Ellen Barker
Author Interview - Ellen Barker
Author of Still Needs Work, a Novel
Marianne gets the call while attending a conference in San Francisco: laid off, department dissolved. Two days later, she’s back home in the dicey Kansas City neighborhood she moved to after a reversal of fortune two years ago. After all this time rebuilding her life, it’s all collapsed.
The daily grind is just that—a grind. Until it isn’t, until it’s gone and taken health insurance, retirement contributions, and the currency to buy food and shelter, never mind the free coffee at the office, along with it. In the aftermath of her layoff, Marianne tries all the usual routes to re-employment, but a middle-aged woman, regardless of experience, has little job cred in the tech world, especially with an address in the heartland. A contract job at a Chicago startup morphs through two acquisitions in eight weeks. And then she’s mugged in her own neighborhood, which frightens her enough to consider a permanent move away.
An irreverent look at the alien denizens of the tech world, the fraught business of mergers and acquisitions, and the parallel universe of job openings, Still Needs Work is a contemporary story of the working world wrapped around a very human story of one person, her dog, and her community.
Author I draw inspiration from:
Catherine Ryan Hyde - all of them! I love how she writes a compelling story with interesting characters, and also conveys a message, usually related to a social issue. Not a preachy message, more like . . . just information. One Hispanic man's experience in New York, for example, in Have You Seen Luis Velez?. A middle-aged woman down on her luck plus a kid in the system (in Allie and Bea). The moral quandary in A Different Kind of Gone.
Favorite place to read a book:
In the kitchen, with coffee or wine. It's a long way from my favorite place as a kid. Then, I'd climb up to the top of the maple tree in the back yard, out of reach of my brother. I'd take a sofa pillow and cookies and a book, wedge myself in, and read until it got dark. No one ever saw me, even in winter when the leaves were off the tree - no one ever looks up!
Book character I’d like to be stuck in an elevator with:
Carlotta from James Hannaham's Didn't Nobody Give a Shit What Happened to Carlotta. Her personality alone could fill up an elevator. She would be a lot of fun while we're waiting for help, and if necessary I think she'd be bad-ass enough, and inventive enough, to get us out of there.
The moment I knew I wanted to become an author:
Around the time I learned to read - and I don't remember a time when I couldn't read. As a kid, I'd walk around narrating my life as though it were a book. Then in seventh grade, I won an essay contest, and then the senior English award in high school. So I knew I had a chance at it. And every few years, I'd try something and fizzle out. But I didn't have the big IDEA to get started until much, much later. One day in 2019 or so, I just sat down and started writing. The time had come.
Hardback, paperback, ebook or audiobook:
I love hardbacks, but they take up a lot of space and are heavy for traveling.
Paperbacks are my favorite compromise.
ebooks are a good alternative and portable, but bad for reading in bed - plus I still like leafing through a book.
I don't like headphones or earbuds, so I don't "read" audiobooks, but I love them because the give so many people access to books they can't read because they don't have time, need the distraction while doing tedious work, can't see well enough to read, or are learning a language by simultaneously reading and listening.
The last book I read:
I'm currently reading Blank by Zibby Owens. I like her writing style and the story (so far) surrounding the book (called Blank) that she is publishing. I'm not sure yet about the book itself, but I'm intrigued by possible story arcs and am looking forward to finding out where she goes with this.
Pen & paper or computer:
Laptop, always. Even before computers I composed on a (manual) typewriter. For one thing, it's faster than writing, so it's easier to keep up with the scene that's unfolding in my head. Sometimes I think I'll print it out and mark it up, but then it seems too tedious and I never actually do it. So - I like the IDEA of pen and paper, but it doesn't work for me.
Book character I think I’d be best friends with:
Alice Holtzman in The Music of Bees by Eileen Garvin. I was sorry when I finished that book and am hoping for a sequel. Even better would be moving into the story, in Oregon, and being friend and neighbor to Alice. We both like solitude and open spaces and bees and chickens and dogs. I don't have bees or chickens so I could enjoy hers without the work.
If I weren’t an author, I’d be a:
Watercolor artist. Currently a hobby and a good counterpoint to writing fiction. Ironically, selling a single painting is what made me say to myself: Self, if you can paint something that someone else will pay money for, surely you can write that book.
Favorite decade in fashion history:
I love the look of the 1940s with all that beautiful tailoring, but I wouldn't want to wear it every day. I'd rather wear the casual side of the late 1960s, when women were free of all those hats and stockings and white gloves of the 1950s. For business attire, today is the best for women (goodbye pantyhose, stilettos optional!).
Place I’d most like to travel:
Rural Europe: Spain, Italy, Germany, France. The scenery, hiking, food, and wine. And I can manage with my limited Spanish and not worry about drinking water.
My signature drink:
Morning: iced coffee
Evening: a dry but fruity red
My husband and I make red wines, so we always have plenty on hand. Some days, though, I just want something fresh and fruity and delicious, so I'll order a drink in a bar based solely on the picture or the amount of fruit in the description. It's usually pink.
Favorite artist:
Sooo hard to choose. For the moment, if pressed, I'll say Monet. Tomorrow it could be someone else.
Number one on my bucket list:
Hiking in the Alps, which is high on the list because (fingers crossed) it's happening later this year and I can't wait.
Anything else you'd like to add:
Writing fiction has been such a wonderful experience for me. I love hearing from the readers of East of Troost (my first novel), and I can't wait to hear from readers about Still Needs Work. There will be one more book set in the same place with the same narrator, and then I'll move on to a new locale.
Find more from the author:
https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=61550221886112
https://www.instagram.com/elrubar/
https://www.linkedin.com/in/ellen-barker-6a4a366/
author website: www.ellenbarkerauthor.com
About Ellen Barker:
Ellen Barker grew up in Kansas City during a period of demographic upheaval, and she returns there in her novels. She has a bachelor’s degree in urban studies from Washington University in Saint Louis, where she developed a passion for how cities work, and don’t. She began her career as an urban planner, then spend many years working for large consulting firms, first as a writer-editor and later managing large data systems, jobs rich in corporate drama large and small. She is the author of East of Troost, which introduced readers to the neighborhood where The Breaks takes place, and Still Needs Work, which takes place in the same area. She now lives in Los Altos, California, with her husband and their German shepherd, Boris, who is the inspiration for the dog in this novel.