“There are people who don’t give up demanding change.” An Interview with Susan Burgess-Lent
T here are novels that tell a story, and then there are novels that carry the weight of history, identity, and moral urgency. When All the Girls Stopped Singing is firmly the latter. Spanning continents and generations, it follows Zora Monro as she is pulled from a carefully constructed life into a truth that is as dangerous as it is necessary. I spoke with Susan Burgess-Lent about voice, responsibility, and what it means to write toward the realities many would rather not face. Dianne Pearce: Without giving too much away, what is When All the Girls Stopped Singing about? Susan Burgess-Lent: When All the Girls Stopped Singing follows Zora Monro, a Washington, DC human rights advocate whose carefully constructed life unravels after her mother’s sudden death. What begins as grief soon becomes a revelation. Hidden files and cryptic notes expose a long-buried secret about Zora’s origins, one that stretches from America’s fraught racial history to a...