I can’t express how excited I am to have Mim Eichler Rivas in the Shed today! Some of you may know that in addition to being a novelist and blogger…and copywriter…and mom… I’m also a collaborator and ghostwriter.
Well, Mim is the Queen of Collaborators. Her stories, the stories she’s so masterfully and beautifully helped others to tell, New York Times bestselling stories, have been inspiring me for years. A couple of years ago, when I was assigned to be editor of one of her books, Saving Each Other, by Victoria Jackson and Ali Guthy, I was as excited and terrified as I could be. I, me… I was going to be editing Mim? Crazy! But true!
1. Did you always want to be a writer? If not, what were some of your early career plans? And if so, is the kind of writing you do what you imagined yourself doing?Until I was 28 years old, I didn’t consider writing as something I could do to make a living. Writing was what I did to live—like breathing—as a way of keeping track and making sense out of the incongruous parts of my life. For most of those years, my focus was on making it as an actress. But after graduating with a major in theater from Sarah Lawrence College and heading to LA, I soon confronted the unfortunate reality that Hollywood didn’t have a niche for me. I was too quirky to be the girl next door and too much of an ingénue to play offbeat. Fortunately, I had studied fiction writing with E.L. Doctorow and when the time came to find something else that I could love as much as acting, my true calling was right there in my back pocket waiting for me. When I began to take myself seriously as a writer, my interest was definitely more in fiction and film than in the calling card I have earned as a narrative non-fiction author. That said, I ultimately see myself as a storyteller—whether I’m acting or writing, regardless of the genre.
2. You’ve worked on some pretty big collaborations, Chris Gardner’s The Pursuit of Happyness and its sequel, Start Where You Are, Antwone Fisher’s Finding Fish, and Becoming Dr. Q with Alfredo Quinones; you collaborated with Victoria Jackson and Ali Guthy’s Saving Each Other. I know for me as an editor, spending a lot of time in other people’s stories has helped me better see “the big picture” when it comes to my own life and how circumstances, good or bad, are really just passages or chapters of a bigger “book.” How has helping tell other people’s stories affected you?
What I learned early on in helping other people find or understand the narrative through-line that connects the different chapters of their lives is that most of us resist becoming the protagonists of our own stories. Books have beginnings, middles, and ends. Life doesn’t. However, when we take a step back to look at the why’s and how’s of our experiences, it becomes easier to see how our choices, good or bad, contribute or detract from our happiness. Or happyness as Chris Gardner would say. In that way, I agree, helping others tell their stories has helped me to see that bigger picture, and to take ownership—or authorship—of my life. I also feel so lucky to be that fly on the wall in situations I will never have in my own life and to come away incredibly inspired and motivated. On Saving Each Other, for example, after spending time with mother/daughter authors Victoria Jackson & Ali Guthy, I took away insights that guided me to be a better mother to my son. When I worked with NBA superstar Dwyane Wade on his memoir, A Father First, a NY Times bestseller, I got a crash course in why you never give up on the people you love or on yourself. On the downside of helping others tell their stories, I too often shirk my own stories and my own writing projects.
BONUS QUESTION: Can you share for us what’s next for you?
I’m working on a big sprawling novel, historical fiction, about a self-improvement circle formed by six mill girls in 1841 New England. It’s based on their actual journal. The documentary filmmaker David Hoffman, who brought me the story that became my non-fiction book, Beautiful Jim Key, brought me the journal and will hopefully be doing a documentary based on this fascinating, much overlooked period.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~MIM EICHLER RIVAS is the best-selling author/co-author of The Pursuit of Happyness with Chris Gardner, Becoming Dr. Q with Alfredo Quinones-Hinojosa, Finding Fish with Antwone Fisher, and Beautiful Jim Key, soon to be a major motion picture. She and her husband, actor/activist/author Victor Rivas Rivers live in Hermosa Beach, California, and have one son, Eli, a rising sophomore at Harvard.
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