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Q: How did the book-launch lunch come about?

A: Nicole brought it up because she’s amazing at entertaining. It’s like down to the smallest detail. I could never do that.

Q: Your new book is fiction, but is it in some ways an autobiography?

A: No, not really. Some things in it are autobiographical, so that’s why we’re calling it “auto-fiction.” The characters are definitely fiction, because they are meant to be sort of any woman. There are lots of things in the book that happened to me, and there are things that happened to me that I gave to other characters. It’s all kind of mixed up. There could’ve been 20 characters…but you can’t have 20 characters in a book!

Q: What’s the gist of it?

A: In some ways, it’s about a passage of time that happened to me in my fifties. I call it “middle-aged madness.” I got divorced, and my life changed. I wanted different things, and I didn’t even want to date. I had all these other girlfriends who were also getting divorced and in a time of transition.

Q: What happened after the “happily ever after”?

A: No one talks about that! You may think that you’ve found your happily ever after, but it doesn’t mean that you’re going to have it forever. It requires you to reinvent yourself a little bit, which is actually a great thing. For a lot of people in their fifties or early sixties, a parent is going to die. Statistically, that is what’s going to happen. So on top of change, there are also just life passages, like loss. It makes it tricky. The book is about a group of women going through this passage together. Did you ever consider making this a Carrie Bradshaw story? Bringing Carrie to this age? No. I think that character is too big. Carrie Bradshaw is in a tutu in a beer commercial now. That’s just not a real woman, and I mean that in the nicest way. She’s become like a superhero. So I think it would be hard. I would go back in time, maybe. But in a different form.

Q: The sexual tales of women in their fifties and sixties are not often discussed in our culture. Although the ladies of The Golden Girls had very active sex lives back in the ’80s!

A: The Golden Girls seemed like they were 80! They had those women in their fifties acting really old. Women in their fifties now are not old. It’s a different group of women, and it’s a different time. They were Sex and the City women 20, 25 years ago. They had a career and a family. But it’s like, “Hey, there’s another chapter.”

Q: You draw inspiration from your friends. How do they react when their antics are revisited in your pages?

A: I take stories from all different kinds of places, but nobody has come up to me and said, “That’s so-andso.” What does happen is that people will come up to me and tell me something and say, “Hey, you should write about this.” Also, remember I’ve been working on this book for a couple of years, so when people ask me what I’m working on, I say, “I’m working on this book about mid-life, and it has these kind of characters in it.” People always say to me, “Oh, my God, that’s my sister,” and they’ll tell a story and ask me to use it. People always say, “You’ve never heard this story,” but I’m like, “Try me!”

Q: Do you like the promotional part of being an author?

A: It’s a very different part of being an author. It has certainly changed so much. Now, [publishers] want you to be on Instagram. Some young writers have told me that a publisher is interested in their work, but they won’t publish them until they have 10,000 Instagram followers. That seems like a ridiculous standard. If you’re a writer, chances are, you spend your time writing. Getting Instagram followers is a separate job!

Q: Some outlets reported recently that you’ve expressed regret over not having children.

A: I never said that I wished I’d had kids. What I said was that when you get older, if you don’t have kids, you’re alone in a certain way that people who have kids are not. That does not mean that I regret not having children. It’s really about women being able to look at different choices. There are things that one gives up with each choice, and that’s just kind of the way life is. I do not regret not having children. For me, it’s absolutely the right situation. I love my life, and I will continue to encourage women who feel like that’s the right thing for them. Both are viable choices, and we just need to accept that. One is not better than the other.

Q: Are you impressed with the younger generation of women?

A: Yes! I live in New York and the women that I come across are together and confident. They’re aspirational, smart, they have a sense of humor... they kind of get it. Women are really, really good at figuring out what is right for themselves. At this age, the women I know who haven’t had children are happy with their choice and do not regret it. And the women I know who had children are also happy and do not regret it. Oddly, everyone’s okay!

Q: What else is coming down the pipeline for you?

A: I’ll be working on the TV show [based on the book], and I have a couple other things lined up. But I have to do this book tour first. Q: Do you enjoy being 60?

A: I do. I really do. I do so many fun things, and I think it’s all about embracing it. There is only so much longer that someone can really do fun things, like make little videos on Instagram or put out books or make a TV show. I’m grateful.

“if you’re a writer, chances are, you spend your time writing. Getting instagram followers is a separate job!”

Chit Chat with Nicole Miller

Q: How do you and Candace know each other?

A: We’ve known each other since the ’80s. We had the same circle of friends, and I think we met at a mutual friend’s wedding initially.

Q: Why did you decide to throw a lunch for her?

A: I always love supporting women and especially my friends. We are both in Sag Harbor and see each other around frequently, so when her book was coming out I thought it would be the perfect place to have some of her friends and fans over for lunch.

Q: How did you approach the table settings?

A: It’s summer, so I used a lot of my own bamboo accessories and a lot of pink. I had hot pink as an underlying accent and, of course, I served my rosé and pink lemonade. Your rosé has been a hit this summer.

Q: What kind of reaction have you been getting?

A: It’s been amazing. Out of the blue, people approach me and tell me how much they like it. It’s made at Château Auguste and is a blend of merlot, cabernet sauvignon and cabernet Franc grapes. It’s vinified by Damien Landouar, the famous French winemaker of Château Gaby. It has done so well that we have big plans for next year.

Q: Have you had a chance to read Is There Still Sex in the City? What do you think?

A: Yes, but only halfway through, and it’s a great read. I have read every one of Candace’s books and watched every episode of Sex in the City. I give her tremendous credit for always evolving but still staying true to herself.

Q: When you read Candace’s books, do you try to figure out who some of the fictional characters are based on?

A: Yes, and sometimes it’s obvious and sometimes it’s not, but I think she combines elements of people sometimes, which always confuses everyone.

Q: Why do you think Sex and the City has resonated with people for so many years?

A: It highlighted everyone’s struggle in New York in a lighthearted but poignant way. Everyone fell in love with the characters and identified with all of them in some small way.

BY EDDIE ROCHE

PHOTOGRAPHY BY HANNAH TURNER-HARTS

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