When we
caught up with Rene Gutteridge she was at
a nationally-known coffee shop “sort of out in the middle of the
country” not far from her parents’ home. “With
cows and fields and everything?” we asked. She
assured us that the view was great―and
so was the decaf nonfat upside down caramel
macchiato.
WoF: My Life As a Doormat
is dedicated to “anyone who has ever
felt stepped on” – do you consider
yourself more of a stepped-upon or a stepper?
Rene: Definitely
more of a “stepped upon” when I
was in my 20’s. When I got in my
30’s,
I realized that I was not going to let other
people tell me what I was supposed to do with
my life. I started looking at life differently
and letting God be in control, instead of other
people. It helps tremendously now that
I’m over that hump. Now I can relate
with people in a more loving way. People
think that it’s either one or the other ― they
either have to be a doormat or the kind of
person who steps all over them. But there is
a between type of person who can stand up for
herself or stand up for her friends without
being obnoxious about it.
WoF: Many people – women,
especially – have trouble standing up
for themselves. Why do you think that
is?
Rene: Well,
I think we have been taught that we should
be peacemakers at all costs―that’s
the trick, “at
all costs”. At the cost of truth?
Reality? Emotional health? That’s
a very high price to pay and at end of it all
there’s no peace. It’s sort of
a trick―you think you’re making
peace but at the end there is no peace. Certainly
not for yourself and probably not for the relationship.
Bitterness tends to take root and it’s
hard to continue on with the relationship in
a healthy manner.
WoF: It’s not every
day we read a book about a playwright. Why
did you choose to give Leah such an unusual
profession?
Rene: I like doing that. I’m
writing a series now called the Occupational
Hazard series. Each book focuses on a different
occupation. I’ve always found different
occupations interesting. I’ve done some
playwriting myself and I wanted her to be a
writer. I wanted to bring her alter
ego out; I wanted to see what happened when
she interacted with this person. I thought
the best way to do that was to put her as a
character in the play that MY character was
working on.
WoF: And
do you interact with your characters the
way that Leah does with Jodie?
Rene: I
do, you know. My characters are very real to
me. They’re my friends. I
spend a lot of time with them―I can get
sick of them, too. I really put Leah through
the wringer. She kept saying, “Stop!” and
I said, “No, it’s not enough―you
need more conflict.”
It was fun to
write because I drew from so many different people, including myself. People
come up and ask me, “Did you write that about me?” But it’s
a common problem that both men and women―but mostly women―deal
with. You see it in little boys and girls. Boys beat each other up and five
minutes later they’re fine and playing together. Little girls, even at
kindergarten age, start holding grudges and dealing with relationships in a
manipulative way. I’m hoping to bring in a new generation of women who
can stand firm in what they believe and do it in a healthy manner.
WoF: That conflict
resolution class in your book is something
else – especially the exercises the class
had to do! Where did those come from?
Rene: I was talking with my agent
about this idea at the very beginning of the
story concept. We started brainstorming and
as I was telling her the story, she said, “When
I was in college, my roommate had to go to
a conflict resolution class.” (It
had something to do with her major.) Some of
the examples are from what she remembered of
her roommate’s experience and some I
just made up for the class to do.
WoF: In some ways Leah’s
experience parallels that of the older brother
in the parable of the Prodigal Son. Was
that deliberate?
Rene: Yes.
I think that a lot of people have a peacemaker
kind of personality―and I’m one
of them. We try to do everything so right;
we don’t
want to make waves, we don’t want to
rock the boat. I think we have a hard time
identifying with the prodigal. We’re
thinking, “OK,
but what about the good child?” I wanted
to experience that with Leah, to have a deeper
understanding of what grace meant.
WoF: You have a degree in
screenwriting and experience as a church drama
director. What made you turn to writing
novels?
Rene: I was really
against it for a long time, but God was really
directing my path. My intention was to leave
Oklahoma and move to Los Angeles to pursue
screenwriting. I ended up being hired right
out of college by a church to be their Director
of Drama. It was there that my writing was
molded, in a way, to be a novelist. I wrote
two sketches a week, one for a Friday night
evangelical service and one for Sunday services,
so I was on a tight deadline every week. I
directed and frequently acted in them. It cultivated
my ability to write in an accelerated manner.
In
the meantime, my professor in college urged
me to try writing novels. I started one and
really liked it. I thought, I’ll
work on screenplays here and novels there. Then
I started working more on novels and I sold
one.
WoF: You have young children
at home, right? How do you manage to
get any writing done?
Rene: I
mostly work in the mornings. We’ll get
up at 7:00 – 7:30 and my
husband takes the morning shift. I work from
7:30 to 9:30-10:00. Then he goes on to work
and I take over the kids. I sold my first book
by query when I was 26-27 and my son was 3
weeks old, and then I had to write it. It’s
all a blur. I did a lot of late-night writing
in the wee hours between feedings. I can’t
do that anymore―after about 4:00 my brain
is just dead. I can do some editing but nothing
that requires coming up with something fresh.
This
is a big Fall for me―both of my kids
will be in school for the first time this year.
I might write, like, three novels in three
months with all this time! I’ve
always been writing with small kids at home.
It’s
a new phase for me, to be able to write with
a good unbroken schedule.
WoF: Where do you
begin with a new book? Is it a character,
a story, a setting….?
Rene: It depends on the book. Some
start with the character – Doormat was
definitely one of those. My suspense novels
start with the plot then I build characters
into that. I have to have both pretty well
developed before I will even start writing.
I know where I’m going and most of time
I know the ending. I don’t know exactly
how I’ll get to the ending but I do know
what the ending will be. Then I start
with Chapter One and just write until the end.
WoF: What
do you like to read?
Rene: I
wish I had more time to read! I read the Bible,
that’s my first
priority; a lot of times that’s the only
thing I get to read. I’ve been reading
[A.W.] Tozer lately―I’m really
liking him. Probably the last novel I’ve
read that’s published (I read a lot of
novels before publication for endorsements)
was Last Light by Terri Blackstock.
That was really good.
WoF: What
are you working on now?
Rene: I’m
working on the second book of the Occupational
Hazard Series, called Snitch. The first one was called Scoop,
about a local television crew. Snitch is
about undercover police officers. It’s
a comedy series. Snitch has been fairly
hard because undercover work is dangerous,
but when I talk to the officers they tell me
these hilarious stories about predicaments
they got themselves into. I try not to be predictable
and pull funny things out of life we can all
relate to.
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