is her third novel, following Love and Fury: A Novel of Mary Wollstonecraft and Mr. Dickens and His Carol, her debut.
Silva applied the Page 69 Test to her new novel, Sometime This Century, with the following results:
From page 69:Visit Samantha Silva's website.“I’ve been through the whole downstairs,” Annabel told him. “I used blue sticky notes for the Hepplewhites, purple for anything else that might be valuable—for you to decide—and pink for the things that should definitely stay.” She put a hand on her heart. “Sentimental value…”So begins page 69 of Sometime This Century in which Annabel Blake shows a Mr. Patterson from Sotheby’s around Kidlington House, the "crumbling old country pile” in England she’s tasked with sorting out for her boss. Annabel is explaining her system of sticky notes to indicate what she thinks may have the most value—the Hepplewhite furniture in particular—and should be sold at auction, and what has sentimental value and should stay. They’re both taken by a Hepplewhite settee that probably had a sister once. “Hard to keep sisters together all that time,” Mr. Patterson says. On cue, Annabel’s sister, Cassie, comes in and makes fun of their over-the-top enthusiasm for Hepplewhites, in other words, being such complete nerds.
I was nervous opening to page 69, taking it as a personal challenge. When I teach writing, I often say that at your most successful, the DNA of the whole, however subtle, should be in every scene, on every page. But it is very hard to do. So I was relieved that while the scene appears to be doing rather light-lifting for the set-up of the novel, it actually offers significant clues as to what lies ahead and what the novel’s all about.
The attentive reader turning to this page alone might note several things. That the novel is a comedy. That it’s about two sisters somewhat lost to each other. That it’s probably England in a big old country house. That Annabel loves the Regency period in every detail. That her sister Cassie has mostly contempt for it. That some furniture will be taken away (this could complicate things)! That right now Annabel will leave it Mr. Patterson to decide, but in fact, it could be a novel about what Annabel herself decides: what sentiment matters and what she values most.
Q&A with Samantha Silva.
--Marshal Zeringue


