Not quite our main subject, but I think you will see the relevance, and sympathize... - Robert Lopresti
Not quite our main subject, but I think you will see the relevance, and sympathize... - Robert Lopresti
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| Liz Zelvin with Lee Child |
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| Liz reads at Poets House, NYC |
Today, I'm combining the wisdom of two authors I much admire, Benjamin Stevenson and John Floyd.
Two
nights ago, I hosted/interviewed Australian author Benjamin Stevenson on stage at the
Centennial Theatre in Burlington, Canada. To say I was 'outnumbered' is
an understatement: Benjamin's book "Everyone in my Family has Killed
Someone" has sold a million copies! I don't believe I've sold even half
that if you were to combine all my books, short stories, and comedy
pieces put together. (Okay, the newspaper columns had audiences in the
millions, but that wasn't fiction.)
It was an electric night on stage with Benjamin, as we both got our start writing standup. Lots of fun! But some of the things we talked about have really resonated with me after the event.
Benjamin said it takes him two years to write a book. (It takes me one year. I sit in awe of cozy writers who can write three a year, frankly.) We both agreed on one thing: We have to be really excited about a book project to sit down, bum in chair, and write every day until that one project is done.
Excited. I've thought back to my own career as a novelist, and can see that this drives me as well.
I didn't start as a novelist. I began life as a short story writer. But when the short story market began to shrink, I started to think about meeting the challenge of writing a novel.
My first series is still my bestselling individual series. Rowena Through the Wall was epic fantasy, or what they would call Romantasy these days. It was featured in USA Today some years ago, and took off (a top 50 Amazon bestseller, all books.) That series was great fun to write, but once I finished it, it felt that fantasy was kind of done for me. I looked around for something that would excite me.
This brings me to John Floyd's column from a few weeks ago, The Old Genre Switcheroo, about moving between genres or subgenres. I realized that this is what I've been doing. It's how I've stayed excited, while continuing to write novels.
My next series was The Goddaughter mob
caper series. You can't get more different from dark ages fantasy than
that! A contemporary mob goddaughter in Hamilton doesn't want to be
one, but keeps getting dragged back in to bail out her family.
Totally different genres with different rules. What they did have in common? Both series were high comedy.
When that series ended, I looked around for another genre or subgenre that I could get excited about. Something that would challenge me, and provide a host of fresh ideas.
Which led to The Pharaoh's Curse Murders (out this week!) and the historical Merry Widow Murder series. Still humorous, but with the challenge of a 1929 setting and - new for me - classic mystery plotting requirements.
Challenging and therefore exciting, for this writer.
What does all this prove? This is what I've learned:
The secret to having a multi-decade career in fiction writing is to be versatile. Move where the market goes. Keep yourself fresh by exploring new genres or sub-genres.
Versatility. Which begs the question, what's next for this writer, after The Kennel Club Murders, out April 2027?
I'm excited to see.
Melodie Campbell is the winner of ten awards, including The Derringer and the Crime Writers of Canada Award of Excellence, for her 21 novels and 60 short stories. She didn't even steal them.
NOW AVAILABLE AT B&N, AMAZON, CHAPTERS/INDIGO AND INDEPENDENTS!
In 1966, Truman Capote claimed to have invented a new type of writing, the non-fiction novel. The result was his seminal work, In Cold Blood. In it, he depicts the 1959 murder of a prosperous farming family in Kansas. The murder actually happened and baffled authorities for Dick Hickock and Perry Smith. The pair met in penitentiary, where a fellow inmate told them stories of working for Herb Clutter, the patriarch of the Clutter family. Specifically, he told them Clutter had a safe in his house holding $10,000. Which was not true as Clutter seldom carried cash.
The pair agreed they would rob the family once they were out of prison. They also agreed they would have to kill the witnesses to cover up their crime. But rather than simply walking in and shooting everyone in their sleep, Hickock raped the oldest daughter first, and the pair tortured Herb Clutter before killing him. The pair then fled to Mexico, pawning what they could take from the home (which did not include $10,000.) Smith had dreams of buying a boat and taking tourists out on deep sea adventures and finding sunken treasure. Hickock, stunted and slightly crippled from a car accident, just wanted to get high and debauch. The pair were cornered in Las Vegas two years later. Both men were hung in 1965.
Despite Capote's claims, In Cold Blood was not the first "non-fiction novel," or more accurately, true crime novel. There were others before it. But Capote's captured enough attention to be nominated for a Pulitzer Prize. It also paved the way for LA District Attorney Vincent Bugliosi's book about the Manson Family murders, Helter Skelter. One thing that sets both these books apart is they don't really sensationalize the murders. Hickock and Smith are a pair of career criminals and drifters who might have been at home in Kerouac's On the Road if they were just a bit smarter and more sociable (and less violent. Merry pranksters these two were not.) Manson doesn't need sensationalized. He and his followers brought their own flair for the theatrics, which actually makes them scarier.
What struck me about the killers in In Cold Blood is they could not articulate their motivations, especially Hickock. He was a violent thug who had vague resentment against anyone who thought they were better than him. Never mind he'd never met or talked to the Clutters before killing them. Smith seems to have trapped himself in the life, hitching his star to a more charismatic and fierce Hickock and constantly regretting it even as he goes along with the next scene. The pair was doomed from the start. The Clutters became collateral damage, as the innocent often are in these cases.
My dad has early stage Alzheimer’s. Until recently, I had been helping manage his care without doing a whole lot of reflection on what is going on with my father and how it’s affecting him, and by extension the members of his family — my mom, my brother, my wife, our son, and me.
That all began to change when I turned 61 earlier this month. Nothing like a birthday to cause a thinking, feeling person to stop and take stock of their life, of the world around them, of the situations arising in their daily existence, and how things are going for their loved ones.
One of those situations has been dogging my steps longer than I’d have admitted. But before I get into all that, I want to talk a bit about Nash Bridges.
I remember back in the late ‘90s, one of my guilty pleasures was watching Don Johnson’s wish fulfillment project Nash Bridges on CBS. The title character, portrayed by Johnson himself, had it all: cool job (police inspector/later captain of an elite investigative unit), cool car (an exceedingly rare late ’60s yellow Hemi ’Cuda convertible), cool partner/best friend (played by Cheech Marin — I mean, come on), cool girlfriend (portrayed by Yasmine Bleeth of Baywatch fame), cool penthouse apartment on the top floor of a skyscraper in San Francisco, cool ex-wife, cool relationship with his teenage daughter, and cool clothes.
| Cool car. Cool clothes. Cool city. Cool life. The stuff of fiction. |
Like I said: wish fulfillment.
On the show one aspect of Nash’s life that was less than ideal was the fact that his father was afflicted with Alzheimer’s, and Nash had just begun to act as his guardian and main caregiver. This is the first time I can recall actively paying attention to a fictional arc about a character with Alzheimer’s. Before this I had seen news pieces about the disease, about dementia, and other aspects of aging that included memory loss, personality changes, mood swings, and confusion.
Nick Bridges was the first fictional character I ever remember watching deal with Alzheimer’s. But his condition was not in any way realistic. If anything, it served as more of a plot convenience than an actual portrayal of the progression of the disease. Nick would seem foggy when it served the plot, then get sharp when that served the plot too. Half the time he just seemed like a crotchety old man with an engaging, salty sense of humor. As portrayed by veteran character actor James Gammon, the character was an awful lot of fun. Kind of like the rest of the show.
So: not just wish fulfillment. Completely delusional wish fulfillment!
I didn’t think much about that at the time. I mean, it was entertainment. Nash Bridges is not a documentary. If you’re looking for clinical accuracy, you’re gonna need to seek it elsewhere.
And yet for all that, these days I can hardly help but think about it. And that because nowadays I know exactly what the real thing looks like.
As far back as I can remember, my father had always been the sharpest tack in the room. And by “sharp,” I mean clever. Articulate. Incisive. Precise with his language — and exacting with me on my employment of same.
If I was relating a story, talking about something that had happened to me earlier in the day: a strange interaction with a sales clerk, perhaps, and in the course of so doing, gave a thumbnail of what I said, rather than exactly quoting, my dad would tell me what I ought to have said and how I ought to have said it. He never once stopped to consider that I was giving a thumbnail. It seemed never to occur to him that in all likelihood I had acquitted myself just fine in the moment. He was constantly trying to improve my language, and by extension, me.
Constantly.
Exhaustively.
And exhaustingly.
In a nutshell this is because my father is a textbook narcissist who has always worked hard to keep himself at the center of any conversation. This made for rocky times during my young adult and early adult years.
These days he cannot even really follow a conversation. Most of the time it’s all he can do to muster repeated volleys of the word “What?”, phrased eternally as a question while struggling to keep up.
Ironically, he and I have never gotten along better than we do now.
Unless he happens to be in the grip of a bout of sundowning syndrome. In those instances all bets are usually off.
Without getting too clinical: a person dealing with Alzheimer’s spends their entire day struggling with confusion, disorientation, and memory lapses. They start the morning relatively refreshed after a night’s sleep (good or otherwise). But as the day progresses, the effort of managing their all-encompassing confusion, their endless disorientation, tends to wear on them. They get tired. And when they get tired, the confusion gets worse. And when the confusion gets worse, they get more tired. It’s a vicious cycle.
So by sundown — or sometime around then — you’ve got someone who has been struggling all day, has reached their limit, and is, for lack of a better term, cranky. They lash out. They can get mean.
My entire family deals with this. And make no mistake: this situation puts significant strain on all of us — my mom, my brother, my wife, our son, and me. I’ll leave it at that, except to say that during this difficult time we have closed ranks, are all pulling together, trying hard to support each other, and to support him.
Sometimes during all of this pulling together, I can’t help but entertain the question of whether my father’s Alzheimer’s is hereditary. I try not to spend too much time dwelling on it — on whether this might be a glimpse of my own potential future. That way lies madness.
What I find myself thinking about far more. What I find myself worrying about. What I find myself sometimes consumed with, is my mother, and the weight she carries daily.
After all, I know that I am struggling with my own emerging impressions of who my father is becoming. But I cannot even imagine what my mom is going through.
I got a glimpse of it the other day. I told her I had broken down crying over what's happening with my dad. She said, "Welcome to my world. I cry every day."
A startling admission coming from my stalwart, stoic mother. No one who knows her would ever think of her as a crier.
Watching the personality of the person she has spent her entire adult life with — sixty-plus years — be whittled away. Be carved down. Be eroded like sandstone by the wind, like granite rock on a headland worn down by the surf and the tide.
All of it a diminishing. A gradual vanishing. My father, and by extension, all of us who love and try to support him, victims of Time.
Okay,
now here’s one you can sink your
teeth into. Babylon Berlin, streaming on MHz.
This is rich soil to cultivate, and for me, as a political junkie with a side in history, naturally fascinating. It’s a little Cabaret - without the eye-watering phoniness of Liza Minnelli – and very reminiscent of Philip Kerr’s series of Bernie Gunther novels, but darker and more Gothic than both. It also happens to be mordantly funny.
The show is based on a series of novels by the German writer Volker Kutscher, which I’m now interested in, and are available in English translation. The series, though, changes the chronology. So far, the first three seasons take place in 1929, the fourth in 1930-31, and the last – the fifth season, yet to be released - in 1932-33, when the Nazis come to power. And, as odd and ominous as the first three seasons are, the Nazis haven’t even shown up yet, which gives you an idea just how odd and ominous the series really is. Things are already bad enough.
The producers have also put a lot of time and effort and money into recreating period Berlin, and as somebody who’s actually spent some time there – and considering how much of the city was flattened, during the war – they’ve done a terrific job. They do use CGI, but it’s pretty seamless. The famous Alexanderplatz doesn’t really exist the same way it once did – Berlin Alexanderplatz is a hugely successful 1929 novel by Alfred Döblin, adapted twice to film – but it looks plenty real here, in all its prewar significance.
This
may be an acquired taste, in that not everybody shares my fascination with the
place and the time, but I think it repays your attention. It’s not a history lesson, or a documentary,
although they aren’t fudging the facts - it’s more along the lines of a fevered
dream, which seems like an entirely accurate representation.