Gwendolyn Womack Unravels a 10,000-Year-Old Mystery in The Memory Painter
Author Photo by Jenn Kelley LublinWhat if there was a drug that could help you remember past lives?
What if the lives you remembered could lead you to your one true love?
What if you learned that, for thousands of years, a deadly enemy had conspired to keep the two of you apart?
Internationally-famous artist Bryan Pierce has a secret: His paintings depict vivid dreams—dreams of past lives. When neurogeneticist Linz Jacobs recognizes her own nightmare in one of Bryan’s paintings, the two find themselves thrown into the clutches of a 10,000-year-old mystery. From scientists developing a cure for Alzheimer’s in the 1980s to ancient Egyptians protecting the secrets of the pyramids, Bryan and Linz’s lives converge while a relentless enemy pursues them across time.
Paste already predicted that The Memory Painter’s story of love and revenge would be one of 2015’s literary hits, so we caught up with Womack to discuss her inspiration for the book, the possibility of reincarnation and Ancient Egypt. Check out the interview below!
Paste: What sparked your imagination to write The Memory Painter?
Gwendolyn Womack: The original idea came to me quite suddenly years ago as I was walking down the hallway of my apartment, and it literally stopped me in my tracks. I stood there for several minutes feeling jolted and excited. The spark of the idea was that neuroscientists had created a wonder drug that would allow us to access all our past lives—and with that drug we could remember how to speak all the languages we had known in the past and remember every previous talent and ability we had ever possessed. By the end of the day, I had the present day lifetime with Bryan sketched out along with the 1980’s neuroscientists storyline, and then the rest of the story grew from there.