Showing posts with label Interviews. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Interviews. Show all posts

January 06, 2026

An Interview with Virginia Kantra, Author of Anne of a Different Island

Anne of a Different Island by Virginia Kantra

Anne of a Different Island is a book by Virginia Kantra that will be published later this month on January 20, 2026. It is the story of Anne Gallagher who returns home to Mackinac Island after her father’s sudden death. The life Anne built for herself in Chicago has been unraveling both professionally and personally, and she needs time to figure out what she really wants in life.

The book is inspired by the Anne of Green Gables novels by L.M. Montgomery. Readers of Montgomery’s series will recognize echoes of her characters in Kantra’s contemporary novel. Like Anne Shirley, Anne Gallagher experiences her own coming-of-age challenges as she returns to her hometown for the summer. As Anne grieves the loss of her father, she forms new relationships while rebuilding old ones. She tries to make decisions about her career and find her place in the world.

I was fortunate to be able to read an advance copy of the novel courtesy of Penguin Random House and to have the opportunity to ask Virginia Kantra a few questions about her novel.


Here is my interview with Virginia Kantra:

1) What about Anne of Green Gables inspired you to write this modern story about a woman who is similar to Anne Shirley?

Growing up, Anne of Green Gables was one of my go-to, feel-good reads. Not because it introduced me to my first, best book boyfriend, Gilbert Blythe. (Okay, partly because of Gilbert.) But mostly because I saw myself in Anne. She gave me hope—in the words of my Anne—that “a strange girl with a big imagination and a bigger mouth could find her place in the world.” That yearning to belong is something most of us carry into adulthood.

I was also inspired by the way Lucy Maud Montgomery dealt with real-life issues in her books. I set Anne of a Different Island on Mackinac Island, Michigan, because I felt nostalgic setting evoked the charm of Prince Edward Island, and I wanted to use the reassurance of familiar tropes (enemies-to-lovers, first love, small-town romance) as a way to talk about love, anxiety, grief and resilience, about finding your way forward despite the bends in the road.

2) I have run a website on Anne of Green Gables and L.M. Montgomery’s other works for many years, with an emphasis on Montgomery’s lasting legacy. How do you think your novel adds to this legacy?

I wrote Anne of a Different Island for the girls who grew up loving Anne and the readers who need her now. My heroine, Anne Gallagher, is herself an Anne fan in her mid-twenties, what I think of as a contemporary “coming of age,” when you’re figuring out who you are apart from your parents and what you’re going to do with the rest of your life. Revisiting a beloved classic is always a risk, because the emotional stakes are so high. But I hope I captured some of Anne Shirley’s irrepressible spirit—and that the book points readers back to Montgomery’s series, where that magic began.

3) Anne Gallagher is an English teacher with an ability to connect with young people through books. I enjoyed how you incorporated The Perks of Being a Wallflower, Red Sky at Morning, and of course, Anne of Green Gables into your novel. Could you reflect on the relationship between reading and personal growth and the importance of having access to a wide array of books?

I love that you picked up on that! It’s so important to read about characters who are like us, especially when we feel we don’t fit in. When Anne is defending her classroom library in Anne of a Different Island, she says:

“Sometimes books are the only safe place kids have to explore who they are and how they feel. To understand they’re not alone. How would I have navigated my own life without Meg Murray and Anne Shirley, Jo March and Jane Eyre, to offer a road map and point the way?”

Stories help us feel seen. And just as importantly, they help us to recognize others. Reading about characters from different backgrounds, walking in their shoes, seeing through their eyes, expands our understanding and creates empathy. We are all kindred spirits. Books remind us of that.

4) Hailey describes Gilbert Blythe as Anne Gallagher’s “perfect book boyfriend.” Could you talk about how you view Gilbert as a foil and romantic lead?

I’ll put it this way: Years after I first read Little Women, I still wavered between Team Laurie or Team Baehr. But Gilbert Blythe won my heart the minute I met him. He and Anne don’t start off on the right foot. He calls her “Carrots.” She breaks her slate over his head. They have an intense schoolroom rivalry. But Gilbert meets Anne as an intellectual equal, and the way their friendship deepens into love feels natural and right. He respects her. He believes in her. He even gives up his teaching post so she can stay close to Marilla.

Anne Gallagher wants to find her own Gilbert. But one of the things I explore in Anne of a Different Island is the tension between fiction and real life. Anne has a destination in mind, but no clear map. Joe, on the surface, is no Gilbert Blythe—he’s older, rougher, and much less articulate. But the same qualities that make Gilbert the perfect romantic hero make Joe a great partner: his sense of responsibility to his family, his devotion to Anne, and his determination to support her dreams.

5) What aspects of Anne Shirley’s character speak to you, and why do you think she’s so beloved worldwide?

Anne Shirley is an icon for dreamers everywhere. Like most creatives, she’s observant, sensitive, and expressive (sometimes too sensitive and expressive , Marilla might say!). Basically, she’s your average teenager. But she’s also uniquely and perfectly true to herself.

One of my favorite lines from the original Anne of Green Gables is:

“My life is a perfect graveyard of buried hopes.' That's a sentence I read in a book once, and I say it over to comfort myself whenever I'm disappointed in anything."

It’s over-the-top and achingly sincere all at once. But in addition to capturing Anne’s dramatic side, this quote demonstrates how she faces disappointment with humor and resilience. We all need the comfort of books and the escape of imagination. Anne has this amazing ability to find joy in the world. No wonder we love her!

6) What books have helped shape you as a writer?

I started with Andrew Lang’s fairytale collections and then moved on to the children’s classics: The Narnia Chronicles, The Phantom Tollbooth, A Wrinkle in Time. I’ve reimagined Little Women (Meg and Jo, Beth and Amy) and The Wizard of Oz (The Fairytale Life of Dorothy Gale). And, of course, Anne of Green Gables.

Those books sank deep roots. They helped form not only what I have to say, but how I say it—the cadence of fairytale.

They taught me that magic is possible, relationships matter, and ordinary people are capable of extraordinary things. Those beliefs are at the heart of my writing and very much at the heart of Anne of a Different Island.


Acknowledgements:
Thank you to Virginia Kantra for answering my questions so thoughtfully, and thank you to Penguin Random House for allowing me to read Anne of a Different Island in advance of its release.

Image Credit:
Book cover of Anne of a Different Island by Virginia Kantra.

Purchase and read Anne of a Different Island:

Anne of a Different Island by Virginia Kantra
Created January 6, 2026.
© worldofanneshirley.com

October 05, 2024

Why People Still Love Anne of Green Gables on The Current Podcast

Why People Still Love Anne of Green Gables on The Current Podcast

On September 3, The Current with Matt Galloway on CBC Radio released a podcast episode with a segment on "Why People Still Love Anne of Green Gables." The episode's synopsis reads: "This year would have been the 150th birthday of Lucy Maud Montgomery, the famed P.E.I. author of Anne of Green Gables. We talk to some islanders and 'Anne fangirls' who are excited to celebrate both the author and her creations."

On his visit to Prince Edward Island, Galloway interviews Judith Graves and Linda Lowther. Judith Graves compiled and edited The Annethology, a collection of short stories inspired by Anne of Green Gables. Linda Lowther is on the committee responsible for Anne of Green Gables tourism in Cavendish, Prince Edward Island, and she helped create The Inspiring World of L.M. Montgomery: A Literary Tour.

The interview covers a variety of topics relating to why Anne of Green Gables is timeless and why they love Anne. They also discuss adaptations of the story on screen and the economic importance of Anne of Green Gables-related tourism on Prince Edward Island. Lowther talks about The Literary Tour and things people might not know about L.M. Montgomery, such as her love of photography, scrapbooking, fashion, and nature. Graves discusses the concept behind The Annethology and the inventive short stories in the volume that take Anne on new journeys. This leads to a conversation about "Anne purists," "woke Anne" and "Anne fatigue."

It's a fun interview. Give it a listen!

Websites:
The Current with Matt Galloway on YouTube
The Current with Matt Galloway podcast at CBC

Image Credit:
Screencapture of The Current Podcast on YouTube.

Created October 4, 2024.
© worldofanneshirley.com

May 24, 2024

Megan Follows on Playing Anne of Green Gables

Megan Follows as Anne Shirley in the 1985 Anne of Green Gables miniseries

Megan Follows is known for playing the outspoken, imaginative and talkative Anne Shirley in the 1985 TV miniseries Anne of Green Gables, which was based on L.M. Montgomery's novel. In December 2023, Follows reminisced about how playing Anne Shirley changed her life in a podcast conversation with the CBC's Tom Power. In the introduction to the podcast, Power mentions how the conversation made him rethink Anne of Green Gables and consider how radical the story was then and how relevant it still is today. I loved their conversation. Give it a listen!

Sometimes actors dislike being identified with a particular role, but not Megan Follows. She expressed gratitude about playing Anne Shirley and emphasized how great it was to play a character that was "a girl that got to express rage." When asked about her relationship with the character, Follows responded, "I love Anne...She and I have a great relationship. We're tight. We're bosom buddies. I think she's an extraordinary character, and uhm, I always felt incredibly grateful to have played her and to have been introduced to a strong-willed, female-driven story where you got to be number one from the point of view of a story." Often, Follows reflects, women are the appendage in stories and not the backbone or driving force. In contrast, Anne has a driving force to belong and to be seen for herself, and Follows believes that this is what resonates with people.

Megan Follows delved back into L.M. Montgomery's stories in preparing to record an Emily of New Moon audiobook a few years ago and then to direct a new Audible Anne of Green Gables audiobook featuring Michela Luci, Catherine O’Hara, Victor Garber, and Sandra Oh. Follows remarks that her deep dive back into the stories allowed her to discover "the subversiveness of the text." She had previously understood Montgomery's humor, but now she observed her way of pointing out hypocrisy through Anne. Follows feels that the power of the character scares people.

Follows sees Anne's compulsive talking as coming from a dark place where Anne chooses to go toward the light, not out of naivety, but for her own survival. As an example, she mentions how Anne planned to sleep in a cherry tree at the train station. She believes that Anne came up with this idea for safety, but that Anne focused on the beauty of the blossoms because she was terrified to be abandoned and alone in the world. Follows says that Montgomery used poetry because children don't actually speak this way.

Follows also reflected on her amazing experiences working with Colleen Dewhurst (Marilla Cuthbert) and Patricia Hamilton (Rachel Lynde). She discussed how Richard Farnsworth (Matthew Cuthbert) was only available for six days of filming, so she worked very long hours with him to film his scenes. Later, she did scenes with a grip stand with a hat on it as a stand-in. Follows also talked about the raspberry cordial scene with Schuyler Grant, who played Diana Barry. They were giving Grant glasses of watered down grape juice or Ribena, and she really did get sick after filming the scene multiple times. Follows briefly mentioned that her heart always smiles for Jonathan Crombie and that they laughed a lot.

Power asked Follows about her audition for Anne. Strangely, the day after her audition, her tape disappeared, and she had to redo her audition at the last minute. Follows mentions that there was another actress who was the first choice for Anne Shirley and that she had to fight for the role. Luckily, she had advocates at the CBC and someone at PBS who believed that she was the right fit for the role.

Later, when asked about how the success of the miniseries affected her, she reflected that she is grateful that she did a good job playing Anne, and that she has received a tremendous amount of goodwill because of the character and how much the character and writing mean to people.

Toward the end of the conversation, Follows talked about how she is currently developing a limited series on the life of L.M. Montgomery, her legacy and the power of her writing. I can't wait to hear more.


Image credit:

Photograph of Megan Follows as Anne Shirley in Anne of Green Gables © Sullivan Entertainment.

Reference:
Megan Follows: Playing Anne in Anne of Green Gables and bringing the story to a new generation. (2023, December 15). Q with Tom Power. CBC Arts & Entertainment. Retrieved from: https://podcasts.apple.com/ro/podcast/megan-follows-playing-anne-in-anne-of-green-gables/id256943801?i=1000638664483

Created May 24, 2024. Last updated August 26, 2024.
© worldofanneshirley.com


November 08, 2001

Remembering Lucy Maud Montgomery

Remembering Lucy Maud Montgomery by Alexandra Heilbron

Remembering Lucy Maud Montgomery is a book by Alexandra Heilbron that was published by Dundurn Press in October 2001. Heilbron interviews numerous people who knew L.M. Montgomery during her life, including her friends and neighbors, providing insights to the beloved author.

Here is the description of the book from Dundurn Press:

Lucy Maud Montgomery, Canada’s most beloved author, not only gave the world the classic novel Anne of Green Gables, but she was also a devoted minister’s wife, mother, neighbour, and friend to many, who in turn were honoured to have know this great lady.

In Remembering Lucy Maud Montgomery, the writer is remembered through first-hand reminiscences of the people who knew her. Her Sunday school students, neighbours, maids, family, and friends paint a portrait of Montgomery as she has never before been seen. Not only does this book uncover fascinating sides of the author and provide fresh anecdotes, but it includes many photographs that are published for the first time.

Even Montgomery’s most devoted fans will find stories to surprise, delight, and at times even shock them.


Reviews

"The book, lavishly illustrated, is an interesting collection of reminiscences, a boon for the popular writer's legions of fans."
The London Free Press

"Compelling reading and the collection as a whole will certainly be of interest to any reader of Montgomery's journals and her novels." –Canadian Literature


Image credit:
Book cover of Remembering Lucy Maud Montgomery.

Purchase and read Remembering Lucy Maud Montgomery:

Remembering Lucy Maud Montgomery by Alexandra Heilbron

Created November 8, 2001. Last updated September 8, 2024.
© worldofanneshirley.com