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How
did CHANGES IN LATITUDES come about?
At the very beginning, I was looking at a beautiful photograph of sea
turtles swimming underwater. My mind drifted, and I imagined swimming
with sea turtles. I wrote a short story that contained that image, then
set it aside. During the next few years we went on spring break to Mexico
twice, once to Isla Mujeres, on the Yucatan peninsula and once to Puerto
Vallarta, on the Pacific coast. At Isla Mujeres I came across a sea turtle
in a three-sided pen at the beach, and encountered many sea turtle products
for sale. Back home I read an expose of an outfit on the Pacific coast
of Mexico that was slaughtering tens of thousands of ridley sea turtles
every year while merely pretending to hatch their eggs. All of these things
started to come together. I started imagining a novel that would intertwine
the fates of endangered turtles with that of an "endangered family" on
spring break in Mexico.
From
the first, was Travis the narrator?
I could hear his voice from the first line I wrote. Changes in Latitudes
really came together for me fast. Writing it was an intense and emotional
experience.
The
heart of the book seems to be when Travis and Teddy, his little brother,
swim with the sea turtles.
It really is. You know, the idea of swimming with sea turtles is all that
survived from my original short story. But it was plenty: I wrapped the
whole novel around that image. It taught me that an image you have a strong
feeling about is all that you need to get started. Starting with a single
image, you could write a poem, a song, a short story, or an entire novel.
Was
CHANGES IN LATITUDES your title from the start?
Is it from the Jimmy Buffett song, "Changes in Latitudes, Changes in Attitudes"
that appears in the story?
Yes to both questions! I really liked the title. It contains much more
than the idea of going south for a vacation. Readers hearing the title
can "fill in" the second phrase of that song. Travis's changes in attitudes
is what this story is all about. Over the course of the novel, he moves
from being self-absorbed to caring a whole lot more about his family and
even about the endangered sea turtles that his little brother loves so
much.
Have
you been around sea turtles other than that one in the pen that ended
up in the novel?
The turtles in my story are ridleys, but Jean and I did have the opportunity
to work for five days on a leatherback sea turtle project at a remote
beach on the Pacific coast of Mexico. These leatherback turtles are really
bigthe largest one recorded was about 2,000 pounds! The females
we were seeing averaged around 800 pounds. We were camping on the beach
and assisting Mexican turtle biologists and Mexican students. After dark,
the female leatherbacks started coming out of the sea to lay their eggs.
As the females laid their 80 or so eggs, the students collected them so
the poachers walking nearby in the dark wouldn't steal them and sell them.
Note my photo, taken at first light, of one of the females going back
into the sea. Shortly after dawn, we helped the students dig new nests
in a fenced nursery. Sixty days later, the eggs would hatch. In fact,
at the time we were there, there were lots of hatchlings clawing their
way to the surface from earlier "plantings." It was a big thrill to take
them outside the fence and watch them disappear into the sea. In my novel,
Travis said they look like wind-up toys. They really do.
Is
Punta Blanca modeled on a real place?
Yes, Puerto Vallarta. But the ridley sea turtle beach and the slaughterhouse
I was describing were far to the south, in the state of Oaxaca. The way
to join them in close proximity was to fictionalize the resort city. I
called it Punta Blanca.
One
last question. Have you ever had the chance to swim with sea turtles yourself?
Yes! In Hawaii, and it was just as wonderful as I had imagined it would
be.

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