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Published 09:00 8 Feb 2020 GMT
Updated 20:35 8 Feb 2020 GMT
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"From the time I was a kid, I would keep like little journals and diaries and would write little short stories, but I come from a very practical family. So I never sort of allowed myself to think about actually becoming a writer," she recalled.
"I didn't really let myself give myself permission to think about being a writer professionally until pretty late, like it was sort of after I had already published one book that I even thought about like making it a career. I kind of thought the first book would be like a one-off and I wouldn't do something else after that."
After growing up outside Boston and living in New York, she and her husband moved to Philadelphia 11 years ago. She explained that one of the first things she did after the move was meet with a friend-of-a-friend - a photographer taking portraits in the neighbourhood, who invited her to interview his subjects.
That, combined with her family's history, was the "spark" for the book.
"A photographer who was a friend of a friend was taking portraits in the neighbourhood. He invited me up, he knew I was the writer and he invited me to go with him to take do interviews of his subjects. The neighbourhood was already like very hard hit by the opioid crisis and there was a lot of addiction going on," she recalled.
"It was a very emotionally compelling place, a really emotionally difficult place and I kept going back over and over again kind of on my own. I wrote nonfiction about it and ended up doing community work at a women's day shelter there, which is housed under an organisation called Saint Francis Inn, which is existed for a long time in the neighbourhood.
"So, all of those experiences together kind of were the inspiration for the novel along with my own family's history of addiction, which was sort of like the autobiographical spark for [Long Bright River].
"A lot of the research was very organic because I was already sort of like in the neighbourhood and meeting people and being spending time there. Some of the formal research I did was about the police work in the book, which I didn't know much about to begin with.
"I spoke to a number of police officers on the phone, and then I did a ride along with one member of the Philadelphia Police Department. I spent several hours with him and I was able to kind of ask him all the questions like what a patrol officer does from the start to end of his shift."
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