8 minute read

Home

Next Article
Seen

Seen

INSIDE: HOME / REAL ESTATE / ENTERTAINING / WEEKENDER / SEEN / PLAYLIST GOOD LIFETHE

MAKING THE MOST OUT OF LIVING HERE

HOME Kimmery Martin’s Cure for Chaos

The physician-turnednovelist welcomes us into her modern, light-filled Cotswold home office before the February publication of her second novel, The Antidote for Everything

BY TAYLOR BOWLER

Kimmery Martin, a former ER doctor, says she started her first novel “in a fit of misguided confidence.”

“I HAVE 45 MINUTES to an hour of complete and total chaos getting the kids out the door,” Kimmery Martin says with a laugh as she describes a typical morning in the Cotswold home she shares with her husband, an orthopedic surgeon, and her three children, ages 15, 13, and 9. “None of us are calm people at my house.”

Fueled by co ee—and 30 minutes of Pilates—Martin then retreats to her home o ce, where she spends a few hours tackling the email backlog, writing articles, and keeping up with her social media accounts. “Then the carnage starts up again in the a ernoon when the kids get home,” she says.

I rst met Martin two years ago at my book group, where she led the discussion on her rst novel, The Queen of Hearts. The story, set in Charlotte, had little winks and nods to places we all frequented: Selwyn Avenue Pub, Queens Road West, the car pool line. Aside from

An Excerpt From The Antidote For Everything by Kimmery Martin

Mark’s clear eyes shone with something that looked suspiciously like mirth. “I realized I already know a lot about you—you’re a doctor, you’re a bookworm and a science geek, you’re a bit of a rogue but you’re lonely, you—”

“Whoa,” she interrupted. “Hold up. Obviously you’re aware I’m a doctor, but how do you know those other things?”

“I’m paying attention. You have not one but two novels and a biography sticking out of your shoulder bag. Only a dedicated book junkie would carry that much weight around.”

“Okay.”

“The science part: the biography is Nikola Tesla, and there’s a novel by Neal Stephenson. And then there’s your tattoo.”

“You saw my tattoo? Which one?”

He nodded. “A Delta. I saw it on the plane, when your pants leg rolled up a bit.” He paused, adding, “I wasn’t purposely staring at your ankles or anything.”

She must have looked dubious, because he went on. “Okay, yes. I was looking at your ankles. They’re very nice.”

“No, it’s just most people think I have a tattoo of a triangle. Or if they recognize it as a delta they think it’s a sorority thing.”

“The Greek letter delta,” he said. “The scientific and mathematical emblem of change.”

“Correct. And it’s the differential operator given by the divergence of the gradient of a function on Euclidean space.”

He stared, his mouth slightly ajar. “The Laplace operator.”

Her turn to be impressed; she’d never met anyone who didn’t look at her strangely if she started babbling math jargon, let alone anyone who could actually comprehend what she was talking about. “You know about the Laplace operator?”

“I was a math major; how do you know about the Laplace operator?”

“My father was a college math professor. So, yes, I have a lot of reasons for liking the delta symbol. What about the rest of it?”

“The rest of the Greek alphabet?”

“No, the rest of what you said.” She waited, embarrassed, but he still looked puzzled. “That I’m a rogue or whatever.” her medical degree and book deal, she felt like one of us: an overscheduled wife and mother in need of a night out and a glass of wine with her girlfriends.

I caught up with her again last fall to chat about her new book, The Antidote for Everything, as she recovered from knee surgery. It was a role reversal for the former ER doctor, who prefers to be on the other side of the scalpel. But the downtime, she admits, was a refreshing change of pace for someone who rarely makes time to relax.

When Martin started writing her rst novel in 2013, in “a t of misguided con dence,” she didn’t have a designated writing space. She took over the playroom and gradually started moving more books in and phasing kids’ stu out. “I still love to write there,” she says, “but I love the new space.”

Her new o ce is part of an addition to the home, which doubles as a pool house and a guest suite. Kelly McArdle Construction handled the addition, and Martin worked with Casey Maslanka of Traditions to design the interior. Leading up to her o ce is a “stair library,” a staircase decorated in decals with names and titles of her favorite works of literature that Martin found on Etsy. “(This space) is a more modern aesthetic with clean lines, lots of light, and an industrial look in places, so it’s di erent from the rest of the house,” she explains. “I can write anywhere—at my kitchen table, the library, my o ce—but I like having a serene space because the rest of my life is so cluttered.”

Martin likes to write without “visual clutter,” so there’s not much in the way of trinkets and accessories—just some fresh owers, an antique typewriter that belonged to her mother, and her book collection. “I keep a stack of books on my desk that I love, with the most exquisitely written sentences. I look at how they structure their words, and the arc and ow of narrative. It’s good inspiration if you get blocked while you’re writing. And books are physically beautiful.”

Her clean and airy workspace is the opposite of her work style, which she says is disorganized and undisciplined. “I function best when I’m in a panic. It’s stressful, but that’s how I get it done.” It’s how she completed The Antidote for Everything, which revolves around two physicians who go rogue a er their hospital res one of them for treating transgender patients. “I was curious what happens if a doctor’s core practice principles con ict with administrative ones,” she says.

Martin no longer works in the ER; once she landed a publishing deal with Random House in 2016, writing became her fulltime occupation. “I love the idea of reinvention. I nd both careers equally compelling,” she says. “Both allow an examination of the human condition—the di erence being, in medicine, doctors are striving to alleviate su ering, while authors are deliberately torturing their people, because you can’t have a good book without friction.”

Her book tour starts in Charlotte on February 18 with a ticketed luncheon at Quail Hollow Club and, later, a free book signing and talk at Park Road Books, then stops in Charleston, Atlanta, San Diego, New York, and many others. For the selfdescribed introvert, it’s equal parts energizing and exhausting. “It takes a supreme amount of energy to talk in front of people for any length of time. I collapse like a burst balloon a er,” she says. “I had no familiarity with public speaking when I started, but I wound up really liking it. I love bookstores (and) meeting readers, and I love the travel. I’m not gonna lie—I love a hotel room to myself. It’s a frantic pace, though. There’s not much time to soak in a city.”

When she’s not traveling—or recovering from knee surgery—Martin meets with a weekly writers group, interviews authors for her website (kimmerymartin. com), edits her children’s book reports, and reads three to four books a week. (“I can’t imagine being a writer who didn’t read,” she says.) She’s also a trustee on the Charlotte Mecklenburg Library Board, where she advocates for the addition of a dedicated writers’ space to the new Main Library, scheduled to open in 2024.

She’s working on a third book—about an infectious disease doctor traveling with her two children in the midst of a viral pandemic—which she hopes to release in 2021 or 2022. And in those unavoidable moments when she nds herself staring at a blank computer screen, she o en clicks over to a favorite hashtag, #bookstagram, to scroll through artistic photos of books, libraries, and workspaces.

Sometimes a beautiful interior is all the inspiration she needs to keep writing—at least until the kids get home from school.

REAL ESTATE Hot Listings

In this rapidly growing city, it’s special when you find a historic home for sale. These beautiful houses reflect styles from the ’20s, ’30s, and ’40s, with brick exteriors, expansive porches, and charming archways. —Emma Way

3039 PARK RD. $500,000 SEDGEFIELD A short walk from Freedom Park, this charming blue bungalow was built in 1923 and boasts original hardwood oors. 3 BD, 2 BA, 1,662 sq. .

Helen Adams Realty

2321 SHARON RD. $799,000 MYERS PARK A highlight of this 1938 home is the front porch and second- oor balcony, which makes the Myers Park house look like it was plucked from New Orleans’ French Quarter. 4 BD, 4 BA, 3,212 sq. .,

eXp Realty

2409 BELVEDERE AVE. $695,000 PLAZA MIDWOOD This 1940s cottage has loads of curb appeal with white brick walls and a copper awning over the front door. 4 BD, 4 BA, 2,408 sq.

Nestlewood Realty

1706 DILWORTH RD. E. $750,000 DILWORTH The same family owned this 1936 brick home for more than 55 years and maintained the original hardwood oors and archways inside. 4 BD, 3 BA, 2,541 sq. . RE/MAX

2610 SELWYN AVE. $1,399,000 MYERS PARK This 1926 classic Georgian brick home was updated 15 years ago. The house has huge oor-toceiling windows with views of the garden and koi pond. 4 BD, 5 BA, 4,663 sq. .

Ivester Jackson Distinctive Properties

Homes available as of Jan. 3, 2020

Immaculate all brick home fully renovated in 2004 with all new electrical, plumbing, HVAC, slate roof and copper gutters. High ceilings, beautiful formals, and 2-car garage. Outdoor living area o ers slate patio with private .6 acre flat yard. Nestled on quiet street located in town. ®

This article is from: