Tricia
Pimental @a_movable
Award-Winning Author
“Has your husband read this?”
I had sent Carol, the leader of my former writers’
group in Ocala, Florida, a draft of my latest book for comment. Now living in
Portugal, I was still in touch with her by email.
“Sure,” I wrote back confidently. “In fact, he’s
formatting it.”
Later a hint of doubt crept into my mind. Keith hadn’t
even gotten close to the more revelatory sections of A Movable Marriage,
a playful title inspired by Hemingway’s A Moveable Feast.
And therein lies one of the biggest challenges for the
memoirist: to tell, or not to tell. If so, how much? We’re assuming, of course,
any “telling” will be honest.
But let’s face it: often there is disagreement
with a spouse, family member, or friend on the details of a past situation or
occurrence, even about something as simple as what someone wore last night. Imagine
the nightmares crime investigators encounter, taking and analyzing statements
from various supposed eyewitnesses to the same event.
Another obstacle I encountered was obtaining permission
to publish certain photos in my book. Although they were all my personal
property, a fine line is drawn when it comes to reprinting the likeness of a
famous personage, as the lingo goes. I’d run into this one before, in my first
memoir. I had reached out to Playboy Enterprises for permission to print certain
pictures, and they were not entirely cooperative. I eventually did reach a compromise
and was able to present the story of my conversion to Christianity the way I
wanted to (in Rabbit Trail: How a Former Playboy Bunny Found Her Way).
I also had to deal again with that first issue, protecting an individual’s
privacy while dealing with sensitive past memories.
I wrote Rabbit Trail to expose New Age and
other misguided belief systems. The impetus for AMM was entirely different.
One day I was asked by my homebody, homesteading, neighbor in Utah why Keith
and I moved so much. I laughingly reassured her that we were neither in the
military nor the Witness Protection Program. “That’s the book I want to
read,” she said. “I want to know all the places you’ve been and how you manage
to stay married to your crazy nomadic husband.”
The seed planted when Keith and I lived in New
Hampshire a few years before had just been liberally watered.
Expatriating to Portugal in 2012, life became filled
with new challenges: adapting to a different culture, learning another
language, frequent visits back to the U.S. to see family, and accompanying my
spouse on never-ending, often National Lampoon-style road trips. We
moved a half-dozen times in the first five years in our adopted country, as I
compiled snippets along the way for my book.
By spring of 2016 I was signing copies of A Movable
Marriage at our local bookstore near Lisbon, with members of our church and
expat groups there to support me. Little did they (or I) know yet another move
was on the horizon.
Next time: An American Author in Portugal:
Living and the Writing Life Overseas
Native
New Yorker Tricia Pimental has written three award-winning books: Rabbit Trail: How a Former Playboy Bunny Found Her Way recounts
the wandering path she took before becoming a Christian; Slippery Slopes
is women’s fiction, set in Park City, Utah. Her second memoir, A Movable
Marriage, has been called “honest and engaging,” “delightfully
entertaining,” and “refreshingly down to earth” in an Epic Book Quest 5-star
review.
As Portugal Correspondent for International Living, Tricia has
written Escape to Portugal and a video series, Portugal 101. She contributes monthly to both the
digital and print magazines and speaks bi-annually at conferences and other
events in the US and Portugal.
Tricia
has been featured on CBS Travel Editor Peter Greenberg’s Peter Greenberg
Worldwide, Wall Street Journal’s MarketWatch with Catey Hill, Business
Insider, Dance Past Sunset with Brant Huddleston, Generation Bold Talk
Radio with Adrian Berg, and elsewhere.
She and her husband, Keith, reside in Portugal, but
she retains membership in her beloved Florida Writers Association. She invites
you to visit her at triciapimental.com.
Thank you Trish so glad you wrote this book.
ReplyDeleteLove the opening line of this article!
ReplyDeleteThe book sounds fascinating.
Enjoyed the article! Can't imagine moving that often. :-)
ReplyDelete