An Interview with Caro Claire Burke, Author of Yesteryear
Conducted by Clayton Bradshaw-Mittal
In Yesteryear (Knopf, 2026), Instagram tradwife, Natalie Heller Mills, ends up in the 1855 version of her curated life. The novel, by former NOR contributor Caro Claire Burke, tackles themes of agency and authenticity while exploring the impact of spreading traditional cultural values through social media in 21st Century society. It has become one of the most-discussed books of 2026, and NOR is happy to present this interview with Burke, which has been lightly edited for clarity.
Clayton Bradshaw-Mittal: To get us started, walk us through the genesis of this novel? Why did you choose to write about tradwife culture?
Caro Claire Burke: I think I became aware of tradwives in the winter of 2024. It just felt like a topic that allows you to talk about everything. You can talk about power, you can talk about gender, you can talk about race. And it’s just so filled with opportunity, but it is also a fiction. Like the idea of a tradwife is a fantasy. It’s a propaganda campaign. I think it was very natural for me to take that and immediately have this knee jerk impulse to write it in fiction, which is an area that I’m more comfortable in than cultural criticism, which I’ve only started engaging with more recently.
Clayton Bradshaw-Mittal: Early in the novel, Natalie finds a plastic microphone lapel on the ground of her 1855 life, which leads to paranoia and a belief she is on a reality television show. We won’t spoil the ending here—personally I think the turn is brilliant—but why did you choose to plant this seed of doubt for Natalie so early in the novel?
Caro Claire Burke: It’s so interesting because at the point that I was writing the book, I was not worried about how we would market it. I say that because I never really viewed it as like a time-travel novel. I didn’t worry about breaking that illusion quickly just because it wasn’t something that really interested me. More so, I always knew what the ending was going to be, but I had no clue how I was going to get there because I’ve never written thriller before. In order to just keep writing, I came up with a few red herrings or a few theories. And I knew I had different theories for her to be working with because I wanted there to be some sort of momentum in a time period that is kind of claustrophobic. Most of that section of the book, you’re just in a house with her. I was trying to think about, like, how do I keep from boring myself? How do I keep the plot moving and how do I move towards the ending? So I was really just kind of like zigging and zagging and that was one of the zigs that I came up with.
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