The roughest draft

Emily Wibberley

Book - 2022

"They were cowriting literary darlings until they hit a plot hole that turned their lives upside down. Three years ago, Katrina Freeling and Nathan Van Huysen were the brightest literary stars on the horizon, their cowritten books topping bestseller lists. But on the heels of their greatest success, they ended their partnership on bad terms, for reasons neither would divulge to the public. They haven't spoken since, and never planned to, except they have one final book due on contract. Facing crossroads in their personal and professional lives, they're forced to reunite. The last thing they ever thought they'd do again is hole up in the tiny Florida town where they wrote their previous book, trying to finish a new manusc...ript quickly and painlessly. Working through the reasons they've hated each other for the past three years isn't easy, especially not while writing a romantic novel. While passion and prose push them closer in the Florida heat, Katrina and Nathan will learn that relationships, like writing, sometimes take a few rough drafts before they get it right"--

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Subjects
Genres
Romance fiction
Published
New York : Jove 2022.
Language
English
Main Author
Emily Wibberley (author)
Other Authors
Austin Siegemund-Broka (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
pages cm
ISBN
9780593201930
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

In their first book for adults, married YA coauthors Wibberley and Siegemund-Broka portray coauthors who fall in love while writing a love story. Three years ago, New Yorkers Katrina Freeling and Nathan Van Huysen were at the pinnacle of their coauthoring career with a much-lauded and enormously popular book. But their success warped their professional relationship, and they parted ways on bad terms. She stopped writing, and he published a book with tepid sales. Now they are forced by their publishing contract to write one more book together, so they convene at a secluded cottage in Florida. They channel their animosity into their characters, writing viciously and passionately until they declare a truce. Unacknowledged attraction had always simmered between them. Each was the essence of life to the other, each found the other's very existence fascinating. While apart, Nathan got divorced, and Katrina got engaged, but the magnetism between them has persisted. In intricate layers, Wibberley and Siegemund-Broka unfurl what went wrong between Katrina and Nathan and how their past anger transmutes into desire and soul-binding love, making for a deeply emotional meditation on the psychological perils of success within a passionate romance.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Married coauthors Wibberley and Siegemund-Broka (Time of Our Lives) break from their usual YA rom-coms for a surprisingly bleak adult debut that's light on both romance and comedy. Three years ago, Nathan Van Huysen and Katrina Freeling co-wrote the bestseller Only Once, which centered on an affair. Nathan was married at the time, and rumors about their art reflecting their lives drove Katrina to an early retirement and Nathan to tell the New Yorker that writing with Katrina was "torture." But when Katrina's literary agent turned fiancé, Chris, runs into financial trouble and Nathan's solo book proposal is rejected, the pair reluctantly agree to work together again. They hole up in Florida and insult each other through drafting their new manuscript--until their true feelings reveal themselves on the page. The prose is rather pedestrian for how loftily both characters discuss literature, and the alternating timeline between their work on the new novel and their collaboration on Only Once adds little. Most rom-com readers will object to the emotional affair between Katrina and Nathan while Nathan was married, and the pretentious, privileged Nathan and self-involved Katrina do little to redeem themselves. This literary spin on Noah Baumbach's Marriage Story aims for bittersweet, but lands on depressing. Agent: Katie Shea Boutillier, Donald Maass Literary. (Jan.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

Three years ago, Katrina Freeling and Nathan Van Huys wrote a best-selling novel together. They haven't spoken since. Reunited to write their contracted next book, their story unfolds in flashbacks. Back then, Nathan was married and the two began to fall in love. Both remained professional but it is clear Nathan is expressing his feelings for Katrina in the pages he writes for their book. When Katrina and Nathan head back to the same beach house and begin to write their new novel, they must confront the unresolved issues from their past as they continue to communicate through their daily pages. Both characters stay entrenched in their emotionally tortuous positions until the very end, with an unsatisfying resolution that seems to come out of a desire to give the reader a happy ending, rather than giving these characters what they really need: couples therapy. Imani Jade Powers has a beautiful voice that glides over the words and lifts the material to a different level. Dan Bittner has a pleasant "everyman" voice that would fit well with any genre. VERDICT Well written, but excruciating in terms of human behavior. Better to read than to listen.--Laura Brosie

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Famous co-writers who had a major falling out team up for a new novel and dredge up past feelings. Shortly after meeting each other at a writers' workshop, Katrina Freeling and Nathan Van Huysen decided to join forces. A novel they wrote about an affair became wildly popular, but they've refused to work together again for reasons they won't reveal. Nathan got divorced around the same time the book came out, leading to rumors and speculation about the relationship between the co-writers. Now, three years later, Nathan's new solo book is underperforming, and Chris, Katrina's fiance and agent, is pushing her to return to writing. Nathan and Katrina are under contract for one more book, so they agree to spend a few months together in a house in Florida and get it written. The rift between them is not easily repaired, but as they find a flow in their work, their friendship blossoms once more. As more feelings return, they have to confront what tore them apart the first time. The story alternates between past and present and shifts between Katrina's and Nathan's perspectives. Everything is written in first-person, present-tense, which gives the book a feeling of momentum and immediacy but doesn't lend itself to any differentiation in the narrative threads. The writing is beautiful, with many poetic musings, and the emotions throughout are rich and complex. The characters don't feel fully drawn, however, making some of their actions unbelievable, seeming like they're happening just for the plot. The reveal of the big conflict from the past is underwhelming, and the ending drags. Pretty prose but not entirely satisfying. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

1 Katrina The bookstore is nothing like I remember. They've remodeled, white paint covering the exposed bricks, light gray wooden shelves where there once were old metal ones. Cute candles for sale and Jane Austen tote bags occupy the front table instead of used books. I shouldn't be surprised it looks different. I've pretty much given up buying books in public in the past three years, including from Forewords, where I've only been once despite the bookstore being fifteen minutes from our house in Los Angeles's Hancock Park. I don't like being recognized. But I love books. Doing my book buying online has been torture. Walking in, I eye the bookseller. She's in her early twenties, not much younger than me. Her brown hair's up in a messy bun, her green nose piercing catching the overhead lights. She doesn't look familiar. When she smiles from the checkout counter, I think I'm in the clear. I smile back, walking past the bestseller shelf. Only Once sits imposingly right in the middle, its textured blue cover with clean white typography instantly identifiable. I ignore the book while I move deeper into the store. This visit is something my therapist's been pushing me to do for months. Exposure therapy, conditioning myself to once more find comfortable the places I used to love. Pausing in the fiction section, I collect myself, remembering I'm doing fine. I'm calm. I'm just me, looking for something to read, with no expectations pressing on my shoulders or stresses jackhammering in my chest. Covers run past me in rows, each waiting to be picked out. Everything is crisp with the scent of pages. I knew the Los Angeles independent bookstore scene well when Chris proposed we move here from New York for the job he was offered in the book department of one of Hollywood's biggest talent agencies. Each shop is varied and eccentric, indignant icons of literacy in a city people say never reads. Which is why I've hated avoiding them. The past three years have been a catalogue of changes, facing realities of the life I no longer knew if I wanted and the one I decided I didn't. I've had to remember the quiet joys of my ordinary existence, and in doing so, I've had to forget. Forget how my dreams hit me with devastating impact, forget how horrible I felt coming close to what I'd once wanted. Forget Florida. Everything's different now. But I pretend it's not. The bookstore is part of the pretending. When I lived in New York on my own, before Chris, I would walk to Greenpoint's independent bookstores in the summer, sweating into the shoulder strap of my bag, and imagine the stories in the spines, wondering if they'd lend me inspiration, fuel for the creative fire I could never douse. Reading wasn't just enjoyment. It was studying. I don't study now. But I never lost the enjoyment. I guess it's too integral a piece of me. Reading and loving books are the fingerprints of who I am--­no matter how much I change, they'll stay the same, betraying me to myself for the rest of my life. And bringing me into this bookstore, wanting to find something new to read until Chris gets home in the evening. "Can I help you find anything?" I hear the bookseller's voice behind me. Instinctive nerves tighten my posture. I turn, hesitant. While she watches me welcomingly, I wait for the moment I've been dreading since I decided earlier today I needed something new to read tonight. Why should I wait for delivery? The moment doesn't come. The bookseller's expression doesn't change. "Oh," I say uncertainly, "I'm not sure. Just browsing." The girl grins. "Do you like literary fiction?" she asks eagerly. "Or is there a subgenre you prefer?" I relax. The relief hits me in a rush. This is great. No, wonderful. She has no idea who I am. It's not like people overreact in general to seeing celebrities in Los Angeles, where you might run into Chrissy Teigen outside Whole Foods or Seth Rogen in line for ice cream. Not that I'm a celebrity. It's really just bookstores where the possibilities of prying questions or overeager fans worry me. If this bookseller doesn't know who I am, I've just found my new favorite place. I start imagining my evening in eager detail--­curling up with my new purchase on the couch, toes on our white fur rug, gently controlling James Joyce so his paws don't knock green tea everywhere and stroking him until he purrs. "Yeah, literary fiction generally. Contemporary fiction more specifically," I say, excitement in my voice now. I'm going to enjoy telling Chris tonight that I went to Forewords and no one knew who I was. It'll probably piss him off, but I don't care. I'll be reading while he's working out his frustration on his Peloton bike. "I have just the thing," the girl says. She's clearly delighted to have a customer who wants her recommendation. When she rushes off, my nerves wind up once more. The horrible thought hits me--­what if she returns, excited to pitch me the book she's chosen, and she's holding Only Once? I don't know what I'd say. The couple seconds I have right now aren't enough for me to come up with even the first draft of how I could extricate myself from the conversation. Instead, it's worse. "Try this." The clerk thrusts the hardcover she's chosen toward me. "It came out last week. I read it in, like, two days." Under the one-­word title, Refraction, imposed over moody black-­and-­white photography, I read the name. Nathan Van Huysen. I look to where she got the book from, and I don't know how I didn't notice when I walked in. The cardboard display near the front of the store holds rows of copies, waiting patiently for customers, which tells me two things: high-­publisher expenditure, and it's not selling. His name hits me the way it does every time I see it. In New York Times reviews, in the profiles I try to keep out of my browser history--­never with much success. The first is wishing those fifteen letters meant nothing to me, weren't intertwined with my life in ways I'll never untangle. Underneath the wishing, I find harder, flintier feelings. Resentment, even hatred. No regret, except regretting ever going to the upstate New York writers' workshop where I met Nathan Van Huysen. We were each fresh out of college. When I graduated from the University of Virginia and into the job I'd found fetching coffee and making copies in a publishing house, I felt like my life hadn't really started. I'd enjoyed college, enjoyed the rush I got learning whatever I found genuinely interesting, no matter the subject--­fungal plant structures, behavioral economics, the funeral practices of the Greco-­Roman world. I just knew I wouldn't be who I wanted to be until I wrote and published. Then I went upstate and found Nathan, and he found me. I remember walking out of the welcome dinner, hugging my coat to my collar in the cold, and finding him waiting for me. We'd met earlier in the day, and his eyes lit up when he caught me leaving the restaurant. We introduced ourselves in more depth. He mentioned he was engaged--­I hadn't asked. I was single--­I didn't volunteer the information. It wasn't like that between us. While we walked out to Susquehanna River Bridge in the night wind, we ended up exchanging favorite verses of poetry, reading them from online on our phones. We were friends. For the whole lot of good it did us. When I take the copy of Refraction, the clerk's voice drops conspiratorially. "It's not as good as Only Once. But I love Nathan Van Huysen's prose." I don't reply, not wanting to say out loud his prose was the first thing I noticed about him. Even at twenty-­two, he wrote with influences fused perfectly into his own style, like every English course he'd ever taken--­and Nathan had taken quite a few--­was flowing out of his fingertips. It made me feel the things writers love to feel. Inspired, and jealous. In my silence, the clerk's expression changes. "Wait," she continues, "you have read Only Once, haven't you?" "Um," I say, struggling with how to reply. Why is conversation way easier on the page? "If you haven't"--­she starts toward the bestseller shelf to fetch the paperback. I know what'll happen when she catches sight of the back cover. Under the embarrassingly long list of starred reviews, she'll see the author photos. Nathan's blue eyes beneath the immaculate black waves of his hair, the dimple he only trots out for promotional photos and press tours. Then, next to him, she'll find his coauthor, Katrina Freeling. Young woman, sharp shoulders, round features, full eyebrows she honestly loves. Professionally done makeup, dark brown hair pressed and polished, nothing like it looks when she steps out of the shower or she's reading on the patio on sweaty summer days. The differences won't matter. The bookseller will recognize the woman right in front of her. My capacity for speech finally returns. "No, I've read it," I manage. "Of course," the girl gushes. "Everyone's read it. Well, Refraction is one of Nathan Van Huysen's solo books. Like I said, it's good, but I wish he and Katrina Freeling would go back to writing together. I've heard they haven't spoken in years, though. Freeling doesn't even write anymore." I don't understand how this girl is interested enough in the writing duo to know the rumors without identifying one of them in her bookstore. It might be because I haven't done many signings or festivals in the past three years. Following the very minimal promotional schedule for Nathan's and my debut novel, Connecting Flights, and then the exhausting release tour for our second, Only Once--­during which I made my only previous visit here, to Forewords--­I more or less withdrew from writerly and promotional events. It was difficult because Chris's and my social life in New York centered on the writing community, and it's part of why I like living in LA, where our neighbors are screenwriters and studio executives. In LA, when people learn you're a novelist, they treat you like a tenured Ivy League professor or a potted plant. Either is pref­erable to the combination of jealousy and judgment I endured spending time with former friends and competitors in New York. If you'd told me four years ago I would leave New York for the California coast, I would've frowned, or likelier, laughed. New York was the epicenter for dreams like mine, and Nathan's. But I didn't know then the publication of Only Once would fracture me and leave me reassembling the pieces of myself into someone new. Someone for whom living in Los Angeles made sense. While grateful the Forewords bookseller hasn't identified me--­I would've had one of those politely excited conversations, signed some copies of Only Once, then left without buying a book--­I don't know how to navigate hearing my own professional life story secondhand. "Oh well," I fumble. "That's too bad." No more browsing for me. I decide I just want out of this conversation. "I know." The girl's grin catches a little mischievousness. "I wonder what happened between them. I mean, why would such a successful partnership just split up right when they were really popular?" The collar of my coat feels itchy, my pulse beginning to pound. This is my least favorite topic, like, ever. Why did you split up? I've heard the rumors. I've heard them from graceless interviewers, from comments I've happened to notice under online reviews. I've heard them from Chris. If they're to be believed, we grew jealous of each other, or Nathan thought he was better than me, or I was difficult to work with. Or we had an affair. There'd been speculation before our split. Two young writers, working together on retreats to Florida, Italy, the Hamptons. Photos of us with our arms around each other from the Connecting Flights launch event--­the only launch we ever did together. The fact Only Once centered on marital infidelity didn't help. Nor did the very non-­fictional demise of Nathan's own very non-­fictional marriage. This is why I don't like being recognized. I like the excited introductions. I love interacting with readers. What I don't like is the endless repetition of this one question. Why did Katrina Freeling and Nathan Van Huysen quit writing together? "Who knows?" I say hastily. "Thanks for your recommendation. I'll . . . take it." I reach for the copy of Refraction, which the girl hands over, glowing. Five minutes later, I walk out of the bookstore holding the one book I didn't want. Excerpted from The Roughest Draft by Emily Wibberley, Austin Siegemund-Broka All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.