those seeds, I wrote a proposal for the novel and sent it, along with the first two chapters and a detailed outline, to my friend Jeanette Perez who is an editor at HarperCollins. Luckily, she loved it and offered me a contract to write the book.

2. Where do you find your inspiration?

Relationships certainly inspire me—friendships, family dynamics, people in love, parent-child relationships. It’s always interesting to analyze how two specific people interact the way they do, the history behind that dynamic, the character quirks that make them get along or continually rub each other the wrong way. Place also inspires me and tends to be important in my writing. I like to think about how location affects people and relationships—how two people interact might be different on a New York City street than, say, on Main Street in a small town.

3. What was the most challenging aspect of writing HOW TO EAT A CUPCAKE?

Having a contractual deadline was both the best possible motivator and the most challenging aspect of the writing process. The occasional bad days when the writing just would not flow felt particularly stressful because of that looming deadline. But in the end, over all, I loved writing with a contract—it kept me focused.

4. What is the message you want readers to take away from your book?

That friendship, at its best, is another form of family. Those friends who know us so well, who listen to us, who surprise us with their thoughtfulness, and for whom we do the same—those are some of the most important relationships in our lives.

5. Describe your background.

I was born and raised in Philadelphia, where I spent much of my youth reading and writing stories. I’ve wanted to be a writer for as long as I can remember. My parents are both lawyers, but they have always had a strong interest in the arts and enc

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