An
Interview with
Craig Joseph Danner
Q. How would you describe
Himalayan Dhaba?
Himalayan Dhaba is the story
of Mary, an American woman doctor struggling to run a hospital in
the mountains of northern India. The novel tells how five very isolated
and extremely disparate people find themselves touching bottom both
physically and emotionally, and how their lives become enmeshed as
they each find a very different pathway to redemption. I can't stand
reading novels about people that are completely unsympathetic, so
I crafted my characters so even the most despicable ones act in such
a way that you understand what motivates them. The novel is about
how these people find their way out of their own personal hells; about
how fate and their own decisions get them back to the surface of life.
Apart from the characters, Himalayan
Dhaba is also a story about a place. I wanted to cast a description
of this town and the surrounding valley and mountains as it was when
my wife and I lived there. Walking through some of the nearby villages
was like passing through a window of time, watching people wearing
homespun wool, living in stone-and-timber houses that could have been
built centuries before. And yet, the town itself was growing frantically,
and I know that even in the last ten years it has changed significantly,
and not necessarily for the better. I wanted a record of the place
as we knew it. As I handed first drafts of each chapter to my wife
for her reaction, she would invariably ask, "where are the smells?"
I'm a very visually oriented person, and she would remind me that
sounds and smells were as much a part of the experience as the beauty
and ugliness. I'd go back and spend hours trying to fit the other
senses into the rhythm of the story.
Q. Is there some autobiographical
nature to the book?
Like Doctor Mary, in the early
nineties my wife and I arrived in the Himalayas to work in a tiny
hospital, only to find that the surgeon who had agreed to train us
had left three days earlier for a nine month sabbatical. For the first
few months, there were some other medical volunteers, but for about
half of our six months in the mountains we were the only ones running
the hosptial. So the basic premise, as well as the medical details
and the physical discriptions of place, came from my own and my wife's
experiences. But aside from that, the story is fiction. I developed
the characters based on a mix of people we came in contact with while
we were there, and then had the pleasure of allowing them each to
tell me their story as I imagined them facing their individual dilemmas.
It's the most fun part of writing.
Q. Was there ever a point where
you thought about telling your own non-fiction story rather than the
fiction story that became Himalayan Dhaba?
Not ever. As I mentioned above,
the most fun part of writing is discovering who your characters are
and then allowing them to tell their own story. To write my own story
would be boring. I'd rather work in the garden.
Q. Do you see yourself in any
of your characters?
Doctor Mary's experiences were
closest to my own, but I think there's a bit of my personality in
each of my characterseven the nasty ones. Once Phillip was strapped
to his board, I had to imagine seeing through his eyes so that I could
describe what he saw... and when I did that, I would also imagine
what he was feeling, both physically and emotionally. For me to understand
him well enough to make his story believable, then he must in some
way BE me. But thank goodness I have other parts of my personality
that have some tact and social skills.
Q. What is your writing schedule
like?
I'm not terribly disciplined
in most areas of life, but I like to work hard on my writing. When
I'm writing, especially on a first draft, I work in the morning, before
my head gets cluttered with reality. When I'm editing, I can work
eight to twelve hours at a stretch, but when I'm producing new material,
I can only write for four hours. After that I'm fried. Even on days
when I feel like continuing, anything written after the fourth hour
ends up being thrown away the next day because it just doesn't measure
up. I write very carefully and slowly, spending a lot of time reading
and rereading the last sentence or paragraph. I'm happy if I produce
a page of new material in a morning. It sounds pretty flaky when writers
describe how they let the characters tell the story, but it really
does work that way, at least for me. And I think that's why I can
only work for four hours. I have to go into this writing trance where
I can give myself up to imagination. The rest of the world has to
disappear in order for me to go back to a little town in the Himalayas,
to see the mountains and smell the ether in the operating room. And
then, my own personality has to disappear as well, so that I can see
and feel what my characters are experiencing. After four hours, I
can't hold that kind of concentration, and I'll go weed vegetables
or chop some firewood.
Q. Was the transition from
practicing medicine to writing books difficult?
I actually didn't have to make
the transition. I've been writing fiction since I was a teenager,
and wrote the first draft of a novel as my thesis for a creative writing
degree in college. I wrote the second draft while living in a little
coconut-wood shack on an island in the South Pacific, where I went
to join my wife-to-be for the last six months of her stint in the
Peace Corps. Unfortunately, that manuscript is still collecting dust
in a box in my office.
I didn't get involved in medicine
until Beth was most of the way through her first year in med school.
We were living in Baltimore, and to pay the rent I was working as
the production director for a tiny advertising agency. It was the
early 80s, and I had agreed to take on a job and a half for a $20,000
a year salary, and so I was working 60 hours a week, not writing at
all, and every evening I'd come home late to find Beth studying hard.
She would then tell me about her day, all the interesting things she'd
learned, and I said "I want to do that!" So I quit my advertising
job, took some science classes at the community college, and was admitted
a year later to a Physician Assistant program. We graduated within
two weeks of each other. I resumed my writing while I worked full
time in Family Medicine during the three years of Beth's residency
program. Then we went to India, and I've worked in medicine only part
time since then, while working full time writing.
Q. Do you see yourself returning
to medicine, or is writing your new career path?
I stepped out of medical practice
last year, just before we released the self-published edition of Himalayan
Dhaba. I was only practicing two days a week at the time, I'd
been writing full-time off and on for over 20 years, and it was either
go all the way with the writing or give it up. The amount of mental
energy it takes to stay current in medicine is enormous, and the more
energy I put into writing, the less I had left over for medicine.
I would have loved to keep my practice up, but I was afraid I would
end up hurting a patient because I wasn't as up-to-date as I should
have been. I have no regrets, though. Medicine is a fascinating profession,
but I really love to write.
Author photo © Lynn Weyand
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