Episode 97: Natasha Solomons (Fair Rosaline) audio only
The Worm Hole Podcast The Worm Hole Podcast
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 Published On May 12, 2024

Charlie and Natasha Solomons (Fair Rosaline) discuss Natasha's interpretation of Romeo and Juliet, told from the perspective of Rosaline, wherein Romeo is a groomer and Juliet must be saved from him. We discuss as well Natasha's stylistic choices for her prose and the changes she made to the original ending.

Please note that there is a lot of discussion of sexually predatory behaviour and some explicit language in this episode.

Mark Scott's rephrasing of Charles Dibdin's argument can be found in his 1987 publication, Shakespearean Criticism, page 419
Natasha's I, Mona Lisa:   / i-mona-lisa  
Natasha's Mr Rosenblum's List:   / mr-rosenblum-s-list-or-friendly-guidance-f...  
Ros Barber, The Marlowe Papers:   / the-marlowe-papers  
Pamela Butchart's To Wee Or Not To Wee:   / to-wee-or-not-to-wee  
Susan Calman's audiobook version of Pamela Butchart's To Wee Or Not To Wee
: https://www.audible.co.uk/pd/To-Wee-o...

Where to find Natasha online

Twitter:   / natashasolomons  
Instagram
:   / natashasolomonsauthor  

Where to find Charlie online

Website: http://wormholepodcast.com
Twitter:   / carnelianvalley  
Instagram
:   / charlieplacebooks  

Discussions

01:39 The inspiration for Fair Rosaline - Natasha's interpretation of Romeo and Juliet as being darker than it's portrayed
06:18 How we never see Rosaline in the original, and how Natasha changes this
07:01 Shakespeare's own thoughts on his characters, and Natasha's interpretations here
10:29 How Natasha borrowed from other Shakespearean Rosalines and Rosalinds
16:32 The importance of Juliet and her relative relevance in the book, and how Natasha considered different types of readers when she wrote
19:39 We start talking about the changes Natasha makes to the ending
20:44 Romeo's copying Tybalt - the balcony and roses not being Romeo's original idea in Fair Rosaline
21:57 The theme of roses and thorns
24:54 How Natasha wrote her prose - similar but not the same as Shakespeare's
28:12 How Natasha changes (or, as she says, 'made it more explicit') Friar Lawrence
32:45 The men being in on it
34:17 The importance of the convent and the theme of women's freedom
40:25 Tybalt's death and why Natasha made the choices she did
42:29 How Natasha wrote with her young daughter beside her on Zoom in lockdown
44:34 What Natasha's writing now: Cleopatra, with the Shakespearean influence again
47:18 There will be a play of Fair Rosaline!

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