July 2, 2024

Would You Be Okay Having a Cemetery in Your Backyard?

J. Courtney Sullivan on the house that inspired The Cliffs.

Would You Be Okay Having a Cemetery in Your Backyard?

J. Courtney Sullivan on the house that inspired The Cliffs.

I never know what might spark my imagination and provide inspiration for a novel. In the case of The Cliffs, it happened while I was on vacation in Maine ten summers ago. The idea for the book was set in motion by two old houses. The first, an 1880 farmhouse, was for sale. My husband and I, newly married then, briefly considered buying it. We made an offer. At which point, the realtor gave us a map of the property, and we learned that the original owners and their children were buried just beyond the edge of the backyard grass, in a wooded area. Once I knew the gravestones were there, I realized I could see them from the kitchen window.

This became a topic of debate among our friends—would you be okay having a cemetery in your backyard? People felt strongly, one way or the other. To me, it felt like an extreme form of what is always true in New England: The past intersects with the present everywhere you look, whether you see it or not.

Just down the road from the farmhouse, we came across a gorgeous, purple Victorian overlooking the ocean, fully furnished, and mysteriously abandoned. Every August thereafter, we would visit (okay, fine, we would trespass) to check on the place and peer through the windows. I always wondered—Who lived here? Why did they leave? Where did they go?

One year we arrived to find the house was gone, the foundation for a McMansion dug in its place. I was inexplicably crushed. When I got home, I started writing about the house. From there, characters emerged. Jane, the protagonist in The Cliffs, discovers the exact abandoned Victorian I did (down to the furnishings) as a teenager. It becomes her refuge from a difficult home situation and a town where she doesn’t fit in. Twenty years later—her career and marriage in shambles due to a massive mistake she has made—Jane, now an accomplished archivist, returns to Maine and finds the house drastically changed. It comes to play an unexpected role in her adult life when the new owner, fearing the house is haunted, hires Jane to research all its previous residents.

I populated the house with fascinating women. I had so much fun creating them and incorporating the history of various unusual places in Maine into the story—like a summer camp for psychic mediums, and a Shaker Village where the last two living members of that faith still reside.

My primary obsession in fiction is the idea that the moment a woman is born determines so much of who she is allowed to become. We are always in conversation with the people who came before us, even if we don’t know their stories. I see the women in this book, separated by time and many other factors, but united by a house and the land on which it sits, as being in conversation with one another.

Writing this book transported me to Maine, to my favorite place by the sea, and helped me see it in a whole new light. I hope reading the book does the same for you.

Kicking off the week on a high note by finishing Once Upon A Time In Dollywood and getting ready to hear from @AshleyJordanWrites on the latest episode of Bookmarked, the Reese’s Book Club podcast. 🎧📖

New episode drops tomorrow — and trust us, you won’t want to miss this one. Expect all the feels: romance, stepping out of your comfort zone, and the journey of writing a debut novel. We're calendaring it in! 

Listen tomorrow on the @iHeartPodcast app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you love to listen!
"I hope you will also find that there is reassurance, maybe even a promise, whether you’re coming of age or not: that your anger is righteous and just. That the endurance with which you face the world is admirable. That your vulnerability, your longing to be wanted just as you are, is worthy." — @afarolfollmuth

To girls and women everywhere, we see you. 💙
Welcome to the club, Once Upon a Time in Dollywood. 💙

📷: @therealbookhustler
"You are important and you are powerful. Just as you are, in yourself, standing alone. Don’t let anyone, and especially no man, treat you as anything less."

We're still hung up on this iconic line from Stuck Up and Stupid. A fantastic reminder that you are worthy and certainly not stupid. 🩷
This weekend’s mood: resting, recharging, and rendezvousing with every iconic and authentic version of Cate Kay. 🧖‍♀️✨
This book gives us all the fireflies (iykyk) ✨ It's just so easy to ship Eve and Jamie in Once Upon A Time in Dollywood. We’re always here for the sunshine-and-stormcloud duo that just make each other better 🌤️💙
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Reese’s Book Club and Gevalia have partnered to help you slow down and find your calm with the perfect tools: delicious coffee and a good book. It’s time to reclaim a moment of joy. Give yourself permission to pause and head to our link in bio to shop Gevalia coffee.
✨ HOLD DOWN ✨ on this video for all the romance vibes and prepare to swoon!

And if you fell in love with the couples in Seven Days in June, Honey & Spice, or any of these titles, we promise you'll be obsessed with Eve and Jamie in Once Upon A Time In Dollywood. 💙
Enemies-to-lovers fans unite and add Honey & Spice to your TBR! ❤️‍🔥 Why is this trope truly the best? Sound off below!

📷: @chris.reads.a.lot
This post is dedicated to the special people who try to find beauty in everything. 💌

Recognize that iconic voice narrating Great Big Beautiful Life by @EmilyHenryWrites? It's the irreplaceable @JustJuliaWhelan — and she recently spilled all things audiobook on Bookmarked, the Reese's Book Club podcast, with @DanielleRobay.

Listen to the story behind the voice on @iHeartPodcast, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you love to listen.