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Elizabeth Kostova
Elizabeth Kostova (née Johnson) was born in New London, Connecticut
in 1964, and now lives in Ann Arbor, Michigan. She graduated from
Yale and holds an MFA from the University of Michigan where she
won the Hopwood Award for the Novel-in-Progress. The Historian took
her ten years to write, and was inspired by the vampire stories
told to her by her father, a professor of urban planning, during
the year they spent in Ljubljana, capital of Slovenia (where her
father taught at the university) when she was seven, and as they
traveled through Europe.
Later, she says, "I wondered whether this would make a good
structure for a novel." At the end of each of these tales,
the young listener realizes that Dracula himself is listening to
the story. Then I got the chills and immediately began working on
the book." When asked about her personal beliefs she confirms
that she does not believe in vampires and has a very scientific
outlook on life, However, she does believe in the power of myth
in the human psyche.
She says that she based much of the book in Bulgaria because her
husband, Georgi Kostov, is Bulgarian. She met Georgi in 1989 while
on a fellowship from Yale to study village music in Eastern Europe.
She arrived in Bulgaria at a time of great change - only seven days
after Communist dictator Todor Zhivkov had been placed under house
arrest; Georgi was one of the first 100 Bulgarians to be granted
a passport.
She traveled to isolated villages in Bulgaria, Bosnia and south-west
Russia, not only recording traditional music but also witnessing
rituals dating back to the Middle Ages.
She says "Those journeys gave me a sense of a world that's
closer to a European past and was preserved by the creation of the
Iron Curtain. It preserved the mystery of Eastern Europe for the
rest of us. I tried to express that as a love story, the bridging
of these two worlds, east and west. I've realized that there is,
of course, a certain autobiographical flavor to it."
Another inspiration for her were the lectures she attended at Yale
by Professor, Vincent Scully, "one of the great professors
of the twentieth century". Kostova, who traveled extensively
in Eastern and Western Europe before starting to write The Historian
and speaks Bulgarian "pretty well", and used to speak
French "quite well, but has got rusty", says "his
ardor up on the stage about some of the great architectural and
art sights of Western Europe made me go to those places as soon
as I could save money from my bookstore job or mowing lawns or whatever
I was doing."
The USA book rights for The Historian were sold for $2 million,
and it has been or will be published in at least 37 different languages.
Movie rights sold for $1.5 million - the movie, produced by Douglas
Wick (Memoirs of a Geisha, Gladiator etc) is currently in production
and scheduled for release in 2007.
Little is known about her next project, other than that she says
it is very different to The Historian and "not Gothic";
she started work on it just after she sold The Historian. In a 2005
interview she said "I felt it was important for me to get back
to writing right away to draw that magic, private circle
again. I've been sitting on the subject matter, as the project is
still fragile and raw and I don't want to jinx the writing process.
It does involve history again, but in a completely different way."
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