Please Join me today and welcoming KJ Steele, author of The Bird Box, today at Celticlady's Reviews!!
Suitcase
Secrets
Finding inspiration for ‘The Bird Box’
in unexpected places.
When a dead man speaks people listen. There is just something
compelling about a voice that reaches out to us from beyond the grave. I’m not
referring to spooks here, but rather to mankind’s phenomenal ability to impress
ourselves onto the fabric of this world even long after the physical self has
departed.
Music, literature, art, etc., are some of the common daily
communications we have with the dead. The emotive essence lingers on. But for
one fragment of society their voices came forward in a much humbler way.
When I set out to write my novel The Bird Box I spent some time on the grounds and in the buildings
of a former insane asylum. Although the physical location was beautiful it was
best described as a melancholy beauty. The memory of the former patients
lingered.
I began to wonder about them. Not as patients but as people. Who
were they? Before and during their committal’s? What had their lives been like?
Their childhoods? Had they flown kites? Liked kittens? Plums? Had they been
bold and adventurous or shy and cautious? What had formed their hopes and
dreams and secret fears?
I went to the Mental Health Archives in search of answers. I
found none. Researching patient files was often heartbreaking. Not so much by
what was written there, but by the lack thereof.
After the initial admittance notes there was very little new
information. Staff were busy and it was not uncommon to have whole lives
–40–50–60– years condensed down to a few brief notes.
The brevity of it haunted me. Not that I blamed the staff. Their
hands were more than full with practical matters. But still, it felt inhumane
to me that whole lives had been pared down to a few paltry lines. I wanted to
know who these people were. Above and
beyond the narrow label of psychiatric
patient.
I was soon to find out. Their voices began a torrent of stories
into my mind. They demanded a place on my page. They had stories to tell; lives
and loves, laughter and tears. They too had experienced great joys and
devastating loss. They had suffered deeply as well and yet none of these things
fully defined them.
What followed was an astounding opportunity to speak with the
dead. Or rather – listen. Displayed alongside some of Jon’s photographs were
the original suitcases and their contents. Each suitcase, no matter how
carefully or haphazardly it had been packed for that initial trip to the
asylum, spoke volumes to me. Each one was a virtual time-capsule illuminating
the individuality of its owner. Bibles and poetry books, family pictures,
lotions, musical instruments, detailed diaries, loving letters. Objects as
seemingly disparate from one another as mending kits and (in one case) a small
hand-gun. Items that symbolically spoke of the desperate need to either mend or end the suffering.
Few people in our society’s history have been so reviled and
disenfranchised as the mentally ill. Our discomfort and fear of those we could
not understand or control led to some less than glorious years.
Those committed to the care of an asylum were in some ways
excommunicated from the rest of humanity. They were held in institutions where
their sense of autonomy was met with resistance. Their personal mail was opened
and relieved of any unsettling or
dissenting content. Their objections were routinely overruled. Not only did
they become powerless they became voiceless as well.
Obviously it was far easier to silence people back then in an
age before today’s instant and ubiquitous technology. Problematic dissenters
were easier to erase; sometimes permanently.
And sometimes not so permanently as evidenced with the Willard
suitcases. The contents of the suitcases serve to form an intimate choir of
ghostly voices. They speak of each person’s individuality. Of their uniqueness.
Some of them give evidence of seemingly competent minds while others show an
obviously distorted grip on reality. Mental illness can be frightening. Perhaps
to no one more so than to the person caught within its shifting shadows.
The people who filled the wards of the former insane asylums
were as individual as they were unique. To paint them all the same would be but
an erroneous reverse stroke of history. The contents of the suitcases they left
behind now speak formidably for these long dead patients.
I have listened to their stories and endeavored to capture the
echo of their hearts and minds in my novel The
Bird Box. These were people who contributed to the diversity of life. And
their lives mattered.
Broken and abandoned by the world, Jakie lives out his days in the silent desperation of an insane asylum. One night he discovers a young woman chained beneath a tree. The doctor commits her to a cellar room in the over-crowded institution. A fierce, protective love blooming in his heart, Jakie realizes that in order to free the girl he must find a way back into the strength of his truest self. In doing so he will alter both of their worlds profoundly.
Author Bio:
KJ Steele is an author who most decidedly does not color between the lines. She is drawn to unusual characters with twisted, dynamic stories that they insist she tell. She has one previously published novel No Story To Tell, and was a contributor to the anthology You Look Too Young To Be A Mom. She is currently writing the sequel to The Bird Box. A mother of three and grandmother of one, she loves nothing more than the laughter of family and long horse rides up the mountain behind her house where the still-chatter of nature enlivens forward many entertaining worlds looking for a page.
KJ Steele is an author who most decidedly does not color between the lines. She is drawn to unusual characters with twisted, dynamic stories that they insist she tell. She has one previously published novel No Story To Tell, and was a contributor to the anthology You Look Too Young To Be A Mom. She is currently writing the sequel to The Bird Box. A mother of three and grandmother of one, she loves nothing more than the laughter of family and long horse rides up the mountain behind her house where the still-chatter of nature enlivens forward many entertaining worlds looking for a page.
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