I recently had the pleasure of reading Ellen Feldman's book Scottsboro, which I also reviewed for Blogcritics. Ms. Feldman has also written The Boy Who Loved Anne Frank and Lucy along with numerous other articles and book reviews. She has a BA and MA in Modern History and resides in NYC.
I was able to speak with Ellen by phone and we had quite a discussion about her book Scottsboro. I am delighted to be able to share some questions I had and her responses with you.
Wisteria:
What was your reason for writing about the Scottsboro trial, an event that took place over 75 years ago?
Ellen Feldman:
The word Scottsboro is iconic in American lore. Everyone knows it stands for a terrible racial injustice, but few know the details of the horror, how deeply it convulsed the nation, how widely it reverberated around the world, and how it incited and exacerbated other prejudices in the country. I wanted to remind readers of a heinous chapter in the nation’s recent past, in hope that remembering inoculates against repeating. I also wanted to tell a riveting story, at once heartbreaking and inspiring.
What relevance do you believe it has today?
There is no doubt that the virulent racism rampant in the Scottsboro era is a thing of the past. And I’m still not over the thrill of having an African-American in the White House. But the story of Scottsboro remains heartbreakingly relevant today. Racial profiling continues on the roads of American and in the selection of juries, to name only two egregious areas. Capital punishment still falls far more heavily on racial minorities. Moreover, the relevance extends beyond America’s borders. In a world riven by ethnic and racial hatred and even genocide, Scottsboro speaks to the timeless human capacity for hate, and for forgiveness.
What message are you hoping your readers will glean from the book?
Though Scottsboro is alive with moral issues, I hope readers will get lost in a thrilling story. And I trust the horror of that story will encourage compassion and understanding of the “other.”
How were you able to capture the southern dialect and voice of Ruby with such beauty and accuracy?
Becoming a ventriloquist for Ruby was the most daunting hurdle I had to leap to write Scottsboro. The real Ruby Bates was a barely-literate mill worker and part-time prostitute from a small town in the race-baiting lynch-happy Depression-era South. I am a northern dyed-in-the-wool liberal writer who has lived all her adult life in New York City. But in draft after draft, Ruby kept nagging me to let her speak for herself. I read and reread native southern writers. I studied dictionaries of regional slang and dialect. Soon I found Ruby was telling her story in her own words. That is the slow, frustrating, terrifying process of discovering Ruby’s voice. How the voice got in my head to be discovered is still a mystery, and one of the wonders and joys of being a novelist.







Article comments
1 - Ann Weisgarber
Thank you for this interview with Ellen Feldman. I read "Scottsboro" when it was first published, and I continue to think about the story. America in the 1930's was a complicated and confused country, and Ellen Feldman's characters reflect the era. The young men accused of rape, the accusers, the journalist, and the lawyers are all complex people caught up in a tragic event. "Scottsboro" takes a footnote from the history books and gives it life.
2 - Wisteria Leigh
Ann...I couldn't agree with you more. Well said. Thanks for the comment.