by Sanibel Chai
How peculiar it must feel to have a book group point out that you feature in your text. Steve Sheppard expressed amusement and appreciation at the identification of his persona in his fiction. The book group members are such fans of Sheppard’s novel that they are helping to craft discussion questions for other book groups. The book group also offered input on Sheppard’s next novel, a follow-up to Tourist Town, also set in Nantucket. At present, Steve Sheppard is juggling a number of fiction projects but his journey to his role as novelist has been as winding as a Nantucket tour bus route.
Sheppard grew up in Brockton, MA where his love of literature first burgeoned. Sheppard’s father was a writer whose work was published in magazines.
While attending Bridgewater State College (now Bridgewater State University), Sheppard met his wife Karin. Sheppard said there was no question about what he was interested in, and he majored in English without any hesitation. Karin first brought Sheppard to her hometown of Nantucket in 1979. Sheppard witnessed a bit of Nantucket history on his first visit to the island. He, Karin, and friends planned to spend the evening at the Preston Airport Lounge, but that very night it burned down. An enduring backup plan, they went to the Chicken Box instead. Following a stint in the mailroom at IBM, Sheppard moved with Karin to Nantucket in 1980. Karin is an accomplished weaver, having fallen in love with the craft as a young girl, and was able to secure a position as a weaver for Sheppard. Sheppard took up his post at Nantucket Looms and became proficient himself. When asked if he has practiced weaving much lately, Sheppard takes a moment to think before mentioning that he helped Karin a few years ago and, “like riding a bike,” weaving came back to him with ease. Sheppard says that he and Karin had intended to stay in Nantucket for one year only, but ended up making the island their permanent home. Apart from one year Sheppard spent at The Patriot Ledger in Quincy, MA he has lived on Nantucket uninterrupted.
It was in Nantucket Magazine that Sheppard’s first piece of fiction, a short story, was published. Sheppard served as editor for that now defunct publication from 1998-2005. The periodical celebrated the culture, history, photography, and what was special about the island, Sheppard says.
The initial writing blast, as Sheppard refers to it, of Tourist Town took roughly six months. Two additional years were required to re-write, tinker, and incorporate suggestions and feedback into the story.
Sheppard has received overwhelmingly positive feedback since the publication of Tourist Town. His readers have been asking when his next book is coming out and I am pleased to report that he is working on two novels and a children’s book. One novel is the follow-up to Tourist Town and the second work in progress is a novel called Macaroni Man that has been gestating for years. Set in Sheppard’s hometown of Brockton, MA, Macaroni Man concerns the closure of a plant that makes macaroni and cheese for Howard Johnson’s. Sheppard offered a few details about the story: the shutdown of the plant affects the jobs of Brockton’s population and everyone reacts in different ways.
One character takes up a new career as an undertaker and another begins building a bomb shelter. Sheppard is more tight-lipped about his children’s book, but did reveal that it concerns the natural history of Nantucket. When asked whether he believed Nantucket catered to a writer’s life, Sheppard was quick to affirm. He cites the supportive writer’s community in Nantucket and the “constant inspiration you get from the island” as the main elements that make it conducive to writing. Sheppard continues, explaining that the Nantucket Book Festival does so well because “there’s no pretense. It’s not like a manufactured festival. It’s really of the fabric of the island.” Sheppard’s fiction tends to pull from his own life and is the stronger for it. His dual career as teaching musician-writer will provide him with ample content the fiction his loyal fan base is insisting upon.
For a glimpse of the island through Sheppard’s observant eyes, pick up a copy of Tourist Town at Mitchell’s Book Corner or at Nantucket Bookworks.