Melissa Scholes Young鈥檚 new novel, her second, focuses on a family-run pest control business in small-town Missouri. Young knows of what she writes: She was raised in small-town Missouri 鈥 by a family that ran a pest control business.
She still had to do her research.
鈥淭hat territory is very familiar to me,鈥 she explained on Wednesday鈥檚 St. Louis on the Air. 鈥淏ut this isn鈥檛 my family鈥檚 story.鈥
A native of Hannibal, Young is now an associate professor of literature at American University in Washington, D.C., and her book, 鈥,鈥 introduces us to the Fehler family of Cape Girardeau: mom, dad and four sisters, struggling to find their place in a rapidly changing world, even as the 2008 recession puts Fehler Family Exterminating in jeopardy.
For Young, the date came even before the setting.
鈥淚 knew I wanted to write about 2008. I wanted to talk about the recession in middle America and the idea of growing fear and how that line of fear really impacts us,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 wanted to be able to look back to 2008 in order to wrestle with and think about how we move forward from that fear and resentment that I know so well in the Midwest.鈥
For her characters, that includes grappling with the election of President Barack Obama, and also seeing second-born Jules fall in love with a Black man. For the family鈥檚 matriarch, Grace Fehler, it means becoming a survivalist, or prepper, stocking up and planning for disaster.
Young joined a three-day prepper camp as research for the book, and said she came away both respecting the survivalists鈥 back-to-the-land strategies and troubled by their eagerness for an apocalypse.
Seeing their glee at the nation鈥檚 capital being wiped out in a disaster simulation, she acknowledged, was disconcerting. But she used the moment to dig deeper.
鈥淔or me as a writer, my job is to ask those kinds of questions: What would lead someone to have so little compassion or empathy for someone else that they would actually want it destroyed? That to me is a fascinating line that is incredibly dangerous as a human to cross over,鈥 she said.
And she could see the flip side, the positives in the preppers鈥 preparation: 鈥淚t really did surprise me that so many of the values of preserving the land, of wanting self-sustainability, and taking care of yourself and working hard, those foundational roots make a lot of sense to me, growing up in a place like Missouri.鈥
After spending 25 years in the Midwest, followed by more than a decade on the East Coast, Young said she hopes to facilitate 鈥渕ore nuanced conversations鈥 within a divided country. She鈥檚 the first person in her family to earn a college degree, and now she teaches at a university.
From where she lives today near Washington, she acknowledged, 鈥渢he distance from that rural road 鈥 outside Hannibal, I must admit, in the New London territory; we lived way out in the country 鈥 the distance is pretty vast. And I hope stories can help bridge that distance.鈥
Of the country as a whole, she added: 鈥淚 think we often misunderstand each other. And that we are not spending as much time as perhaps we could be, being curious and having compassion.鈥
For her, writing is a path to empathy, just as she hopes her writing will generate empathy in her readers.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 know that any of us really know what it鈥檚 like in someone else鈥檚 shoes,鈥 she said. 鈥淏ut the question is, do we have compassion, and do we have curiosity about what someone else鈥檚 experience is like.鈥
With a good novel, she said, 鈥淲e can have access to worlds we might not otherwise spend time in.鈥
Related Event
What: Melissa Scholes Young with Joy Castro
When: 7 p.m. Wednesday, June 9
Where:
鈥鈥 brings you the stories of St. Louis and the people who live, work and create in our region. The show is hosted by and produced by , , and . The audio engineer is .