Stuff & Nonsense 039: When the People Find Out
Hi! Thanks for stopping by. This'll be a fun one.
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I love it when an author surprises me. I don't mean that in a "wow, great plot twist" way. Though, that's always welcome. I mean when an author goes beyond expectations and delivers a book that is not only good/great, but different, thought-provoking and a notch above what's come before. That's how I feel about Laura Lippman's Wilde Lake.
Which isn't to say Lippman's previous work - 20 novels worth, natch - is anything to scoff at. I've made no secret of the fact that her Tess Monaghan books were part of the reason I'm even writing my own Pete Fernandez mysteries. She's one of a small group of writers that I will follow without question. Her books are automatic buys. So, I went into Wilde Lake expecting the usual level of quality. It went above and beyond.
I've had the pleasure of talking to Laura before and I'm grateful she took the time out of her busy schedule to chat with me about her new book, her process and her love for a certain animated series. As usual, this interview was edited for space, clarity and all that other stuff.
Laura, so I think this interview will veer away from what's now become my standard newsletter chat, if that's okay. Can you tell me a bit about the story behind your latest, Wilde Lake? What made this the book you had to write next?
I had been thinking a lot about rape. When Dylan Farrow published her letter on the New York Times website -- winter 2013? -- I found myself revisiting that event, how I reacted in the 90s when her father, Woody Allen, was accused of molesting her. At the time, I had been very comfortable with the paradigm of he said/she said/we can't know.
I'm not comfortable with that paradigm anymore. Because, if you think about it, there is a lot of stuff we can never know, but we don't shrug and say, "Well, I can't know what happened, so I won't have an opinion because the risk of harm is equal to both parties." Sure, if I were a juror, I would hold myself to the standard of a criminal court proceeding, beyond a reasonable doubt. But I'm not a juror. I'm a human being and I know some stuff. I know that the "problem" of false reporting is exaggerated in most people's minds while the problem of under-reporting -- a lot of sexual assaults are never reported to any law enforcement agency -- is quite real.
About 2-8 percent of criminal reports of sexual assault are false. God help you if you're one of the 2-8 percent and I realize the pendulum swings wildly at times, and that some colleges have over-reacted. But I decided that if 92 to 98 percent of sexual assault complaints are not manufactured, then I'll focus on those.
So when I decided that I believed Dylan Farrow, I began thinking about other cases where I might have not believed victims, initially. And I couldn't help thinking about To Kill a Mockingbird. Not because I disbelieve Tom Robinson -- he's so obviously innocent, that's the point. But the same elements, in a different time or place -- I saw how the story could play out quite differently.
The story runs very organically on two tracks, each happening in a different time, building toward one another. How challenging was it to keep everything straight? Can you share a bit about your process for writing a novel - generally, and anything specific that came up when penning Wilde Lake?
It took me quite a while to figure out how to tell this story and while I wrote a few chapters alternating between past and present, once I really understood what I was doing, I wrote one story first -- Lu's life from birth through a particularly notable funeral in the 1980s -- and then the modern-day story of a rather ho-hum murder prosecution. Then I had to write the final third of the book, which was all in the present day.
Lu Brant is a layered and realistic protagonist - she's driven and whip-smart but is also at peace with her flaws. She's career-oriented but also mindful of family. She feels very alive, which is great. What went into her creation?
A lot of me, a little Jean Louise Finch. The competitiveness, the drive, the perfectionism. And maybe some of my daughter, because she has a much older brother who means the world to her. May I tell you a really weird story? We were coming up on parent-teacher conferences recently at my daughter's school and she said to me: Mama, make sure you tell me everything that my teacher says, the good and the bad. My assistant looked at me and said: "That sounds a lot like a certain book I've read." It was really eerie, almost word for word out of my own book.
That's...pretty intense.
Now, I'm always curious about what authors are reading - in the moment and while writing. Are you a research-focused writer? Were there any books that you referenced while working on Lake? What have you been reading for pleasure lately?
A New City Upon a Hill, a very good book about Columbia, was key. I'm a very efficient researcher, and I knew Columbia well.
For pleasure, I am reading a galley of Ann Hood's The Book that Matters Most and I love it.
You've been very savvy about shifting between you're bestselling (and acclaimed) standalones and your long-running (and beloved) Tess Monaghan series. Does it boil down to you writing what you want as the mood strikes you, or do you feel like the standalones offer you the room to do new things that a multi-book series can't, by design?
I pretty much write what I want to write when I want to write it. That's an incredible privilege and I admit, I might have lost sight of how privileged I am a time or two. I'm not "pure," and if I had strict instructions to write to a certain market, I think I could do it. But I've been allowed to follow my own imagination and interests and -- well, wow.
Going back to Wilde Lake for a second: I hesitate to use the term "leap forward" here, because it's not like novel-writing is new to you, but the new book felt like you'd leveled up somewhat, like a culmination of your previous novels. For you, was it a difficult book to write? Did it differ much from the novel you envisioned when you first put pen to paper?
It took longer than any other book I had written. And it's only recently that I've begun to remember all the false starts, all the things I didn't do. Initially, I imagined a girl coming out of the lake and claiming she had been raped. A body found at a construction site. (It seemed impossible to write about Columbia and not take on development.) A man in prison who knew something about Lu's family.
I really try not to do things twice, though. So I didn't want Lu to spend time talking to an incarcerated man, that felt like a throwback to I'd Know You Anywhere. The girl emerging from the lake -- that had an echo of What the Dead Know. I've written 21 books and a collection of short stories. It's hard not to repeat myself. I let go of the development thread. I've come to realize only in talking about this book how much I resent Columbia's transformation from the place I knew in the 70s. Paved paradise/put up a parking lot would be overstating it, as I never thought it paradise, but I have a bizarre nostalgia for the deadly left-hand turn onto I-29 north. Back in my day, we didn't have no stinkin' overpass, kids.
What else are you working on these days?
I seem to have inadvertently wandered into this phase where I want to rethink, repurpose, retool beloved narratives. I'm working on a mean, lean little novel that's sort of a gender-switch of The Postman Always Rings Twice that also recognizes the very noir underpinnings of Anne Tyler's Ladder of Years. I have to work on a revision of the original book that my husband, George Pelecanos and I wrote for an original Pogues musical. And, every day, Monday through Friday, I write a new lunchbox note. My lunchbox notes are EPIC. A year ago, I don't think I had ever been inside a Michael's; today I have BINS of stickers, stamps, ink pads, paper, cards. Sometimes, my husband gets a lunchbox note.
I really hope those lunchbox notes are collected someday. It's a lost art, the lunchbox note. (Also, everything else you mention sounds amazing - A POGUES MUSICAL?!)
Ahem. In terms of other media - what have you been watching or listening to that's left an impression?
Catastrophe on Amazon Prime, although I love discussing it with my good friend Rebecca Chance, because I think she's right that there's a seed of female fantasy in it. And my attitude is: WHAT'S WRONG WITH FEMALE FANTASIES LET'S HAVE MORE OF THEM! Which is funny, because I think I used to argue with her about Jane Eyre, saying it was too much of a female fantasy, but then decided to succumb to its charms again. I loved Jane Eyre and then I didn't and now I think I love it again, and isn't it lovely to think of writing something that a person would engage with that way over a lifetime? (Well, 40 years for JE and me, which was a lifetime for a Bronte.)
I love Archer. That's the Lippman-Simon "no cheat" show; we don't watch it apart. I'm sure someone will write a very good "think" piece on why I'm wrong to love Archer, but if you rate the characters on IQ alone, Lana is clearly at the top and her only flaw is her man hands/having had sex with Archer; and then there's Mallory, who's a sociopath and a bad mother, but she can survive anything. Then Cyril and after that it's a big race to the bottom. So an African-American badass woman, an "unnatural" mother and a nerd are the most admirable characters.
Oh, I know what you mean. It's The Americans and Better Call Saul for us. Before we wind down, did I miss anything?
Did I? I probably have a few more thoughts about Archer. I am probably thisclose to writing Archer fanfic.
Please do this. And thanks for coming by! Always wonderful.
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My mini-South Florida book tour was great! Had two excellent events: a Miami launch party at Books & Books in Coral Gables - where I was introduced by the amazing Brad Meltzer (buy his new book!) - and another reading in Delray Beach at Murder on the Beach. Proud to have read at two of the best indie bookstores in the state - and honored by the response from the fans. It was nice to go back home for a little while.
In other book news: I talked Down the Darkest Street and more with fellow Polis Books authors Rob Hart (at LitReactor) and Steph Post this week. Both convos were fun. Read them, yeah? Dana King also interviewed me on his blog.
AFAR Magazine listed my Pete books as one of five "best travel mystery novels." Really high praise, and I'm in excellent company.
This was a fun event. Lovely people, lovely crowd, lovely store.
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Links!
Megan Abbott on the unexpected way a movie brought her closer to her mom. Pre-order You Will Know Me! I can't wait for my copy to arrive.
Loved this essay by Laura Lippman on the art of asking.
"Noir is protest literature."
Robin Wasserman on the seemingly endless wave of "Girl"-titled books. Girls on Fire is next on my to-read list.
A South Bronx shooting that becomes a homicide - three months later.
"The day we discovered our parents were Russian spies."
An interview with Mexico's "Queen of Cartels."
I could read "how I broke in" stories all day - and Duane Swierczynski's is particularly entertaining.
Keith Rawson on the life of a ghostwriter.
Chuck Wendig debunks even more writing myths at his blog.
How Love & Rockets broke the rules.
Am I the only person not reading Marvel's Vision comic yet? I need to fix that.
This Evan Narcisse piece on The Question - one of my all-time favorite comic runs - reminded me that he's been on an amazing hot streak in terms of his comic book writing/criticism. Wait, calling it a streak implies it's recent. Let's boil it down: Evan is one of the best people writing about comics regularly. Here are a few more examples. Decide for yourself.
Michelle Dean on why TV today is good, but not Sopranos-level great.
Does The Sympathizer's Edgar and Pulitzer wins signal the great literary convergence? Adam Sternbergh asks the question.
I will never forget listening to this Miami Heat game as a kid.
Lots of personal, heart-wrenching stuff coming from my Polis comrades lately: Rob Hart talks about his young daughter's struggles with a rare heart defect while Rough Trade author Todd Robinson discusses the end of Thuglit, and what it means for him as a writer. Don't miss these.
Until next time!