I lived in Calcutta for five months in 1999. While I was there, I read many journals, diaries, collections of letters and histories. Susanna Moore calcuttacollectiondiary Change image and share on social
People will be able to survive, of course, without honeycreepers and monk seals. But if the wolf spider is in trouble, we are in trouble, too. Susanna Moore honeycreepermonkpeople Change image and share on social
When I was 23, I went to work for Jack Nicholson reading scripts. Later, I was married to a production designer named Richard Sylbert. So I lived in Los Angeles for ten years. Susanna Moore angelesdesignerjack Change image and share on social
I have to admit that I was very happy to finish 'In the Cut,' and happy not to return to it. Susanna Moore admitcutfinish Change image and share on social
When I was nine, I was taught to ride a surfboard in Waikiki by the beach boy Rabbit Kekai. Susanna Moore beachboykekai Change image and share on social
The world of womens' prisons is indeed a microcosm. Susanna Moore microcosmprisonwomen Change image and share on social
'The Big Girls' has always seemed to me to be a story about different kinds of families - a divorced mother with a child; a father with his child and his girlfriend; a mother of three children, suffering from postpartum depression; and the rigid artificial families maintained by women in prison - all potentially perilous. Susanna Moore artificialbigchild share on social
While I was writing 'The Big Girls,' I had to take a big breath each morning and calm myself sufficiently to once again enter that world. But friends tell me that it is the only thing that really interests me. They say that I like to be upset. Susanna Moore bigbreathcalm share on social
'In the Cut' was not what readers expected of me. Before it was published, I was seen as a women's writer, which meant that I wrote movingly about flowers and children. Susanna Moore childcutexpect Change image and share on social
'Forever Amber,' written by Kathleen Winsor in 1944, was banned in Boston at the time of its publication as obscene and offensive. This alone would have been enough to excite my interest, but in 1956, it was sitting inoffensively on the shelves of the small country library on the north shore of Oahu, Hawaii, where my family spent its summers. Susanna Moore amberbanboston share on social