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June 30, 2008

Why Comedy is Important

by Jeffrey Cohen

My thanks to all at Murderati for allowing me to visit my blogging alma mater, as I moved out and took up residence at Hey, There's A Dead Guy In The Living Room about a year and a half ago. But I still check in here, and I'm still awed by all that happens in this space. It's very special.

22hBy now, you might be sick and tired of hearing about George Carlin, who died suddenly last week and was subsequently eulogized by everyone except members of the FCC, who were probably annoyed that everyone started remembering The Seven Words You Can't Say On Television again.

You might be so tired of Carlin at this point that you're glad he's dead. Well, too bad for you.

Add my voice to those who thought George Carlin was brilliant and brave. Well, until he got so angry the past few years that he came out and told the audience that it would be better if we all died and let the planet regenerate itself. He might have been right, but I'm not willing to test the theory.

Carlin's death was a shock to those of us who follow comedy seriously. He was 71 years old, not exactly ancient but not at an age where he'll be classified as "Gone too soon" in ads featuring T-shirts with pictures of Elvis, Marilyn, Jim Morrison, Jimi Hendrix and others who didn't wait for Death to come along and find them, but helped the process along a good deal. His was merely a matter of bad health; Carlin had already suffered more than one heart attack, dating back decades.

But it's relevant to note that like another great comedian, Groucho Marx, Carlin thought of himself more as a writer than a performer. He adored words, played with them, found the hypocrisies in the way we use them, and pointed them out. Carlin wrote three books (the third is scheduled for publication).

His riffs on the concept of "jumbo shrimp" and "military intelligence" just skimmed the surface. In his later years, he could go on long, perfectly precise tears that explored every aspect of a word or added words to thoughts where they'd never belonged before. And as in all forms of genius, he made you think that his idea was a perfectly sensible one that you'd never considered before.

Why is comedy important? Because it is the escape hatch, the steam valve of life. We are attracted to great comedy because it includes not only the obvious, but also the truthful that we never considered before. When Groucho Marx turns to his brother in Horse Feathers and admonishes him that "you can't burn the candle at both ends." Harpo merely reaches into that voluminous trench coat of his and pulls out a candle burning at both ends. And we say to ourselves, "You know, I guess you can, after all."

Knifecover_150 People make the mistake of thinking that because comedy is performed quickly and casually, that it is effortless. It's anything but. I appreciated it when Publishers Weekly used the word ("effortless") in a review of my last book, SOME LIKE IT HOT-BUTTERED (the new one, IT HAPPENED ONE KNIFE, comes out tomorrow), because that meant I'd done my job right, and the jokes seemed like they flowed naturally. They didn't -- in some cases, I was pacing the floor in my office for hours trying to come up with the right comeback for Elliot Freed to use the second after someone insulted him.

I began worshipping comedy at a very young age, probably starting with Bugs Bunny (before I got all the jokes, and thought these were serious fims about a man trying to shoot a rabbit) and Rocky and Bullwinkle (see previous comment, but substitute "moose and squirrel" for "rabbit.") But I quickly graduated to Bill Cosby, Get Smart (the beginning of a lifelong affection for Mel Brooks), then Woody Allen, the Marx Brothers (especially the Marx Brothers!), W.C. Fields, Larry Gelbart, Dick Van Dyke (which led to Carl Reiner), Robert Klein, David Brenner, John Belushi, Dan Ayckroyd, and . . . well, suffice it to say I could go on.

It gets us through the tough times. The problem is that now, there's no George Carlin to get us through the death of George Carlin. But there is Jon Stewart, and there is Craig Ferguson, and Lewis Black, and Stephen Wright, and Tina Fey and many, many others.

In my own writing, I'm going for the laugh first. I'll admit that. I feel like I write comedies that have a mystery in them, and not the other way around. If you send me an email that says, "You know, the plot really doesn't hold water, but I laughed all the way through." I'm a happy man. Comedy is essential to our collective sanity, and that commodity appears to be in short supply htese days.

Respect those who provide it.

Rest in peace, George. Or better, rest cranky. Your work here is far from done, but it was advanced enormously because of your tireless work. We will miss you a good deal more than you'll miss us.

Jeffrey Cohen is the author of IT HAPPENED ONE KNIFE: A DOUBLE FEATURE MYSTERY, which you might have heard will be published tomorrow. He is also the author of the Aaron Tucker series, unproduced screenplays, newspaper and magazine articles, nonfiction books about raising a child with autism-spectrum disorder, and a grocery list that is attracting a good deal of attention in Hollywood. 

(Thanks, Jeff, for visiting today. We're glad to have you.
Pari)

June 08, 2008

Welcome Guest Blogger Dave White!!!

Mystery Writer Awesome

by Dave White

Back in March, Sarah Weinman and I were strolling through New York City on our way to a Laura Lippman signing. Another Thing to Fall had just been released and Sarah and I were talking about how much Laura’s career had changed in the past year. It was the first time I’d seen her since she’d hit “The List” and I was excited to see if anything had changed. (For the record, it hadn’t… in a good way.)

As Sarah and I talked, we became more and more aware of a certain level of celebrity in the Mystery writer world. Let’s call it reaching the level of “Mystery Writer Awesome.” What that is, specifically, is being a writer that your mystery writer colleagues’ love, but you haven’t broken out, haven’t hit the list. You haven’t become a household name.

It kind of became a fun game to name names. Duane Swierczynski, my mentor and favorite writer is Mystery Writer Awesome. My agent Al Guthrie is Mystery Writer Awesome. I think Ken Bruen is Mystery Writer Awesome. Jason Pinter is Mystery Writer Awesome. Sarah said… and I quote, “William Kent Krueger is a fan favorite, multiple winner and nominee of Anthony Awards (including this year) but is almost totally unknown outside of the Midwest mystery community.”

These guys are fantastic writers. Their stories are compelling as hell, page turners, and a ton of fun to read. And they’re willing to help out the mystery community. They answer emails, are willing to read your own work, and do anything they can to get you to be a better writer as well. And if you’re a fan, you have a secret. You’ve found a fantastic writer and no one else knows about them. They’re yours. And yeah, you’ll tell your friends and family about them, but you know you were a fan of them first.

There are, however, Mystery Writer Awesome Alumni like Laura. Writers who’ve since backed out of the internet Mystery Community a bit. (Laura still blogs, but her blog mentions her break-up with the internet.) Robert Crais, Harlan Coben, great writers who’ve also hit it big. They’re not as accessible, not always there to answer emails and serve up advice. Their books are great, but they are not there for the reader anymore.

Mystery Writer Awesome writers are writers who most of us who follow the blogs love and love to push on the blogs. But, let’s face it, the blogs only push writers to other writers (and the few die hard fans who actually follow the blogs). They don’t reach as much of a mainstream community of readers. And I think we as bloggers know this. By blogging, we’re only talking to a small community. It’s almost incestuous.

So what happens when one of our Mystery Writer Awesome writers does break out? Do we get happy for them? (Of course, you say.) Or do we somehow become jealous and annoyed?

Kind of like when Metallica hit it big with the black album. The writers we love are no longer ours. They’ve sold out, they’re not as accessible anymore. They’re not ours. They’re everyone’s.

I hope Al, Duane, Jason, Kent, and Ken break out and hit the Times list. Each one of them have had some huge successes already, from other bestseller lists, to award nominations, to comic book writing, and movie options. But they’re still accessible. They still blog and are still out there. They still feel accessible.

What happens if they go away? All of a sudden, they break out. What happens if your favorite author becomes just a book and no longer a real person?

I, for one, think I’ll still follow them. I’ll probably still email and get less responses. And I won’t know all the cool writer details that are going on in their lives as their careers go. But I’ll still read them and anxiously and enjoy every word.

But will there be that little tinge of “I found them first.” And, part of me for sure, will still wish they were Mystery Writer Awesome.

Come on, admit it. You will too.

So, what do you think? Can you name anyone else who is “Mystery Writer Awesome?” Or any Alumni?

 

 9780307382795_2

DAVE WHITE, born in 1979, is among the youngest winners of the Derringer Award. He has contributed to many anthologies and collections, including The Adventure of the Missing Detective and Damn Near Dead. His first novel, When One Man Dies, was published in 2007. His second, The Evil That Men Do will be released on June 17. Dave lives in New Jersey, where he teaches middle-school English.

 

Editor’s Note:

Toni couldn’t be with us today, but asked that we mention that Max was the winner of last week’s contest. Max, Toni will be in touch.

May 31, 2008

Guest blogger - Megan Abbott

While Alex is teaching at the Pen to Press Writers' Retreat in New Orleans and then racing back to BEA today, Murderati is proud and thrilled to host the amazing Megan Abbott.

Megan Abbott has taught literature, writing and film at New York University and the State University of New York at Oswego. Born in the Detroit area, she graduated from the University of Michigan with a B.A. in English Literature. She received her Ph.D. in English and American literature from New York University in 2000, and in 2002 Palgrave Macmillan published her nonfiction study, The Street Was Mine: White Masculinity in Hardboiled Fiction and Film Noir. She lives in New York City. Die a Little is her first novel and has been nominated for a 2006 Edgar Award for Best First Novel by the Mystery Writers of America and a 2006 Barry Award and Anthony Award for Best First Novel.

Her second novel, The Song Is You, arrived in bookstores in January 2007 and centers around a true-life missing persons case in 1940s Hollywood. Her third novel, Queenpin, came out in June 2007 and won the 2008 Edgar Award for Best Paperback Original.


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Megan Abbott

I’m a weekend writer. Well, that’s not entirely true. I write all week at my day job as a grantwriter at Union Settlement, a 113-year-old nonprofit agency in East Harlem. But the writing I do there is so different. It’s about constructing an argument. It’s about rationality, logic, supporting one’s argument. It comes from a completely different part of my brain than the fevery stuff that sometimes stutters onto the page during my weekend writing. I write in an entirely different voice and a different part of my head gets activated at work. All week I write about the need for more after-school programs or senior nutrition services in Spanish Harlem. And on the weekend, I write about 1950s Hollywood, or after-hours gambling clubs or b-girls in trouble. Mostly, it’s a split life, the life of so many novelists I know who, in the daylight hours, write as lawyers, journalists, professors, etc. and, vampire-like, transform when they turn on their home computer every evening.

The common ground, I guess, is that most kinds of writing are about persuasion. Trying to stir up the reader. Follow me down this dark alley. Give our agency money. Kind of the same thing. This week, I had a moment when I realized how fundamental that connection is, the foundation of maybe all writing, even the writing we only write for our own eyes (don’t we, in our diaries, try to persuade ourselves of things?).

Each year, our Adult Education Program holds a student reading at the 92nd Street Y. In a beautifully restored auditorium, our literacy, English for Speakers of Other Languages (ESOL), GED and Citizenship students fill the space and take turns at the microphone. Students from Mexico, Colombia, Yemen, Morocco, Senegal. There’s the 52-year-old New York native with five daughters who decided to finally get that GED. There’s the group of women who speak three languages but can read or write in none of them, having never been permitted to go to school in their native country. The cabbie who writes lovely poems about his childhood home in Chile. It’s a little bit of memoir, a little personal essay, a lot of warm gratitude between teachers and students. It’s always a poignant experience for everyone involved.

This year, it just hit me more. Among the many students who took his turn at the microphone was an older man, very dignified, from Uruguay. He read a short piece of his own, in tones so delicate, about his family coming together for his beloved sister’s funeral in his hometown. “She was so beautiful,” he read (and I paraphrase), “hair so black and eyes deepest blue. The most beautiful of all my sisters. And I loved her. We all looked at her, we looked together. Looked at the black hair and those bluest of all eyes. The most beloved of all of us.”

His pronunciation was so unusual, the way the words moved in his mouth, the way he cradled them, speaking so movingly. It felt like he was tucking the whole audience under long robes. I guess I was only half-surprised when the Program Director leaned across and whispered to me excitedly, “He’s an undercover priest!” She went on to tell me he was a priest in Uruguay and speaks several languages and of course knows Latin but had never before written in English. “He’s been waiting for this,” she said. “In class, everyone always wants him to read.” He carried the whole audience with him, and it was not just the content or the melodic quality of his voice. The writing itself was so delicate, musical, with artful repetitions that, like a good sermon or a perfect poem, engage you in the writing, make you feel a part of it, make you feel connected. I was envious and mesmerized.

It all reminded me of another work event, a year ago. Novelist Jonathan Franzen (The Corrections) visited our students. He read a piece about his own awkward adolescence, about the way he used to escape into books and into his own first attempts at writing. During the Q&A, the eight- or nine-year-old son of a student rose to ask, “When you write, do you feel powerful?” Franzen laughed admiringly, paused, then said, with all gravity, “Sometimes.”

Thanks so much for having me!


May 20, 2008

GUEST BLOGGER L.J. SELLERS: A DAY IN THE LIFE

L.J. Sellers is an award-winning journalist, editor, and occasional standup 
comic, based in Eugene, Oregon. She is currently writing a second Detective
Jackson story, Secrets to Die For. When she¹s not plotting murders, Sellers
enjoys hiking or cycling through Oregon¹s beautiful Willamette
Valley.



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A Day in the Life of an Aspiring Novelist

L.J. Sellers

9:42 am: As I write page 162, I realize that an entire investigative thread in my new novel is not quite logical. And there’s no way to massage it or spin it. So I go back to the beginning and try to pick out and rewrite every reference to this line of inquiry. Did I get them all? Or did I leave a little silver of foreign material that will pop up and irritate readers? Now I have doubts about other plot threads. So I decide to print out all 162 pages and read through them before continuing to write the story. How many trees have I killed in my career as a writer and editor? 

12:29 am: Another writer posts on my Facebook page, “Congrats on the review in Mystery Scene. ‘A thrilling, eye-opening read.’” I am excited. I haven’t seen this review, and it will make a great blurb. I search Mystery Scene’s webpage, but I can’t find the review and I don’t have a copy of the magazine. So everyone in mystery world knows what this review says, except me. And, of course, I worry that the one line I know about may be the only positive thing the reviewer said. 

3:10 pm: After months of waiting, my beta reader sends an e-mail with her feedback on the first 50 pages of my new story, Secrets to Die For. After commenting, “This is a very worthy story, a page-turner with great potential,” she says, “Try to SHOW rather than TELL.” Aaaghhhhh! I like to think that I live by this ubiquitous writing rule. But now I wonder: Do I even know what I’m doing? 

6:17 pm: After months of waiting, the book trailer for my recently published novel, The Sex Club, arrives via e-mail. I excitedly click open the file, ready to be thrilled and amazed. But no, the trailer is weird and confusing. The girl in the last scene is at least 20, dark-haired, and kind of heavy. She doesn't  even look dead. The victim in my novel is 14 and blond and thin and very dead. I show the trailer to my husband. He hates almost everything about it and cannot stop talking about how much he dislikes it. I am crushed. I spent the last of my promotional money on the trailer, and I counted on it selling a few books. Now I have to compose an e-mail that diplomatically says, “Start over.” It takes an hour that I don’t have. 

9:05 pm: I receive an e-mail from a mystery book club leader named Ruth Greiner, who apparently does have a copy of the Mystery Scene review and says she’ll never read The Sex Club no matter how great all the reviews are. She does not say why, and she does not have to. Just seeing her name horrified me. The antagonist in The Sex Club is a very nasty woman and her name is Ruth Greiner. How was I to know? Now I have to write an e-mail that explains how I chose the name—Ruth is Biblical and strong, Greiner is the name of a street in my old neighborhood. I also try to carefully expresses my concern for her feelings, but without admitting any liability. I offer to send her a free copy of my next novel, then feel lame about it. 

10:16: Yet another fun-filled e-mails arrives. This one is from a local author whom I met at a book fair and exchanged novels with. He says he’s quite sure he’ll find a publisher for his new novel and wants to know if I’ll read his book and write a blub for the front cover. This is the first time anyone has asked me for a blurb, and I’d like to be excited. I’m flattered that he thinks I have any clout. But I didn’t get past the first page of his other novel (which started with a rectal search by a large German woman), and this one, he says, is much more sexually explicit. How did get so lucky? Oh yea, I wrote a novel called The Sex Club, so he must think I’m a sex fiend. (It’s a mystery/thriller, really!) So far, his e-mail is just sitting there, unanswered. But tomorrow is another day, and I’m a creative person. I’ll think of something.

So...tell us about YOUR day!

 

 

April 22, 2008

What the hell is a literary thriller, anyway?



Once again, please welcome our guest blogger, Derek Nikitas.


Dereknikitas




WHAT THE HELL IS A LITERARY THRILLER, ANYWAY?


I’ve been trolling.  Saw some blog chatter re: the endless debate over literary fiction versus genre fiction.  (What’s to debate, except that lit fiction gets more prestige, genre fiction sells more books; seems to me an even tradeoff.)  One guy’s got this long-winded theory about literary fiction being all logical and grownup and staid, while genre fiction is primitive, ritualistic, fantastic, appealing to the child-mind inside us all.  This was his advertisement for genre fiction:  reintegration of the child with the adult to become the fully self-actualized self, or something like that.  I didn’t get it.  He quoted Freud; I tuned out.  Also, he’s wrong.

This literary vs. genre smackdown debate irritates me, though I’m oddly compelled by it.  I understand distinctions, but those distinctions get blurred so often, there’s no point in nitpicking.  I’ve claimed before that the best fiction is the kind that blurs literary and genre, but that’s because I’m a “literary thriller” writer, according to my press kit.  Some will argue that I’m elitist because at heart I don’t think plain old blueprint mystery writing is good enough; it’s got to be hijacked by a literary stylist to be legit—but I’m just talking about my process, and my taste.  If you can diversify, why not diversify?

Why not, indeed.  Eddie Muller’s wonderfully humbling positive review of my novel Pyres in the San Francisco Chronicle suggested that my book might suffer on the market because it’s too schizo, even though he liked it that way.  He says, “For an author, the dilemma of the literary thriller is that many critics don't take such books seriously enough. They suspect the author of pandering to reach a broader market. The irony is that the ‘broader market’ comprises a majority of avid genre readers who tend to favor easily digestible fare and often scoff at efforts to transcend the form's beloved tropes.” Readers pick sides, apparently, which frankly seems idiotic to me, no matter what camp you’re from.  Good writing is good writing.

Well, all right, I admit it—good writing’s in the eye of the beholder.  And there are distinctions that separate readers from readers and writers from writers.  Those of us “literary thriller” writers who try to blend the distinctions meet resistance from some readers on both sides of the spectrum. But another kind of resistance happens long before the novel ever gets to the reader.  This resistance is within we writers ourselves, a war between two kinds of writers going on within each of us.  Even in my own head, there’s always a negotiation between techniques that separate some of the things people talk about when they talk about “literary versus genre.”  I try to marry them together, but sometimes it’s a shotgun wedding.  Sometimes somebody gets a couple fingers blown off.

So I don’t want to blabber about literary vs. genre as if one’s the devil on your shoulder and one’s the angel.  I indulge them both.  But I can maybe point out some of the battlegrounds where these two kinds of writers go to war when I write. 

Language is one.  Some folks believe plain, utilitarian language is best.  Subject verb object.  Short declarative sentences, grammatically complete (unlike this one).  Figures of speech and turns of phrase that are likely to be relatively familiar to the reader.  One of Elmore Leonard’s ten rules for good writing clearly shows his allegiance.  He says if it sounds like writing, he takes it out.  On the first page of Dan Brown’s The DaVinci Code we get: “Only fifteen feet away, outside the sealed gate, the mountainous silhouette of his attacker stared through the iron bars.  He was broad and tall, with ghost-pale skin and thinning white hair.” 

This is workmanlike language, useful because it coveys information clearly and calls no attention to itself.  The description is familiar because it is bad-guy iconic, the sinister albino!  Big things are mountainous, of course.  Pale things get compared to ghosts, of course.  The virtue here is invisibility; the writing is so familiar and predicable that it fades into the background, allowing the reader to forget that there are even words on the page.  This is the basis of good storytelling.

But another kind of writer revels in language, plays with it like poets do.  The idea here is to compel the reader with unique diction, unique turns of phrase, acrobatic sentences.  Language that calls attention to itself conveys mood and a psychic rhythm in its very utterance.  In Blood Meridian, a Western of sorts, Cormac McCarthy writes stuff like:  “a horde from a hell more horrible yet than the brimstone land of christian reckoning, screeching and yammering and clothed in smoke like those vaporous beings in regions beyond right knowing where the eye wanders and the lip jerks and drools.”  He could’ve written, “there were some barbaric Indians coming toward us,” but what he did write is more fun—and, by the way, chock full of horror-genre evocations, despite its supposed “literariness.”

I have to admit that for me, the stylist usually wins out over the stoic word-worker.  It dominates my writing and my reading because stylized writing sounds prophetic, almost superhuman in its scope.  Sure it stops the reader short, causes him to dwell a bit, but heck, the human mind is supple enough to imagine a fantasy world and admire language, both at the same time.  Stylized language is perhaps the most direct reason why I take so long to write.  I can’t be satisfied with “her back was killing her.”  I have to labor a few minutes to get: “Her spine throbbed like the vertebrae had crumpled zigzag along the hot electric line of the cord.”  Write one single page of sentences like this and four hours have passed. 

This language issue doesn’t cause much of a fight between the two writers in my head because I simply don’t believe stylized language is antithetical to genre writing.  Some of the best literary stylists, Raymond Chandler chief among them, were and are mystery/thriller writers.  And some literary writers, like Hemingway and Richard Russo, are as workmanlike with their words as you can get.  But clearly, many readers disagree with me, and the quality of language often has nothing whatsoever to do with the mass appeal of a book.  Dan Brown and James Patterson are both superb storytellers, but both have a dull sensibility for language and a tin ear for rhythm.  And they’re two of the most popular writers in the country, suggesting that many people consider stylized language either a mere embellishment or an annoying nuisance.  I sure as hell could save myself  a lot of time and grief if I agreed.

Character emotion is another problem.  It’s the lifeblood of fiction because fiction exists for readers to feel these emotions by proxy.  One part of me thinks intense emotion is the most dramatic emotion because it is the most visceral and the most overt.  Readers want to have their blood pressures raised, want to know what it feels like to be caught in the middle of a firefight or to discover that you’ve killed your own father and married your mother by accident.  This is spectacle, and its virtues are its thundering pomp and brilliant gleam.  Since genre fiction usually relies on big events that evoke big emotions, intensity gets a lot of play in thrillers and horrors and fantasies.  It’s that feeling you get at the theater during the big battle sequence, or the rush you get on a hairpin turn in your Corvette.  It’s adrenaline, but it’s fleeting.  The reader’s sense of intensity fades fast and can’t be reached to the same degree when a reading experience is repeated a second time.

The other way is subtle emotion.  This writer wants to explore a psychological state carefully and exactingly, in order to get a sense of its textures and contradictions, its surprising insights.  If we go inside the head of a spy hero who’s just defused a nuclear bomb by cutting the right cord, that’s intense emotion.  Subtle emotion is evoked when we explore a young man’s impulsive decision to drop out of college and become a dockworker.  Not because he’s lazy, but because he wants to know what it’s like to suffer.  Not because he has proletariat leanings, but because he wants to replace physical suffering with emotional suffering.  Not because his emotional suffering is too strong, but because he thinks it’s frivolous, even though he can’t help it.  Not because he’s a depressive, but because…

You get the point.  My example is terrible, but that’s because this kind of character exploration takes a writer with intense concentration and awe-inspiring insight.  The virtue of subtle emotion is that it’s complex and requires the reader to reenact nearly the same kind of concentration and insight that the writer mustered to create it.  It resonates and often lasts in the reader’s mind well beyond the reading, even compelling a second or third read.  It’s elusive and suggests unanswerable questions, like real life does.  It is very much like looking at an ordinary object through a microscope and discovering a fascinating world of microbes you did not know was there.

But many readers have no patience for this stuff.  They come to fiction to escape the complexities of their real relationships, to dispel boredom, to simplify and magnify life through grand actions and intense emotions.  What’s more, the stories a thriller writer usually tells do not lend themselves to subtle emotion.  Subtleties come from magnifying the mundane, from noticing the energy encapsulated in a moment of stillness.  Thrillers are all about blasting away from the mundane and going on the run.  There’s no time or space for careful scrutiny.  Plus all the plot twists are going to strike the characters hard enough to elicit only various kinds of unsubtle screams.  The more intense the emotion, the less nuance it has, probably. 

Negotiating an interaction between subtlety and intensity is no easy task, but I often feel it’s necessary to give characters the depth and the resonance they deserve, to prevent them from becoming “types.”  And, quite frankly, some of us writers have this crazy whim to shoot for insight and profundity just as much as we want to spin good yarns.  Both impulses come from the exact same place: the desire to show off one’s skills.  In practice, this means moments of stillness where character’s minds are dissected for three or four paragraphs at a stretch, just the sort of thing that kills plot momentum and bores readers who want constant unrelenting suspense.       

Endings tend to exacerbate this tug-of-war between subtlety and intensity, especially when big revelations are about to go down.  Think of all the mysteries you’ve read where the killer, unmasked in the last few pages, turns out to be a close friend of the protagonist.  Or a shadowy character in the wings who’s had no development so far.  Generic structure dictates that the whammy should hit as close to the end as possible, because everything afterward lacks the same slam-bang intensity.  After the city fireworks grand finale, nobody wants to stick around to see a one-man sparkler show. 

But often these whodunit revelations leave huge gaps in characterization that have to be fulfilled by hasty psychobabble exposition about why such-and-such killed Mr. Mustard in the study with a candlestick.  These summarized pathology reports rarely give the character more dimension.  Instead, they tend to flatten the character and his motivations into a brief newspaper clip, much like obituaries do.   

More emotionally stimulating would be a deep, gradual exploration of the character that revealed his intricacies and subtleties.  But there’s no time for that.  Too much character study after the climax will bore the reader to tears because the suspense is gone.  But too much character study before the big reveal will necessarily ruin the revelation.  If we knew what was truly in his heart, we’d know he was the killer.  What ends up happening, then, is the reader gets short-changed on one of the most intriguing characters in the book.  Some of my favorite novels and movies suffer this rather unavoidable flaw, despite their brilliance otherwise: Michael Connelly’s The Poet, Dennis Lehane’s Mystic River, not to mention Psycho.  Thrillers—where the killer is already known—fare a little better in this regard because the writer can explore the killer’s psyche without giving anything away.  Although, how subtle can a killer’s psyche really be? 

Endings enact yet another battle between the two kinds of writers in my head.  One writer wants to be meticulous about tying up loose ends.  The bad guys (and there should be clear bad guys) should be caught and punished.  The good guys (clear, again) should be rewarded for their efforts, or mourned for their sacrifices.  Narratives have endings, and plots should feel conclusive.  Why?  Because most readers come to fiction for a sense of completeness and symmetry and tidiness that the chaos of real life does not offer.  Readers are willing to feel a bit of discomfort along the way for the sake of suspense, but endings should be eminently comfortable and clear.  Few people want to read three hundred pages only to meet a cliffhanger ending.

But, of course, there’s a devil in my head that loves inconclusiveness.  Not for its own sake, but because inconclusiveness suggest other moods and world views that tidy plots simply cannot.  Often, elusive endings will shift the emphasis from plot to character, so we see a character at his most revealing moment, rather than at his most final and conclusive moment.  Or elusive endings will shine some light on a truth—the kind of truth a lot of readers go to fiction to escape.  No Country for Old Men had this quality; it was a fundamentally cynical book and movie, and it deliberately undermined the audience’s desire for closure.  Why? In order to highlight its cynicism about the nature of evil—its relentlessness, its incomprehensibility, its unpredictability.  Consequently, the movie irritated lots of people while delighting a few with its audacity.

One of my teachers once quoted a friend of his as saying, “there are two kinds of books: those that confirm reader’s prejudices, and those that challenge them.”  I don’t like the simplicity of this aphorism, since it sounds too much like that artificial divide between literary and genre all over again.  But I do agree there are at least moments inside of individual books that either confirm or challenge.  Either the style seems familiarly invisible or it seems weirdly attention-grabbing.  Either the emotion evoked seems familiarly singular and intense, or oddly complex and contradictory.  Either the structure is comfortably fulfilling, or frustratingly open-ended. 

As an entertainer, I’d like to suggest that confirmation gives the reader what she paid for, though confirmation runs the risk of dull commonality.  As an artist, I’d like to suggest that challenge gives a reader more than she could’ve expected, though challenge runs the risk of obscurity or downright resistance from the reader.  I don’t want to champion one merit over another, nor do I think I could.  This unwillingness to choose, I suppose, is exactly why the battle rages on inside my head.


DN

April 09, 2008

Tales from the Bowery

Okay ya''ll,  listen up, 'cause this one'll make you think.   

Today's Guest Blogger is Elizabeth Zelvin. Elizabeth is a New York City psychotherapist whose debut mystery, DEATH WILL GET YOU SOBER, will hit bookstores next week. Her  story, “Death Will Clean Your Closet,” has been nominated for an Agatha award for Best Short Story. Liz ran an alcohol treatment program on the Bowery for six years. She currently practices psychotherapy online.  Publications include two books of poetry and a book on gender and addictions. Liz’s author website is www.elizabethzelvin.com .

 

I’ll start with the one I usually tell. It was 1983. I had just walked down the Bowery for the first time, south from Astor Place past the invisible line that separated middle class New York from the most famous skid row of them all. The Bowery is just a New York street, but in those days it was also a community with a culture and rituals and an argot all its own. It was a destination for chronic alcoholics from all over the country, made up of bars and flophouses and stretches of gutter the way a small town would have houses and playgrounds and avenues of elms and oaks.

The fourth floor of the notorious Men’s Shelter had housed an alcohol detox unit since 1967. Four New York City cops were assigned to the agency that ran it. In the old days, their job had been to round up guys and throw them in the drunk tank in the nearest slammer. Now they were called the Rescue Team. The cop of the day and I drove slowly down the street. Ten-thirty in the morning. The streets were deserted. Nobody knocking back Thunderbird or Ripple from a flat pint bottle. No one passed out on the curbs or in the doorways. The cop said, “They’ll all be in the bars.”

The bartender knew his cue when we stepped through the doorway, the open door casting a shaft of sunlight in which dust motes danced and the row of men at the bar blinked bleary eyes.  “Fourth floor, fourth floor! Who wants to go?”

In 1993, I came back to the Bowery to run the same agency’s outpatient program. I inherited a program in which some homeless alcoholics had managed to get clean and sober, but nobody ever moved on. Some of them, with two or three years of sobriety, were still attending treatment daily. Among  other innovations, I instituted a graduation.

One of our first graduates was Isaiah. He was a tall, emaciated black man who was a natural leader.  He had a gift for inspiring others, and he took no crap from anybody. Before getting sober, he’d been a drug dealer and a scam artist. To say he’d turned his life around was no platitude, but the truth about what addiction treatment professionals like to call a f***ing miracle.

Isaiah had AIDS. After graduating, he hung around the program as a volunteer, continuing to help and inspire other alcoholics and addicts. His health became increasingly fragile, and eventually he died. We all went to the memorial service at a dinky little mission church where he had volunteered several times a week at the soup kitchen that had kept him alive more than once while he was living on the street. Person after person got up and spoke eloquently about how much Isaiah’s friendship or his example had meant to them. The young white pastor gave the eulogy.
   
    “I knew Isaiah for many years,” he said. “He’d stand on line and I’d hand him a bag of sandwiches, knowing with absolute certainty that he would go right around the corner and sell those sandwiches to buy drugs. I would ask myself, Why do I bother? Looking around today, seeing the tears in all your eyes, hearing the stories people have told about his struggle, his courage, and his generosity, I finally understand why.”

This is a story about recovery from alcoholism, a treatable illness. And that’s the kind of story I wanted to tell in DEATH WILL GET YOU SOBER. Bruce, my protagonist, has plenty of intelligence and cynicism. He does his best to maintain an ironic distance. If he heard Isaiah’s story the way I’ve just told it, he’d probably start playing air violin. Hearts and flowers, he’d say. Thank you for sharing. But dammit, I’m the author; he’s just the character. Bruce does and will recover. DEATH WILL GET YOU SOBER  starts with Bruce waking up in detox on the Bowery on Christmas Day. He is not pleased. As he puts it, “My mouth tasted like a garbage scow, my memory was on lockdown, and I bitterly regretted not being dead by thirty the way I’d always thought I’d be.” But that’s just the beginning.

In my experience, readers tend to bring their own history and preconceptions to a book like DEATH WILL GET YOU SOBER. What are your beliefs about alcoholism? Have you ever known anyone whose drinking bothered you? Have you ever known anyone in recovery? How much do you drink, now and in the past? Have you ever considered it a problem? Has anyone close to you considered it a problem? To what extent do you believe that people can change in any fundamental way?

Thanks, Elizabeth, for being our guest today.
                                        -JD Rhoades

April 08, 2008

which he sought so hard we'll tear apart

We're delighted to have Derek Nikitas join us here at Murderati for two Tuesdays in April, while Ken Bruen is off being fêted and wined and dined as Guest of Honor at Noir Con, and Nominee for Best Novel (Priest) at the Edgars. Derek's first novel, Pyres, also nominated for an Edgar this year, was published in 2007 and met with rave reviews. "Nikitas' stellar first novel isn't just one of the best genre debuts of the year, it's one of the best releases -- period," said Paul Goat Allen of the Chicago Tribune. We agree. But let's see what Derek has to say about it.

- Murderati

By Derek Nikitas


Dereknikitas When Murderati asked me to substitute-blog for Ken Bruen, I feared at first that I’d have to feign Catholicism, use Irish slang, write in prose-poetic lines, and evince a hearty blend of ruffian and gentleman.  Instead I’ll save us all the embarrassment of a bad impression.

But to evoke Bruenesque brutal honesty, I’d like to discuss literary failure, not a popular subject among writers.  The role of published novelist is new for me, and it’s been wrecking havoc on my precious inferiority complex.  My first novel Pyres dropped only five months ago, but in the two years since I finished it, I’ve reflected a bit.  Since Pyres has been on sale, I’ve heard other people’s reflections, mostly positives, a few humbling negatives.  And I’ve had time to write more and, I like to think, improve.  All this reflection had shed a few stark lights on Pyres

I’ve occasionally heard veteran writers with decades of writing credits voice disappointment with a phase or two of their careers.  In On Writing, Stephen King admits displeasure with The Tommyknockers and Insomnia (he also admits he can’t remember writing most of Cujo because he was too drunk at the time).  Even James Ellroy, the most cocksure writer to crow his own work, concedes to steady mediocrity before his breakthrough, The Black Dahlia. 

Writers are notoriously self-critical, it’s true.  Some Greats, like Hemmingway and Plath, have critiqued themselves literally to death.  We suffer writer’s block and revise ourselves into full-blown Carpal Tunnel Syndrome.   We kill darlings and later lament.  We battle a version of post-partum depression over the copyeditor’s notes.  But all that hemming and hawing often goes silent when the book hits the shelves.  The time to gripe is gone.  Rarely will a writer publicly chastise his own published work—and when we finally fess, we wait for the Fiftieth Anniversary Career Retrospective: “oh, yes, my late-70s output could’ve used more polish, indeed.”

Zip it, crybaby—you’re saying to yourselves.  I don’t blame you.  Compelling reasons to shut up abound, the foremost being: nobody like a sourpuss.  And bemoaning one’s product has never been the big secret of salesmanship.  Coyness is nice, but who buys a book because the author panned it in print?  Plus, the self-effacing author has others to consider: agents, editors, publishers, sources, friends and family—every advisor who helped shape the book.  And now you want to claim that shape is cockeyed?  In my own case, bashing my own firstborn risks second-guessing those genius, gorgeous, charismatic Edgar judges (whoever they are).  Their other nominations are bulls-eyes, so who am I to rain on the parade?  What a mope.

Maybe the best reason to muzzle is this: why dwell?  If you’ve upped your game, go write a better book and quityerbitchin.  All excellent points, thank you very much.  Such poignant points that this blog should probably close right here, full stop.

Buuuut… I can’t help myself.  Recently, my mentor and former professor subjected her current crop of students to a mandatory reading of Pyres.  As part of their discussion, they produced a series of questions, which my mentor emailed to me, and which I then answered.  The first couple questions were congenial, as with most interviews (just once I’d like to see an author interview start with: “so what is your deal, anyway?”).  A few questions down, the subtle critiques set in.  The tone was still friendly, but the undercurrent seemed to ask: “don’t you realize you royally screwed the pooch here?”  Paranoia, one of my muses, read between the lines. 

What’s weird is this: I don’t think they ever expected me to acquiesce.  I think maybe a healthy population of readers, myself included, harbor odd misconceptions about how writers stand in relation to their own work.  Do readers think writers see their novels as beyond reproach, that every verb zings and every adjective glows—and if not, then, heck, the failing must be with the reader?  Are readers emotionally invested in this ruse as part of the greater illusion of fiction, ye olde “willing suspension of disbelief?”  Would huge fissures crack through the middles of all our Hobbitons if Tolkien admitted—from the grave, I s’pose—that he should’ve made Frodo a girl?   

Me, I went at it with gusto.  Another of my muses, Shame, took to the helm.  Until these emailed questions, I’d never had the opportunity or inclination to voice my self-reflexive discontent.  It was lovely to be able to say, yes—in retrospect, there are parts of Pyres that suck rotten eggs.  I don’t know how your average reader would catch such a curve ball.  They were probably expecting some clever explanation of mine to obliterate their naïve sense that something was wrong with the book.  They seemed to want me to set them straight.  Maybe now what they’ll want is their money back, or at least some in-store credit.   

In Pyres, one of my characters gets head-injury amnesia.  (I suppose I should’ve given a spoiler alert warning, but this whole notion of showmanship makes me dyspeptic.  It’s just my own silly imagination I’m spoiling on you.  I feel like P.T. Barnum or some street vendor hawking fake jade bracelets that will tint your wrist green.  I was quietly freaked out when one reader told me, “I totally fell in love with Tanya; she made me so sad.”  I’m delighted, but Shame at the helm of my mind chants: “Tanya’s just words! Tanya’s just words!  And some of those words are wrong!”  I must’ve believed and loved Tanya myself when I was writing her, but the flame dies when the book is done.)    

Anyway, amnesia.  Some readers have suggested amnesia is a cop-out, a bad soap opera plot fix.  I wholeheartedly agree.  That amnesia crap is the major weakness of the novel—followed by other minor weaknesses, like clunky point of view shifts, the pretentious fairy-tale tone of the climax, the overkill of similes and adjectives in general.  The amnesia thing is far too convenient and contrived.  It artificially boosts the drama where the drama lags.  It comes as a result of a decision made by a non-viewpoint character, so it’s weak as a plot point—an action for my heroine to react to, rather than a result of her actions. 

But, despite its obvious faults, the amnesia thing became so integral to the plot that it couldn’t be removed.  I tried to compensate by researching real amnesia and its causes, the result of which is slightly more authenticity, but dull pages of a talking-head doctor yammering on about amnesia.  I can imagine a much better novel where Blair (the character in question) doesn’t get amnesia and instead we undertake an in-depth exploration of her psyche, without sacrificing plot.  Oh well.

As a writing teacher, I’ve noticed how often writers are aware of their own mistakes and shortcomings.  But we gloss over them with rose-colored denial or laziness or, frankly, a very good reason: we must let go at some point.  We’ve all got to balance perfectionism against progressing to the next project, particularly when deadlines are involved.  Only a few writers like James Joyce and Harper Lee seem dedicated enough to let one or a couple books constitute a whole brilliant career. 

If your book is good enough to be published, the glasses get an even rosier tint.  All that amnesia stuff seemed just fine to me when St. Martin’s signed on, but time and progress removes such euphoria.  I’ve realized, for instance, that a publishing house banks on promise, not fulfillment.  The harshest lesson I’ve learned, yet have known in my heart all along is this: a book good enough to publish is a far, far cry from a book good enough to call a lasting masterpiece for posterity, for immortality.   

I should really shut the fuck up now.  I haven’t finished my second book, no version 2.0 to tout in lieu of the old model.  And worse: readers don’t want to hear this bunk, especially ones who’ve read and enjoyed your book.  They might even read your genuine regret as an attempt to fish for compliments.  “I look fat in this, don’t I?”  This is no pity party, really.  I know there’s stuff to admire in Pyres, and self-criticism should be kept to oneself.  Put on a happy face, and all that.  Readers like to be lured by fantasy, by worlds total and perfect unto themselves.  They don’t want some jerk whispering nearby: “it’s all smoke and mirrors, just some schmuck behind the curtain.”   

Aw, heck—can I go so far as to suggest that a writer’s negative self-critique might be of value?  After all, it’s tied to a vow to do better next time.  It’s an indication against stagnation, against “phoning in” the next book by ceding quality to formula or an impending deadline.  You might think this talk is rather self-defeating and morbid, and you might be right.  It’s a terrible marketing scheme.  But let’s face it, I think The Secret is the biggest load of crap I’ve ever heard, so I don’t know jack about the market.  Admitting to recent past failures liberates, since the alternative is to admit my best is behind me.  Recognizing my literary faults is how I improve.  It’s how I can hereafter stand guard against plot contrivance and excessive figures of speech and description, among the thousand other faults that my prose is heir to.  It’s what keeps me reaching for better than before.

So how about it?  Any confessions regarding past sins of prose, even minor ones?  Or virile roars from those who’ve sired only the most pristine of literary offspring?  Or perhaps renewed vows not to dwell on the past like this here slouch?  Dig in.   Oh, and in the tradition of Ken, your title has been brought to you today by the poet John Berryman.

DN

April 04, 2008

Welcome Guest Blogger Libby Fischer Hellman!!

Going to the Dark Side

Libbyfischerhellmann1 They say that if you keep writing crime fiction, you will inevitably write darker. But they never tell you why. As someone who’s gone down that road, I’d like to try out an explanation.

But first, thanks to the Murderati gang, especially J.T., for this opportunity.

Over the past 6 years I’ve written four books that – while not cozy – feature an amateur sleuth who’s a video producer. The situations Ellie Foreman finds herself in aren’t light, but she has a dry sense of humor that helps keep her grounded. More important, she has a support system and family structure that, in some ways, curtail her behavior as well as the arc of the plot. The danger and chaos she confronts -- whether it’s neo-Nazis, the Russian mob, or terrorists – are short-lived. By the end of each book, her world order is restored. She goes to sleep without any demons plaguing her or her family.

In my third book, AN IMAGE OF DEATH, I introduced a character from a different world than Ellie’s. Arin was from Eastern Europe, and her life fell apart when the Soviet Union collapsed. Her husband became an arms smuggler and disappeared. Her best friend was drawn into sexual trafficking. Arin was forced to make choices just to ensure her survival. She became an illegal diamond courier who ended up making a good living from illegal activities. Anything to feed her son and herself. At the time I thought Arin was an anomaly. A one-time thing.

She wasn’t.

As I read more about crime, both true crime and fiction… as I watch the “if-it-bleeds-it-leads” news stories, I’ve come to believe that the act of bad things happening to good people – like Arin --  is more random than not. Victims of crime become victims because they’re simply in the wrong place at the wrong time – not because of some grand design.

Sure, you can argue that someone who lives in a gang-infested neighborhood is more prone to a drive-by than someone in the affluent suburbs… or that the house with snowbird owners is more likely to be robbed than a house whose occupants are present. But the selection of the person who is shot, or the home that’s targeted, is essentially a random act. It depends on a number of factors, any one of which might suddenly change. The drive-by victim might be at the grocery store, rather than on the street, and thus survive. The home targeted for a robbery might be occupied by a son or daughter home from college and so escape theft.  The actual doing of the crime can be as flimsy as a feather quivering on air currents.

Even orchestrated conspiracies -- the stuff of great thrillers – in which plans are conceived over months, years or decades – are often thwarted at the last minute by a random event or observation. Remember the film (the original version) of The Day of the Jackal? De Gaulle turns his head just as sharpshooter Edward Fox lets loose with a shot. A random head-turn vanquishes the evil and saves France.

The fact that disaster is only a hairs-breath away… that the worst could happen to anyone at any time, given the circumstances, is a powerful driver, and I realized wanted to explore a character who understands that.Easy_innocence_cover1

Enter Georgia Davis, my protagonist in EASY INNOCENCE. A cop for years (Like Arin, she was introduced in AN IMAGE OF DEATH), she’s now a PI. She has baggage. And secrets I’m just learning about. But her greatest strength is that she implicitly recognizes the fragility and vulnerability of life.

My friend (and fabulous writer) Michael Dymmoch likes to quote from the film Shakespeare in Love. She always says that everything will work out if you persevere, work hard, and are talented enough. Although Michael is talking about writing, Ellie subscribes to that theory. She’s an optimist. She even tries to control her universe. She would never dwell in the dark. For her everything can be fixed.

Georgia doesn’t have any illusions. She knows it’s useless to try and control life. Of course, it helps that she has a less than sanguine view of human nature. She doesn’t doubt the cruelty that goes on behind closed doors -- even in beautiful surroundings. She realizes that because it’s random, evil can never be destroyed permanently. In fact, she embraces that randomness. She is still committed to fighting it and railing against the injustice it triggers, but knowing it will always be there in one form or another is part of her world view.

It’s a dark view of the world. But it’s a compelling one. After all, we are all gapers, aren’t we? What’s the first question we ask after a senseless crime or accident? Why? How did it happen? When we hear the answer, maybe we shiver, or our stomach lurches, or we give our kids an extra hug. But we know, at a very basic level, that life is random. That we don’t have control. That we can’t prevent it.

That’s why I’m writing darker these days. To plumb the depths of that randomness – to see how it affects characters in my imaginary world. Maybe it will even teach me how to accept it in the real world.

But enough from me. Readers, why do you read dark? Or not? Writers, why do you write it?

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Libby’s 5th novel, Easy Innocence is a “spin-off” of her award-winning Ellie Foreman series. Libby also edited the acclaimed anthology Chicago Blues. Originally from Washington DC, Libby has lived in Chicago for 30 years and finds the contrast between the beautiful and the profane in that city a crime writer’s paradise. She lives on the North Shore. Her next work, a stand-alone thriller called Set the Night on Fire takes place in part during the Sixties.

P.S. -- A wine suggestion, from a friend of Murderati -- Chateau Souverain Alexander Valley Cabernet Sauvignon 2004. Yum! Coppola bough the Alexander Valley vineyard in 2006. I'm not sure how that will change the appellation, but it's worth a try in the later years as well. Many thanks to fellow scribe Chuck Driskell for the suggestion.

And a boatload of thanks to Libby for standing in today. Don't forget, Simon Wood joins us next week!


 

March 28, 2008

Welcome Guest Blogger Cara Black!

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Springtime on Canal Saint Martin in Paris
 
Ok, we see the buds sprouting on the trees lining Canal Saint Martin, the folks still in winter coats but far as I’m concerned it’s springtime in Paris and time for crime. I have to say this canal, a wonderful thin weaving stretch of water carrying barges to the Seine and site of Georges Simenon’s ‘The Headless Corpse’ an Inspector Maigret novel, sparked the idea for Murder in the Rue de Paradis, the eighth Aimée Leduc Investigation. An evocative setting, dark water shimmering at night, rain soaked cobblestones on the quai. But my editor wagged her finger, ‘You don’t need to do a copycat killer of Simeon’s famed Maigret. Not to mention most American’s haven’t heard of Canal Saint Martin. Aimee, your detective can stretch more than that. Think,’ she said, ‘of the darker side of the City of Light.’

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Ok...what about the Gare du Nord I thought, the bustling train station where the Eurostar disembarks from London and the glass awninged roof resembles a smudged glass umbrella..surely Americans would know the Gare du Nord? I could set a murder there, use that for the title.

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My editor seemed ok with that. And me too until scouting around the Gare du Nord one winter day for a murder location, I thought I’d found the place. A little frequented corner near the tracks, quiet, a perfect location to slide a knife in someone’s back ..most of you are crime fiction readers and writers who probably think the same strange way I do. But as I reached for my notebook to draw a map for this ‘perfect’ murder site content with Murder in the Gare du Nord as the title for the book...who walks around the corner but a trio of CRS riot police in full jumpsuit gear and with Uzi’s slung over their shoulders? No good, the station was patrolled tighter than a shut Breton oyster and that title now felt as good as a plastic bag popped on the tracks leading to the netherworld of northern France. What to do...how could I find a title for this book in this off the beaten track of Paris that fascinated me?  And a place American readers might know or could identify with. ‘After all’ my editor said, ‘Americans have heard of the Marais, Montmartre even Ile Saint-Louis but the 10th arrondissement?’ An arrondissement called by a French writer ‘a quartier of poets and locomotives’, an area rich in small little jewels of belle epoque theatres, an artisanal district which below the surface was still rich in the theatre arts; fan makers...

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...beading and feather ateliers for theatre and haute couture, a once thriving fur district, small manufacturers who still exist like the buckle factory in the same family for 110 years. But for les Arts de la Table, everyone in Paris goes to rue de Paradis, the well known street of porcelain and crystal shops, once the site of the Baccarat museum and the street name struck a chord with my editor. And me.

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Especially when I researched in the archives and discovered the old name for a sliver of rue de Paradis...the rue d’Enfer - the street of hell - so it would encompass Aimee’s journey in this book from paradise to hell...and it all jelled after that. and with passage like this Passage du Desir

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and little squares tucked in the warren of streets like this

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or this

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and those forbidden areas

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and always with a little retro fashion a la Givenchy Aimee wears involved

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and of course the police get involved

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and the fireman go on strike in the Bastille...of course, this is France and people go on strike all the time

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and the best part of my research is that I get to ride a motorcycle sometimes

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and find spots like this

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but it was when I took a short cut through the 10th arrondissement en route to the archives, I noticed the cluster of small cafes, the men smoking hookahs and drinking those potent little cups of Turkish coffee that I realized I’d stumbled into Little Istanbul. And nearby by the storefront mosque and the Kurdish Cultural Institute. But when a policeman told me about his experiences investigating the August 1995 Metro bombing of St. Michel, the bombing that rocked France, the story formed. In this pre-9-11 time the authorities had one take on the perps while my take, given what we know today, differed. And that ‘what if’ buzzed and took off in my head. My editor, ever the wise one, was right. I had a whole quartier with Kurdish freedom fighters, Turkish militants, bourgoise bohemians - or bobo’s as the French call them - taking over lofts in the old warehouses, ateliers specializing in hems for haute couture, and Aimée on the hunt for the murderer of her former boyfriend. Seems a chador clad figure was seen leaving the crime scene. I didn’t need a headless corpse found in the Canal Saint Martin.


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And you, does the plot spring fully formed in your head, or does it take thickening and time to jell? Does it come from a name, a place or perhaps a first line that sets you on your path?

photo credits
Canal Saint Martin -- Adrian Leeds
all others Cara Black
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Cara Black lives in San Francisco with her husband, a bookseller, and their teenage son. She is a member of the Paris Sociéte Historique in the Marais. Loves photography. Cara, like Aimée, once had a moped and appreciates their tempermenal  tendencies. She also, like Aimée, likes dogs and owns a Coton de Tulear. Unlike Aimée, she has never owned an apartment on the Ile St. Louis but feels she will someday when the lottery smiles on her. She is currently working on the new book of the Aimée Leduc series.

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Thanks for being here today, Cara!!!

P.S. Cara is the first of three wonderful guest bloggers who are kind enough to stand in for me while I catch up on some book writing and do some more promotional travel. Next week, Libby Fischer Hellmann joins us, and the following, our dear friend Simon Wood will be back. I'll be back with lots of new wine selections and fresh blogs April 18. À bientôt!

March 09, 2008

Interview -- CJ Lyons

Toni here -- I'm winging my way home from the wonderful Left Coast Crime and had interviewed the wonderful CJ Lyons for today's blog. Please give her a warm welcome!

First off, CJ, congratulations on the wonderful debut this week of LIFELINES—which I not only read and loved, but I see a lot of people agreed with me. Cjs_book_cover

Publisher’s Weekly describes it as a “spot-on debut....a breathtakingly fast-paced medical thriller,” Lisa Gardner called it a “pulse-pounding adrenaline rush” and our own friend of ‘Rati Allison Brennan said that LIFELINES is “A fantastic and wild journey through the fast-paced world of a big-city ER...an all-around great read.”

Let’s start off with a little about the book – can you tell us the premise? What was the inspiration for the story? Is LIFELINES a stand-alone or will there be more books in this fantastic world you’ve built?

>>LIFELINES is the first book in a series centering on the women of Pittsburgh's Angels of Mercy's ER. It deals with the most dangerous day of the year: July 1st—Transition Day.

You see, for teaching hospitals, our calendar starts on July 1st. That's when the new interns—yes, the bumbling fools who were mere medical students on June 30th—hit the hospitals and start taking care of patients.

Add to that the age-old American traditions of drinking yourself stupid and blowing up explosives and/or guns while celebrating Independence Day and you have a sure-fire recipe for disaster.

I remember my own Transition Day. Brand new, still not unpacked or moved in, barely finding the hospital parking lot (it was two blocks away in a gang-riddled, not-so-nice neighborhood) much less figuring out my way around the hospital and I'm suddenly on call, responsible for three floors worth of very sick kids!

No one died that night, not on my watch….for which I've forever been eternally grateful. I don't take credit for it—I think it was more likely because of the always-excellent nurses who were well aware of the dangers July 1st posed their tiny patients.

Of course, in my novel, things don't go quite so well for my main character. She loses a patient—the wrong patient, the Chief of Surgery's son. And she has no idea why he died….

 

I know that you are an ER doctor as well as a writer – and clearly, you capture the entirety of that world so crisply, that anyone who wants a behind-the-scenes look would dearly love. If there’s anything you miss about medicine, what is it? We can see how the world of medicine has influenced you as a writer… but how has the world of writing influenced you as a doctor?

>>I miss my patients—there's something pretty fulfilling about working with kids. They're so resilient! Leaving my practice to make the leap of faith and follow my dream of becoming a writer was probably the most difficult decision I've made.

Medicine has been very good for my writing. Despite working three jobs (I put myself through med school) and the crazy hours, I really got serious about my writing during medical school, joining my first writer's group and attending my first writing workshop. I was actually able to finish a science-fiction novel during medical school—now safely tucked away until I have the strength to read it and see just how bad it is!

But writing was also been wonderful for my practice of medicine. Knowing the importance of asking why, of understanding the motivations behind patients' actions, how to tell a story—and listen to a story—all made me a better doctor.

 

Tell us a little bit about how you started writing? Do you write fiction, non-fiction… both? And if both, tell us a little bit about the other writing projects you’ve done.

>>I've been writing pretty much all my life. It's an addiction and I'd need a 12 step program to stop <g> Being a doctor, I've had to write a lot of non-fiction, everything from peer-reviewed research articles to paramedic protocols to grant proposals and textbook chapters.

Right now, in addition to my fiction, I'm writing a lot of patient education articles and have even done several patient education DVD's. It's a nice way to stay up to date on current research and give something back now that I'm not practicing medicine right now.

 

 

Tell us a little about your writing world and habits – what kind of schedule do you keep? How do you handle juggling more than one project at a time? What inspires you?

>>I'm totally undisciplined as a writer—rebelling against all those years of carrying a beeper and