![]() ![]() I have a personal commitment to the liberal arts that I got from MHC. ![]() Q: What aspects of Witches, if any, can trace their heritage to your MHC experiences? And the book has so hugely exceeded that in some ways that I haven’t completely absorbed it all. ![]() My outer limit of success was that the book would be published. Nobody expects anything like this to happen to them. Q: You’ve received fellowships and awards for your scholarly work, but I imagine it’s another order of magnitude to have fans in the pop-culture sense. And the minute I do, the paperback will come out here and it’ll start all over again. It’s finished here in the US, but it keeps rolling out in other places-I’m about to go to Europe for the French publication-so it’ll be a while before I can call it over. Is the tour launching A Discovery of Witches over? Below is an edited transcript of an interview with her in April 2011. She is the author of two nonfiction books in addition to A Discovery of Witches, the first volume in a planned “All Souls” trilogy. In addition to writing bestselling fiction, Deborah Harkness ’86 teaches in the University of Southern California at Los Angeles Department of History, specializing in the history of science. Of Witches, Women, and MHC: An Interview with A Discovery of Witches Author Deborah Harkness Interview with “A Discovery of Witches” author Deborah Harkness ’86 ![]()
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