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A Winning First Novel About a Coup on a Co-op Board

Bill Morris in Board Operations on July 25, 2019

Carnegie Hill, Manhattan

Jonathan Vatner

Jonathan Vatner and his debut novel.

July 25, 2019

At the age of 39, Jonathan Vatner is publishing his first novel, Carnegie Hill, which is set in the fictional Chelmsford Arms co-op in the titular neighborhood on the Upper East Side of Manhattan. Written in a breezy and engaging style, the novel is built around the awakening of Penelope “Pepper” Bradford, a thirtysomething ingenue who moves into the tony co-op with her fiancee and soon finds herself serving on the co-op board, which is dominated by the tyrannical president. Vatner, who studied creative writing at Sarah Lawrence College, spoke with Habitat by phone from his home in a Yonkers co-op.

What was it about the world of a New York City co-op that inspired you as a fiction writer?

Well, a co-op is an inherently dramatic place. It's a confined space, a community, where most everyone knows each other, and I think because of that there were plenty of opportunities for gossip and drama. That’s what got me excited. I live in a co-op now, but when I wrote this novel, I had never lived in a co-op. A very close friend of mine was on the board of his co-op on the Upper East Side, and he would tell me these outrageous stories about what was happening on his co-op board, with some of the staff members and the various people he met, and it just inspired me to start writing fiction about it.

The novel contains very accurate inside information about the machinations of a co-op board, the interplay between the board and the staff and the residents. A co-op is a little universe, isn’t it?

Yeah, it is. The co-op in the novel is a fictional place, but I did have a lot of material to make sure that it was accurate. First of all, I had hundreds, maybe thousands, of emails from my friend, minutes of board meetings, interactions between him and other members of the board. And then on top of that, someone in my writing group was an attorney for the union that represents building staff members (Local 32BJ or the Service Employees International Union). So she helped me in terms of writing from the staff perspective.

The warfare between Pepper and the entrenched board president is the central drama of the book. Where did Pepper come from?

Originally she was a minor character in the novel, which started as a bunch of short stories with some with recurring characters. When I was done with the first draft, I realized that, no, it would work better if there were fewer characters with stories that were more interconnected. My agent pointed out that Pepper had a lot of potential, and the book might be stronger if the reader could see the co-op through her eyes, since she was new to the building and kind of an ingenue. I already had the character Patricia, the villainous board president, and she became more villainous as I started writing more from the perspective of Pepper. Like Pepper, I was in my early 30s and still kind of learning how to be an adult. I thought that maybe other people could empathize with that.

So there was a little bit of autobiography in Pepper?

There's a little bit of myself in all the characters, actually. That's how I write I. I try not to write about myself, but little things get in pretty constantly. Pepper’s relationship with her parents – they’re this sort of fortress and they don’t let her in – that mimicked my own feelings about my parents.

The co-op board in the novel is pretty dysfunctional. Did Pepper’s battle to usurp the president’s power come from your friend’s experience on his co-op board?

Pepper’s effort to usurp Patricia’s power just came out of the writing. Sometimes I'm surprised by what the characters do. After I wrote the novel, a friend who’s on a homeowners association board was trying to overthrow the president and I realized, oh, there’s some truth to what happened in my novel!

The novel is coming out on August 20. You must be pretty excited.

I'm beyond excited. I’ve been so busy with trying to get the word out that it's kind of hard to be nervous. Really, the panic was last year, all the time waiting for it to come out because the publishing process is extremely slow. I'm really confident in the book, and I'm thrilled to see what's going to happen next.

Hope it sells like Krispy Kremes.

Thank you.

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