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Meet
the Author: featuring Jen's Jewels
your ultimate source of tidbits
and tantalizing scoop happening in romance, chick-lit,
mystery, and suspense!
Also see Previous
Interviews |
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Appearances
can be deceiving. Just ask anyone like me who
parks in a handicapped spot. Sure, I may not look
as if the space is warranted. The doubtful glances
make this apparent. But, the titanium parts along
with the aches and pains earn me the right to
take a few less steps.
This month’s Jen’s Jewels can relate
to my situation. From the outside, it appeared
as if Julie Metz was living a good life. A loving
husband and happy home. It seemed as if she had
it all. Then one day, her husband suddenly dies,
and what’s left shatters the very existence
of her core. In her painfully honest yet uplifting
memoir entitled PERFECTION, Julie takes a look
back at her life as she comes to terms with reality
of her future.
As part of this interview, Hyperion
Books has generously donated five copies for you,
my lucky readers to win. So, don’t forget
to look for the trivia question at the end. Thanks
for making Jen’s Jewels a part of your reading
adventure.

JEN: YOUR EXPERIENCE AS A GRAPHIC ARTIST
PLAYS AN ESSENTIAL ROLE IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF YOUR
MEMOIR, PERFECTION. SO THAT MY READERS MAY HAVE
A BETTER UNDERSTANDING OF THE PATH THAT LED YOU
TO BECOMING AN AUTHOR, PLEASE TELL US A LITTLE BIT
ABOUT YOUR EDUCATIONAL AND PROFESSIONAL BACKGROUND.
Julie: I grew up in a house
that was filled with books and art. My parents both
worked as art directors at Simon and Schuster
Publishers and my father is a landscape
artist. When I was young I attended a Waldorf school
and this provided a creative learning environment—lots
of handmade cloth and wooden toys, lots of drawing
and music. Later I attended more traditional schools
where the focus was on writing and study skills.
I attended Smith College where I majored in fine
art but also took many English Literature classes.
This was an exciting time on campus, with lots of
discussion about the political topics of the day.
After college I returned to my home in New York
City and began working in the design field. My last
staff job was at Harper & Row Publishers
(now HarperCollins). From there I began a freelance
life.
JEN: BEING A FREELANCE DESIGNER AND NOW
WRITER PROVIDED YOU THE MEANS IN WHICH TO EXPLORE
VARIOUS ASPECTS OF THE PUBLISHING BUSINESS. DID
YOU CONCENTRATE ON A SPECIFIC AREA OF EXPERTISE,
OR DID YOU BRANCH OUT AND TAKE ON UNFAMILIAR TOPICS
IN HOPES OF OPENING NEW DOORS OF OPPORTUNITY?
Julie: Before I began writing I was a freelance
graphic designer. I have designed book covers
for various publishers for about twenty years,
and I grew up with parents who worked in the publishing
industry. I have seen many changes in the book
world since I was a kid hanging around my mom
and dad’s offices back in the days before
computers. In my design life I try to maintain
creativity within the vertical rectangle of a
book cover. My writing life started with the memoir
PERFECTION, but now that I am working on fiction
I am more open to letting my imagination take
me to new places.
JEN: EMBARKING ON A CAREER AS AN AUTHOR IS A GRAND
UNDERTAKING DUE TO THE COMPLEXITY OF CREATING
A BOOK THAT WILL GRAB THE ATTENTION OF AGENTS,
PUBLISHERS, AND OF COURSE READERS. YOUR NEW RELEASE,
PERFECTION, TAKES THAT ONE STEP FURTHER BECAUSE
IT’S THE STORY OF YOUR LIFE. FIRST OF ALL,
WHAT WAS THE DRIVING FORCE BEHIND PUTTING YOUR
LIFE EXPERIENCES IN PRINT?
Julie: After my husband died, I began keeping
a journal. I was also writing letters to friends—I
have always been a letter writer. The journal
and letters helped me stay sane during a crazy
time and later became the raw material for my
book. At the time of his death my husband was
under contract to write a book and at first I
thought I’d try to finish that for him.
After the revelations of his affairs I abandoned
that idea. A few friends had suggested I write
about my experiences and I began to think about
that. I began working on the book as a kind of
personal therapy. A friend who was an editor at
Glamour magazine asked me about writing a feature
piece. This was my first experience as a professional
writer. From there I began working on a formal
book proposal and on what would become the first
chapters. At this point I didn’t really
know what would come of it all, but I knew that
I had to see it through and finish the book, whether
or not it ever got published.
JEN: AS FOR THE NUTS AND BOLTS OF THE
PROJECT, APPROXIMATELY HOW LONG DID IT TAKE FOR
YOU TO COMPLETE THIS BOOK? AND, WHAT WAS THE MOST
CHALLENGING PART OF THE PROCESS?
Julie: The writing and publication process took
about five years. The hardest part for me, without
a doubt, were the many times I revisited the middle
section of the book, the most raw and painful
chapters after I discovered my husband’s
affairs. Sometimes I really had to force myself
to the desk. But by then I had a strong sense
that many other women had been in this situation
and that they might get something out of my story.
JEN: IN MY OPINION, PERFECTION IS A BRUTALLY
HONEST NARRATIVE OF A MARRIAGE GONE AWRY AS TOLD
THROUGH THE EYES OF A SCORNED SPOUSE. IRONICALLY,
I DID NOT FEEL AS IF YOU WERE PLAYING THE ROLE
OF THE VICTIM. YOUR TONE THROUGHOUT THE BOOK IS
MORE OF A “THIS IS WHAT HAPPENED AND LOOK
HOW FAR I HAVE COME” APPROACH. HOW DID YOU
KEEP IT SO OBJECTIVE SO AS NOT TO TARNISH THE
MEMORY OF YOUR HUSBAND, HENRY? (HE WAS HIGHLY
REGARDED BY HIS PEER GROUP.) I GIVE YOU MUCH CREDIT
FOR TAKING THE HIGH ROAD. NOT TOO MANY PEOPLE
IN YOUR SHOES WOULD HAVE DONE THAT.
Julie: I had the benefit of some years that passed
after the events I write about in the book. I
wanted to take the reader on the emotional journey,
through grief and anger, all the way to acceptance.
So I would say that time helped give me perspective
and made the book more balanced in tone. The book
shows one version of the complications of adult
relationships, and the consequences of poor choices—Henry’s
and mine. We all make mistakes in our lives. Henry
made some huge ones. But in the end I feel genuine
sorrow for what he lost—the chance to live
a full life.
JEN: BESIDES FILLING IN THE MISSING PIECES,
HOW DID CONTACTING YOUR HUSBAND’S MISTRESSES
AFTER HIS DEATH HELP YOU ACHIEVE A SENSE OF CLOSURE
AND ACCEPTANCE FOR THE MAN HE TRULY WAS?
Julie: I contacted the other women to get a sense
of what other life my husband had been living
in the last year of his life. After talking to
them I did feel that I knew more but I also saw
that there were aspects of the story I’d
never be able to find out and that I would have
to live with that. So some questions remain unanswered
but I was able to begin to think about moving
on to a new life on my own.
JEN: AS WE ALL KNOW, MARRIAGE TAKES WORK…
A LOT OF WORK. YOU MENTION IN THE BOOK THAT THE
TROUBLE SIGNS WERE THERE HAD YOU BEEN LOOKING
FOR THEM. DO YOU THINK HENRY WAS TRYING TO REACH
OUT TO YOU BUT WAS LACKING IN THE EMOTIONAL FORTITUDE
TO MAKE THAT CONNECTION? WHY OR WHY NOT?
Julie: It’s really hard to look back at
the situation we were in and imagine what he was
thinking at the time, how he rationalized his
choices. I feel very changed from the woman who
was Henry’s wife. I would behave differently
now. I think I would be more willing to see the
signs of trouble. What I can be certain of is
that while his behavior was damaging to me and
our child Henry was suffering as well.
JEN: AS IS WITH EVERYTHING THESE DAYS,
IT ALL COMES DOWN TO SEX. EITHER IT’S TOO
LITTLE OR TOO MUCH. IT’S DIFFICULT FOR MANY
TO ACHIEVE THE PERFECT BALANCE. I FOUND IT INTERESTING
THAT YOU REACHED OUT TO DON SYMONS AT THE UNIVERSITY
OF CALIFORNIA, SANTA BARBARA. PLEASE SHARE WITH
US YOUR CONVERSATION AND HOW IT HELPED YOU COME
TO GRIPS WITH YOUR HUSBAND’S BETRAYAL.
Julie: The evolutionary argument suggests that
men and women are “hard-wired” for
certain behavior: men to seek out as many partners
as possible and women to seek out a mate to help
raise children. The main question I wanted to
ask Don was whether he felt that we were prisoners
of our biology or whether we could exert free
will in our decision-making. What I took away
from our conversations is that the conflict is
something we have to live with as modern humans
in a culture that changes more rapidly than we
evolve, but using the excuse “my genes made
me do it” won’t cut it.
JEN: AFTER READING YOUR BIO BLURB WITH
THE MENTION OF YOUR “PARTNER”, I THOUGHT
YOU HAD CHOSEN TO SEEK FEMALE COMPANIONSHIP. NOT
SO. WILL YOU EVER MARRY AGAIN? WHY OR WHY NOT?
Julie: It’s always hard to know what to
call your significant other these days! Sometimes
I call him my boyfriend, but that sounds like
I am eighteen…oh well, we’ll use “boyfriend”
today. He and I have been a couple for five years.
We are domestically partnered now and our lives
are very much that of any longtime couple. We
work hard, we divide house chores, we plan vacations
when we have extra money, and we discuss our IRA’s.
Some of our roles are very traditional: I do laundry
and he takes care of our car. I had been wary
of remarrying because I feared that it would end
badly again and because I wanted my daughter to
feel completely comfortable with our new family
before I made any more big changes. At this point
I can imagine marrying again but we aren’t
in any particular rush. It’s not like when
you are young and you can’t wait for your
big wedding day. If it happens it will be something
small for our family and friends, just to celebrate
the life we’ve made together. Mostly I care
about the happiness of our day-to-day lives.
JEN: THE INNOCENT VICTIM IN ALL OF THIS
IS YOUR LOVELY DAUGHTER, LIZA. HOW WILL THIS MEMOIR
HELP HER UNDERSTAND THE DISSOLUTION OF HER IDYLLIC
FAMILY LIFE AS SHE ONCE KNEW IT?
Julie: She is now almost thirteen years old. She
lost her father when she was six and a half and
has now spent five years with my boyfriend as
a second parent. Our life looks pretty traditional
from the outside and we have worked hard to create
a new family. I think she has benefited from the
fact that my new relationship is healthier and
more stable than the one I had with Henry. She
saw lots of fighting during the last years of
my marriage. She is a wise child—she would
not have described our marriage as idyllic. I
do hope that my story will serve as a cautionary
tale for younger women like my daughter as they
begin to seek out partners. Relationships are
work, marriage is work. It’s important to
choose wisely and not to be swayed by what’s
on the surface.
JEN: LOOKING BACK, HOW HAS THE COMPLETION
OF A MEMOIR CHANGED YOUR PERCEPTION OF YOUR MARRIAGE?
YOURSELF?
Julie: I began wiring the book as a kind of personal
therapy to help me understand what had happened
to my marriage. I try to look back at myself in
my marriage with compassion. I was young when
I met Henry and in spite of everything I was naïve.
The experiences I lived through changed me. One
thing that hasn’t changed: I never wanted
to be in a relationship where I was constantly
jealous and suspicious, and I don’t want
to live like that now. The difference is that
I am able to be honest with myself about whether
I am happy or not.
JEN: IF YOU COULD TURN BACK THE CLOCK,
WHAT ONE THING WOULD YOU DO DIFFERENTLY AND WHY?
Julie: I wish I hadn’t been so afraid to
look at the reality of my life. When I was married
I was a more fearful person and, like many women,
I had a lot invested in my identity as a wife
and mother. I couldn’t imagine being on
my own and I couldn’t imagine myself really
taking charge of my life. But I don’t regret
being in the relationship because I have my daughter.
She is the most important part of my life and
I would go through everything again to have her
in my life.
JEN: IN TERMS OF PROMOTION, WILL YOU
BE PARTICIPATING IN A BOOK TOUR? WILL YOU BE SCHEDULING
AUTHOR PHONE CHATS? DO YOU HAVE A WEBSITE?
Julie: For now the promotional
focus is here in New York City. I have been doing
newspaper and radio interviews. I have done three
readings in Brooklyn. I do have a website where
I post news and events, information regarding
book clubs, and keep a blog: www.perfectionbook.com
or you can reach the same site at: www.juliemetz.com
Jen: I want to thank you for taking the
time to stop by and chat with my readers. I was
truly impressed with your honest and open approach
to facing adversity in such a public forum as
the media. It must have been a cathartic experience
for you, and will hopefully lead to bright, new
beginnings. Best of luck with the book! It’s
a sparkling jewel.
I hope you have enjoyed my interview with Julie.
Please stop by your favorite book store or local
library and pick up a copy today. Better yet,
how would you like to win one? Be one of the first
five readers to e-mail me at
jensjewels@gmail.com and you’ll win
your very own copy of PERFECTION.
What is the name of Julie’s website?
Next month, I will be bringing to you my interview
with childhood television star, Quinn Cummings.
You won’t want to miss it.
Until next time…Jen
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Jennifer
Vido
When a twist of fate landed Jennifer Vido
at the "Reading with Ripa" roundtable
discussion with Kelly Ripa and Meg Cabot,
she knew that her career as a French teacher
would never be the same. A graduate of Vanderbilt
University, Jennifer is a member of Romance
Writers of America and reviews books for the
major publishing houses, such as Random House,
Penguin, and Hyperion. Currently, she is a
columnist and reviewer for www.freshfiction.com,
where her popular monthly column, Jen's
Jewels, also appears. As
a national trainer for The Arthritis Foundation's
Aquatic and Land Exercise Programs, she
is an advocate for those like herself who
suffer from arthritis, the nation's #1 cause
of disability. In addition, she serves as
Vice-chairperson of the Board of Trustees
of the Harford County Public Library where
she resides with her husband and two sons.
She may be reached at jensjewels@gmail.com and
JenniferVido.com
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Katy Kelly, May 20, 2009
Nicole Seitz, May 11,2009
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Allison
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Ellen
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Roberta
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Monica
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