Kathryn Stockett Interviews Adriana Trigiani
Kathryn Stockett was born and raised in Jackson, Mississippi. After graduating from the University of Alabama with a
degree in English and Creative Writing, she moved to New York City, where she worked in magazine publishing and
marketing for nine years. The Help is her first novel.
Kathryn Stockett: This is by far your most epic novel to date. How long did it take you to write The Shoemaker’s
Wife?
Adriana Trigiani: I worked on this story for over 20 years as I wrote scripts and novels and had my own family. There
are scraps of paper, dinner napkins, and bills with timelines and notes scrawled across them. There are old s
filled with my grandmother’s musings from 1985. I collected train tickets, copies of ships’ manifests, and a silk tag
with my grandmother’s name from garments she had created. I traveled as far as the Italian Alps and as close as the few
blocks it takes me to walk to Little Italy in New York City to capture the historical aspects of the story. All of this
went into the novel. It was a delicious gestation period.
Stockett: This is a novel, but it is inspired by a true story—a family story, right?
Trigiani: Yes—my grandparents, Lucia and Carlo. Their love was a dance with e. It is riddled with near misses
against a landscape of such massive world events that it’s a wonder they got together at all. My challenge was to
present their world to the reader so it might feel it was happening in the moment. I wanted the reader to have the
experience I had when stories were told to me by the woman who lived them.
Stockett: The novel takes place during the first half of the twentieth century--what is so compelling about this period
of time to you?
Trigiani: The cusp of the twentieth century was a time everything was new—cars, phones, planes, electricity, even
sportswear, and in each innovation was a kind of explosive potential. No one could predict where all the inventions
would lead, people only knew that change was unavoidable.
My grandparents were delighted every time America presented them with something they had never seen before. And my
grandparents’ sense of wonder never left them, so I tried not to let it leave the page, be it a cross-country train ride
or the first snap of the bobbin on an electric Singer sewing machine.
Stockett: Through the remarkable story of Enza and Ciro, your novel tells the larger story of the immigrant experience
in America.
Trigiani: What a gift immigrants were and are to this country! They bring their talents and loyalty and make our
country even greater. My grandparents were proud to be new Americans. Assimilation was not about copying an American
ideal, but aspiring to their own version of it. The highest compliment you could pay a fellow immigrant was: he (or she)
was a hard worker. I hear the phrase work like an immigrant said, but really, it’s bigger than that—we must also dream
like immigrants.
Stockett: The Shoemaker’s Wife seamlessly brings together fictional characters and historical figures—how did the
wonderful Caruso enter the novel?
Trigiani: It started with a three-foot stack of vinyl records—my grandmother Lucia’s collection of Caruso. Her absolute
devotion to The Great Voice lasted her whole life long. I knew, in order to write this novel, I had to fall in love with
Caruso too, because he sang the score of my grandparents’ love affair.
When Lucia passed, I went to my first opera, seeking understanding and comfort. As the music washed over me, I began to
understand why my grandmother was such a fan. The words were Italian, and the emotions were big; nothing was left
unexpressed in the music. If only life were that way.