The Rubber Fence

The Rubber Fence

2016 • 328 pages

This novel was originally a screenplay called Shrinkproof. It got the attention of Jody Foster's agent in Hollywood but the actress eventually passed on it. In my book, there's a young mother who becomes mute after giving birth to her baby and ends up on the psychiatric ward. At the time, Jody was becoming a new mother herself. I can only guess at the reasons she passed on the script. It was also sent to Meg Ryan at the time and it was also a no go.

Making a film is a difficult business. I was an actress for a while and I know that any producer who embarks on a film has to love it so much that they're willing to invest big bucks and stay with the project for up to three years with pre-production and post-production work. When my agent lost interest, I decided to convert the story into a novel because it was a story I couldn't let go of.

The Rubber Fence was inspired by my first job as a clinical social worker on a psychiatric ward in Winnipeg, Manitoba. I'd been trained as a family therapist by my professor who'd worked for ten years as a family therapist in the Wisconisn Mental Health Centre. So when I arrived on the ward in the early 1970s and discovered that shock treatment still existed and was often the treatment of choice for serious depression, I was stunned. I was of the opinion that people needed a chance to tell their stories, that there were more than biological reasons for their depression. Anyway, some of those emotions and experiences made their way into my novel.

December 18, 2020