Caroline Zancan On the Editor & Writer Relationship

Mindy:             Today's guest is Caroline Zancan, author of the novel Local Girls, as well as her latest, We Wish You Luck. She's a graduate of Kenyon College and holds an MFA from the Bennington Writing Seminars. A senior editor at Henry Holt, she lives in Brooklyn with her husband and their Children. Caroline joined me today to talk about the unique mix of art and business that is the publishing industry. 

Ad:                   This episode of Writer Writer Pants on Fire is sponsored by Personal Revolution podcasts.

Have you been stuck inside wondering how to take charge of your life? Is there something you want to do but haven't been able to yet in personal revolution? Bestselling author and life coach Alison Task help you take control of your life with inspiration and humor so that you move from where you are now to where you want to be and have fun doing it. It's like having a personal coach whispering in your ear. This three month podcast course, along with bonus episodes each month, will help you create a clear vision for what you want out of life. Remove the frustrating blocks that are holding you back. Develop a detailed action plan that will drive you to where you want to be and build the network that will help you create your future. The Personal Revolution Podcast comes with a personal workbook and real time access to a community of other change makers working toward their goals with positivity, possibility and momentum.  

And for a limited time, all of this is available to you for free. Download the Himalaya App in your app store. Look up Personal Revolution and enter promo code REVOLUTION at checkout to get your first month absolutely free. If you're ready to go after a better life, you are ready for personal revolution. Here's a sneak peek. 

Hi, my name is Allison Task and I am the host of Personal Revolution. Are you ready to be happy and do that thing you always wanted to do? Well, I am thrilled to announce that I have now made available for free the Personal Revolution Podcast course. This course is based on my best selling book, and it is now yours for free wherever you like to listen to podcasts. It includes 10 original episodes with plenty of never released before content, and then it includes a premium version. For 4 99 a month, you will get a customized workbook. You'll get access to a private community on Himalya, and you'll have just in time audio droppings from me. Again in the community on HImalaya, just go to Himalaya dot com. Look up Personal Revolution and type in REVOLUTION to get your first month for free. I'll look forward to seeing you in the community!  

Mindy:             Your new book is called We Wish You Luck, and it is very much about the creative world, creative people, how creativity and our own personal projects can become such a drive. At the same time, being very much also a story about female friendships. So if you could talk for a little bit as an introduction about We Wish You Luck. 

Caroline:          Yes, so We Wish You Luck is about an MFA program, a low residency MFA program, which means that students kind of come to campus for these residences that are 10 days long, and they come for residency twice a year. And then they do their long term writing projects off campus and kind of have, like, correspondence with Professor at the times in between. And so it's kind of a little bit like camp. It's almost like writer's camp. This novel is narrated by one class of this MFA program.

Something terrible happens to a member of their class and they only know little bits and pieces of the story through rumor, through gossip, through little bits of conversations that various members of the class had overheard. And they're kind of coming together to piece it together because, you know, they're only on campus ten days a year. 

Some of story happens off campus and in between residencies. So it's all kind of happening just beyond their line of vision and their line of knowledge until they kind of need each other to tell the story. So they end up working together to tell it instead of competing with one another the way that writers often do in writing programs. 

 Mindy:             And can you talk for a little bit about that arena of competition. Because it is there. And I think that's an interesting thing to mention. It's not only present in MFA programs, either. Obviously, that is a smaller arena. But in the broader world of publishing, competition is something that, or at least comparison, is certainly something that happens often. So if you could talk a little bit about that mindset within an MFA program, but then also in the broader scope of publishing, 

Caroline:          I have an MFA myself. And as soon as I got on the campus, it was just so apparent how badly everybody wanted to be good at this thing that it is very hard to be good at. Um, I find writing to be the hardest thing I've ever tried to do. Creative writing, storytelling. There's so many ways to get it wrong. Um, and so it's just kind of like thankless, hard thing to do, and they're on these campuses are people who want it so passionately, so badly, even though it doesn't always make a lot of money. And it can take years of working and grueling over something before it's even has a shot at publication and, you know, wanting anything that badly that's such a long shot can read bad behavior in anybody.

But at the same time, it was so clear that this impulse was coming from a good place. They wanted to write something good because they had been moved or their lives have been changed by something else that had been written beautifully written by somebody else. Anyone who's a writer, even people who aren't writers who are just readers or aspiring writers, you know, can think of a book or a poem or a set of lyrics that completely grabbed them and just shook them up as a person and completely changed who they are. And having that kind of profound experience oftentimes makes people want to have the same effect on somebody else through their writing. There is this competition, but it only comes from wanting to create a wonderful experience for someone else. 

Mindy:             Moving that then out into the world of publishing. I know that many people outside of the industry have this idea of the writer as a creature that doesn't actually exist. Completely solitary an isolated individual, that is, you know, kind of a manic creative, but also always rich. And the reality is that only 1% of published writers actually can live off of their income. So is that something that you can like address a little bit as far as competition In terms of success.

Caroline:          That's funny. Success is a funny word in writing, because what what really measures success? There's getting an agent it's so hard to do, and then getting published is really hard to do and then having it be well received critically, it's really hard to do. And then, you know a different measure of success is like selling a bajillion copies Is your goal to change one person's life by having written something beautifully that you're connecting with one soul? 

I personally write, because I just can't not. Like even if I knew no one was going to read what I wrote, I would do it just because it brings me to life in a way that very few things do. Like, there's nothing that puts me in a better mood than just like an hour of really immersed thought and work in a project that has legs. It's just, you know, sometimes the words come and sometimes they don't and a one hour session during which the words like really come, like that's so invigorating and enlivening. It's just incredible.

I would never discourage anyone from writing like, I think writing is so good for the soul. But at the same time, like there's no reason to write, except for because you have to, or you feel like you have a story to tell, or you enjoy it Like if you're doing it to get rich or to get famous, even to have it be your steady income to live. I wouldn't recommend putting all your eggs in your basket for that.

You know, I am an editor by day, and I've read so many brilliant manuscripts that are beautifully written that just there's no market for them or the publishing house doesn't have a vision for how they can break this book out to the people who want to read it. So editors are really buying books not only that, they love, what they think they have a vision for how to sell on market. Even being great is not always, like guarantee that great things are gonna happen to a book, which I don't mean at all to be discouraging. 

It's just like you have to write something, um, kind of with that in mind, knowing that you're writing it because you want to write it and there might be, you know, even if it's only a handful of people who need to hear this, you're putting it out there so that those three or five or 100 people can hear it. And in that reality and in this kind of world, you just have to think of success in different ways. 

Mindy:             It is a hard thing to say. It's a hard thing for people to hear, but it's still true, and that needs to be said. One of the reasons I blog and one of the reasons I started this podcast was because I, too, was someone you know, 15 years ago, I had this idea that if I got published, everything was going to be fine. Your life is magically changed. 

Well, you know, move forward like 15 years and you know, I am able to work from home. I am a full time writer and that's awesome. I wouldn't trade it for anything. I am not complaining, but it is a constant hustle. It is not just my book in come that is what I live off of. You know, I'm always traveling. I'm always doing appearances. I'm speaking. I am teaching. I have the blog and the podcast, those are monetized. 

Like everything. It's a constant, constant hustle, looking for contests to put your stuff into that will pay, looking for -  I do editorial work, freelance on the side. I make it, but it is constant. I think that it's important for writers to know that.

I want to pop back to something else that you said that I think is inspiring. You said that you would write anyway, you write because you have to and I love that statement. I also write because I have to. I was attempting to get an agent for 10 years. It took me 10 years and five manuscripts before I got an agent, and at one point I was like - I quit. You know, I'm gonna go, I have a bachelors. I was like, I'm gonna go get my master's in something a little more applicable so I could make a living wage and go do something else for a living and kind of give up on this dream of writing.

And so I did. I told myself multiple times I quit. But just because I quit trying to get published, it didn't mean that stories stopped happening in my head. And so once, once they were there, I might as well write them down. And once they're finished, I might as well try to get it published. And once I changed that mindset is when I became successful. 

Caroline:          I'm not surprised to hear that. I feel like that happens for a lot of people -  that's, you know, a familiar story. I also even now, having published two novels, I tell myself that the thing that I'm working on right now, like this is for me. Maybe I'll share it one day maybe I won't. I'm writing this story right now to see where it goes. I might finish it and then put it in a drawer for six months and take it back out and be like, this needs to stay in the drawer and let me go write something else or conceive of this other story and put it all together and maybe I'll decide. Okay, to show it to my agent and see what you think you know kind of go from there. But I think that if too many hands are on something to early you have too many grand, like final plans for something before it is what it is. It just kind of stops it from getting to be what it is trying to become. I think you have to kind of let something become what it is before you decide where it's gonna go, where it's gonna end up in what's to become of it. 

Mindy:             That's a great point because the actual creative process is organic. You can fiddle with it yourself. You can force things. You can, you can do certain things to make it less organic if you choose to. But the actual process itself is organic. Publishing is not. That is a business. And so as soon as you are looking at what you have produced as something that can be marketed. It has changed. It is no longer a work of art. It's a product to be sold, and that changes the way you look at it and how you interact with it. 

Caroline:          And also, like publishers, are businesses, you know. At the end of the day like, I think it is kind of the halfway point between art and commerce. There's a P&L for every book that is published by the Big Five, which isn't to say they don't care about great literature. They absolutely do. And you know they I think, you know, as someone who's part of this industry and most of my community and like my peers, my colleagues and my closest friends are also part of this community, and we are for the most majorly English major nerds

We didn't go into it as business majors like we got into it for books, and the love of books, and it's like not the highest paying industry and we're there because we love the books. But at the end of the day, like when I read a manuscript, my first question is like, Do I love it? That's always the first question. But then the second question is like, Do I know how to publish this? And then the third question is like, Does my company publish this kind of book well, or is it better suited for a different house? So it's not just, you know, which book is the one that had the prettiest writing? Uh, because it's just, you know, it is a business, and the business is kind of reacting to the marketplace. What people are buying. People don't always want quiet, beautifully written stories, right? 

Mindy:             And you were saying earlier, What determines success? What's your definition of success? And you mentioned awards and great reviews and things like that. And then you also mentioned selling a bazillion copies. And sometimes in fact, my experience, often times those are two separate things. 

Caroline:          They are. I think they are separate things. The third thing, seeing a Goodreads review or getting an email from someone being like, Oh my gosh, or instagram post its like - this book made my day or was such great company during you know, it's been a few posts like this was my pandemic reading like it kept me occupied. Like I do it to connect with other human beings. I think that it's the great connector between people who will never otherwise be in touch with one another. And so that's so largely off the page and unseen like I, if someone could be reading my book right now when I would have no idea because reading is something that generally happens in private on the individual basis. So when you do, like, get that connection or the reinforcement that it's happening, it's a really lovely, beautiful thing.  

Mindy:             Agreed. And as a writer, you get those e mails, you get those tweets, you get those instagram posts, and sometimes it can be what keeps you going through your day. 

Caroline:          Totally. Totally. It just makes you feel like Okay, somebody... I feel heard like somebody out there heard what I had to say. It's like that for me. That's enough.  

Mindy:             Coming up. Being both an author and an editor and the often misunderstood author editor relationship. 

Ad:                   This episode of Writer Writer Pants on Fire is brought to you by Canvas People. Here's a question. What do you do with all your photos? We all have a ton. If you're like me most of them are with exes or possibly dead pets. But there are some keepers, like my graduation from college, surrounded by lifelong friends. For those favorite photos, you've got to check out Canvas PeopleCanvas People print your favorite photos on canvas for really unique beautiful prints. Great for decor, the prints are like pieces of art. With Canvas People, you get your favorite memories printed to cherish and beautiful prints that look great on any wall. Get an 11 by 14 print - a 76.99 cent value - for free. All you pay is the shipping and handling. Get your own 11 by 14 Canvas People print. Just visit Canvas People dot com, upload your photo and enter the special code FIRE. This is a special, limited offer for today's listeners. So go to Canvas People dot com today and use code FIRE for your free prints. 

Mindy:             So you mentioned the pandemic. Obviously, we're all in it, and I myself follow the publishing industry pretty closely just to see what's going on. I'm really curious, like, what do you see as an editor? How do you see publishing being impacted in the immediate, obviously, but also then, like long term, What's the tail on this? 

Caroline:          I mean, it's so hard to say, because we still don't know. Everyday, it changes every day. The news is different and giving us a different timeline, publishing kind of, it feels like a very safe, comfortable, inviting group of people to work with. I trust that my company is gonna keep me safe and not call us all back to work before it's safe to get on a subway in New York City again. So I have that trust, but so I think that that means we're probably, you know, gonna err on the side of going back later. But what that means in terms of the calendar, I have no idea. 

But I can say I am impressed by how quickly we have gotten up and running just remotely. Like we're still here. We're still open for business. I'm still reading submissions. Agents are still sending submissions out, I think throughout the history of the written word and books, the way that people read and the way that people make books has changed. The format books are read and the the way that people decide which books are going to be made and how they make them is always evolving. But there I think that the way we hunger for, and that way we value stories has stayed consistent, like, I think, as a culture and a society. We've always agreed that this is something we value now more than ever. This is important, like we're here, we want to be publishing books, books aren't going away on, and we're just trying to keep up with how that looks like in practice rather than in theory. 

Mindy:             Yeah, and I'm interested to see because audiobooks, of course, absolutely exploded in recent times, and a lot of that is due to the average American commute. So with so many of us not commuting anymore, I'm really interested to see if there's a medium shift. 

Caroline:          I think it's too early to say that. There will be like short term trends and long term ones, but I'm curious as you are.  

Mindy:             So let's talk about being a writer and being an editor at the same time. What's it like being on the other side of the desk? 

Caroline:          I like to think that being a writer myself makes me a more empathetic editor. It's very vulnerable making to put your work out into the world. It's hard to really grasp how vulnerable making it is until you've actually been through it. So I'm more of a Mama bear editor, I think, having been on the other side of it, I also really love the process. Like I love the editor writer relationship on either end. Like I believe in the editing process. Some writers don't like to be edited, especially ones that are really established. 

I actually have gone the opposite way, like the further along I've gotten in my career. The more I'm like, yes, this is needs to be a group project I'm like, actually more loath to finally let go of a manuscript. Yes, this is actually ready to go out into the world they like, want to discuss it even more. Just in general, I love that back and forth between the writer and editor in the collaboration, whether I'm giving the suggestions or incorporating them.  

Zancan.png

Mindy:             My editor is Ben Rosenthal at Katherine Tegan Books, and we've been together for oh boy, I want to say six books now, possibly seven. We've been together a long time, I trust Ben. A lot of people outside of the industry and especially aspiring writers misjudge the editor writer relationship. Whenever I'm teaching or if I am doing a presentation to the general public, I generally get that question - Has there ever been anything that your editor made you change? And I'm just like, Dude, your editor doesn't make you do anything. Yeah, I mean, a real editor, anyway. I mean, I have heard one or two horror stories, but few and far between. It truly is a collaboration, and that's something that is, I think, greatly misunderstood.  

Caroline:          I mean, an editor's job's really to like to protect the writer from the public. I think more than anything, the way that I look at it, actually. Here's how this is coming across, maybe you mean it to come across this way. Here's what's on the page and here's the takeaway from it. If you want that to be the experience and you want me to have that question, great. If you didn't want me to have that question and you wanted me to know X or Y, you should put that in there somewhere. It's to me... I just want to make sure my writer's expectation of how a reader is perceiving something are absorbing something matches the way that reader actually is. 

Mindy:             And it's very easy as an author because you have a preconceived notion of what that character's motives are, what they're thinking, how they meant what they said, what their action is supposed to represent. But it might not actually be on the page. It's called Manuscript Blindness. That's something I deal with a lot. Just as a freelance editor, I will have someone say, Well, this character is supposed to be this certain way, and I'm like, Really? Cause it's not on the page. I don't see it at all. That's not how I interpreted it.

Caroline:          I feel like there's such a gap between what's in a writer's mind and what's on the page. So it's like, really, that's just what the editor's job is to close that gap. 

Mindy:             And I think too, having those relationships with your editor, it is interesting because once you've worked with someone on more than a handful of books, they know you, they know how you operate. They know your strengths and they knew your weaknesses. And without exception, every time that I have sent a manuscript off to Ben. I already know what my edit letter is going to say because I know my own weaknesses. I know what they are, but that it doesn't make it any less frustrating when I actually get the letter right and it's and it says exactly what I knew it would say. And I'm just like Mindy, you already knew that you already knew that. Why didn't you just fix it on your own? 

Caroline:          Well, sometimes, too. They are like a 1,000,000 different ways to fix something, right? So I feel like the editors job is also to be like, Here's the thing I'm noticing. Here are 10 different ways you can fix it and you can choose any one of these 10 ways. You can choose any combination of these ten ways, or you can come up with an 11th completely different way to change all that. Sometimes I as a writer at least need to like go through the 10 ways to fix it that are not the right way to land on the right way. You know, I need to, like, walk through all the potential solutions before I can figure out exactly what the fix is. Even if you knew kind of what you were saying, you knew where the problem lied in your manuscript, the conversation that exists or lies in the editor's letter back to you helps you kind of find that fix.  

Mindy:             It does. I absolutely agree. Why don't you, last thing, tell us where people can find you online and connect with you on social media and also where they can find the book, We Wish You Luck.  

Caroline:          I will start with the last part. I think the book is is available wherever books are sold or your favorite local Indy, Barnes and Noble Online. I know that a lot of the Barnes and Noble's are closed right now, but they're still definitely shipping books online. Amazon, of course. I think that there are like delays everywhere because of closing.

But I think it's more important now than ever to be buying books because you know, we want bookstores to be able to open when all this is over, even if you don't want to buy my book by someone else's book. So please buy a book that doesn't have to be mine. And then I'm on Twitter and Instagram. I'm a more active instagram er Caroline Zancan is my name is my Twitter handle and then CarolineZancan82 is my instagram handle. So please, I'd love to hear from you. And everyone stay well and reading. It's a great way to pass these weird, strange, lonely days.

Sarah-Jane Stratford On Writing About The Hollywood Blacklist & The Red Scare

Mindy:

Welcome to Writer Writer Pants on Fire, where authors talk about things that never happened to people who don't exist. We also cover craft, the agent hunt, query trenches, publishing, industry, marketing and more. I'm your host, Mindy McGinnis. You can check out my books and social media at mindymcginnis dot com and make sure to visit the Writer Writer Pants on Fire blog for additional interviews, query critiques and more at WriterWriterPants on Fire.com

Today's guest is Sarah Jane Stratford. Her first novel, Radio Girls, was based on the early days of the BBC and its pioneering talks producer, Hilda Matheson. Red Letter Days, her newest novel, continues that tradition by similarly highlighting a little known but influential woman in media set during the 19 fifties Red Scare and inspired by the real life TV producer Hannah Weinstein, Red Letter Days reveals the untold story of women who escaped the Hollywood blacklist. Sarah joined me today to talk about the inspiration for Red Letter Days and the research involved in writing about the Red Scare.

Mindy:

So your new book is called Red Letter Days, and it is all about the 1950s red scare and talks a bit about how it affected women, particularly on the Hollywood blacklist, which we've known and heard many stories about men in Hollywood who fell victim to the red scare. But as with all topics, we hear much, much less about the women. And so your new book is inspired in many ways by Hannah Weinstein. So if you would talk a little bit about who Hannah was and then also about how you came across the concept for the book and how Hannah's story drew you in, that would be great.  

Sarah-Jane: 

I love your introduction because that is exactly how I approach almost all my work. And even back when I was a student of history, it was always my question is  - whose stories are not being told? And inevitably, it was always the stories of women, stories of more marginalized people, and that was what I was naturally more drawn to. So, yeah, the case of Hannah Weinstein. She's this extraordinary woman who just deserves so much more recognition. She had initially been a fairly firebrand liberal journalist. She was a speechwriter. She worked for mayor Fiorello LaGuardia in New York, very staunch liberal, and she sort of saw which way the winds were blowing post war as the House UN American Activities Committee, it really was finding its feet. And she decamped from the US fairly early and completely reinvented herself as a producer. Came to a point where she was able to set up her own production company. And the first major program that the company produced was The Adventures of Robin Hood, which began in 1955. It's a wonderful program, it actually still really holds up. But at the time, there were a lot of people who talked about how well shot it was and how wonderful the scripts were. 

Well, behind the scenes, the reasons scripts were so wonderful is because every single one of them was written by a blacklisted writer and including it's the chief writer was Ring Lardner Jr. Who had won an Oscar for his script for Woman of the Year. He's famous if people know much about some of the Hollywood Ten's testimony before Congress. So he was one of the Hollywood 10 and when he was asked the famous question, Are you now or have you ever been a member of the Communist Party? he answered. Well, I could answer the question as you'd like me to. But I'd hate myself in the morning." 

Which is a wonderful quote, they cited him for contempt of Congress, and he went to prison, as many of the Hollywood 10 did. He was very grateful to Hannah and helped get a lot of other writers in touch with her. Um and yes. So for the several years that Robin Hood ran, it was always scripted by blacklisted writers. You know, she was determined to try and keep people's careers going at great risk to herself. If the operation had been uncovered, she certainly would have faced extradition on prison. 

Mindy: 

So she was doing this work then from London. Is that correct?

Sarah-Jane:

Yes, that's correct. The company she ran was called Sapphire Films. It was based here in London. 

Mindy:

I know that your first book called Radio Girls, was about the early days of the BBC and a woman named Hilda Matheson. So did you come across information that led you to Hannah's story while you were working on Radio Girls?  

Sarah-Jane:

No, not at all. Although it is kind of funny. First book is radio second book is television, right? It's rather unintentional, but I kind of like the way it shook out. Um, no, look, I do love me some bad ass women. So that's that connection. But no, really, what led me to Red Letter Days was immediately following the 2016 election, I was despondent, and and I got to thinking about America and American history and American mythology about itself. There's just certain things, certain stories that as Americans here, we will believe about ourselves. And you know who we are, who we've always been. And of course, you know you don't need to poke at it too hard to find all the holes. 

It got me thinking about the blacklist, which was something I do as a historian, as a cultural historian. And and it did strike me as as having some interesting potential parallels which, actually at the time thought could happen. And of course, increasingly they have been happening. I mean, it's only in the past couple of weeks that have been talk of purges from the government, which was certainly something that happened during the red scare. People were on lists. It is interesting how little does change. 

But initially I was thinking about how The Red Scare came about a large part out of fear. And then that fear was used to suppress voices of liberalism, voices of dissent, and how once that began it was very easy to spiral. And of course you know so many of us when we we think about it, we do think about what happened in Hollywood, but in fact the red scare cast a very wide net. Teachers, journalists, union members, activists. The NAACP was very widely targeted. It was very far reaching and of course, what was most effective really was the climate of fear, and that was very long lasting. It was interesting. I went back and I was looking at a contemporary footage and things. And when they were attempting to desegregate schools in the south, Ah, lot of the anti desegregation forces were carrying signs saying, No Communists. That was just always that correlation. You know that that remained the idea, you know, through the fifties and well into the sixties and really still today.

stratford.png

Mindy:

Fear is how you control people. There's no doubt. 

Sarah-Jane: 

Absolutely.

Mindy: 

I wanted to follow up with you about when you're writing fiction that is based on a real person. In the case of Red Letter Days, Hannah Weinstein, your main character, though, is only based on her. It is not actually Hannah your main character's last name is Wolfson in the book. So how do you as a writer then blur those lines between fiction and history and reality? 

Sarah-Jane:

You know, it's a little different each time and to a certain extent, as I developed the character and think about the character, I let the character kind of go forge their path. In the case of Hannah, as I was working on it, I realized for the sake of my story, I was just going to make a lot of changes and suppositions. It just felt much more natural to have her be an inspiration, rather than try and write something that skewed a little more biographical.

You know at the end of the day, I'm a fiction writer I'm not a biographer. I do think a very good biography of her needs to exist, at the same time, I'm much more about the drama. It worked better to have her be slightly more fictionalized. Now, though, there were various and sundry little details about her life that it just wasn't going to work for my narrative, particularly as I created this wholly fictional character with whom she interacts. And it was the other main character of the book. It just worked out better. But yeah, each time is a little bit different. I I try not to have and a sort of a set formula. I don't like to put myself in a box. 

Mindy:

Coming up, the challenge of basing a fictional character on a real person and the lasting repercussions of the Red Scare.  

Ad:

This episode of Writer Writer Pants on Fire is sponsored by Personal Revolution podcasts.

Have you been stuck inside wondering how to take charge of your life? Is there something you want to do but haven't been able to yet in personal revolution? Bestselling author and life coach Alison Task help you take control of your life with inspiration and humor so that you move from where you are now to where you want to be and have fun doing it. It's like having a personal coach whispering in your ear. This three month podcast course, along with bonus episodes each month, will help you create a clear vision for what you want out of life. Remove the frustrating blocks that are holding you back. Develop a detailed action plan that will drive you to where you want to be and build the network that will help you create your future. The Personal Revolution Podcast comes with a personal workbook and real time access to a community of other change makers working toward their goals with positivity, possibility and momentum.  

And for a limited time, all of this is available to you for free. Download the Himalaya App in your app store. Look up Personal Revolution and enter promo code REVOLUTION at checkout to get your first month absolutely free. If you're ready to go after a better life, you are ready for personal revolution. Here's a sneak peek. 

Hi, my name is Allison Task and I am the host of Personal Revolution. Are you ready to be happy and do that thing you always wanted to do? Well, I am thrilled to announce that I have now made available for free the Personal Revolution Podcast course. This course is based on my best selling book, and it is now yours for free wherever you like to listen to podcasts. It includes 10 original episodes with plenty of never released before content, and then it includes a premium version. For 4 99 a month, you will get a customized workbook. You'll get access to a private community on Himalya, and you'll have just in time audio droppings from me. Again in the community on HImalaya, just go to Himalaya dot com. Look up Personal Revolution and type in REVOLUTION to get your first month for free. I'll look forward to seeing you in the community!  

Mindy:

Any time you're writing a historical novel, obviously you have to do research of some type. Everything has an element that perhaps you don't even consider. So, for example, I have written a novel. It's not published, but I've written a novel that takes place in 1918 and I have a woman falling down some steps and she loses consciousness, and at one point you know people are running over to her and I have her shoe, like, falling down a couple of steps below her. And then I got to thinking about it. I'm like, Well, wait a minute. What do her shoes look like? Could they even come off? And you know I did some research and it's like, no, her shoes probably were buckled up. Um, and more than likely could not have come off of her feet when she fell down the stairs. So that was something that just this tiny scene in this little visual of this shoe sitting there without a foot in it could that actually happen? Were there any scenes like that? Any small moments where you were like, Wait, I have to go do some research on some surprising thing that I just did not expect to pop up. 

Sarah-Jane: 

It's funny because yes, so many. And then I have to stop and think, Oh, yeah, but what were they exactly? For me, research is sort of the most fun and and yet also, in many ways, the most frustrating. Because you get an idea and you love it. And then you realize that actually wouldn't happen. Curses, curses. And it tends to be less so for me these days than not, only because I do so much research before that. By the time I sit down to writing sort of more or less feel fairly comfortable with the trappings of the daily lives, those should move along pretty well. I mean, there were definitely little things. At some point in an earlier draft. I had Hannah when she was still in the states, she was in, ah, particular press club and that it was only later that I realized Oh, wait, it hadn't yet opened its doors to women by this particular time. So it would be little things like that and and of course, it evidently, by the way, you always end up some mistake, always sneaks through. And then some reader, you know, will email you and say, I love the book. You know, you made this little mistake. Ugh! Rats! 

Mindy:

Yeah. That's why I don't I enjoy writing historical fiction. If I can get away with it, I never set my story anywhere that is real. Like, Obviously you have a particular story. But I always set it somewhere else because inevitably, you have people saying like Well, you have this street running north south that actually runs west east and I'm like I don't care. It doesn't matter. That doesn't affect the story, right? But they want to tell you that you're wrong. And so I very much I will write by the facts right up until it becomes arbitrary. 

Sarah-Jane:

Oh, completely. And Peter Morgan, who wrote Frost Nixon and the Queen and other such stories. Yeah, I once went to a talk he was giving, and he said he in fact, writes the story first and then goes back, does the research. Yeah, which I thought was amazing. And I queried it, actually. But he said, You know, really, the drama must take precedence over the history, and I guess so. And I and I respect that.

Mindy:

Absolutely. So same vein - did you have any assumptions that you, any preconceived notions that you were hoping to use or some element of the story? Or just as I said any any thoughts ahead of time that when you dove into your research, you found contradicts history? Did you have any assumptions that were erroneous about the time period, I guess, Or the story itself? 

Sarah-Jane:

Not so much erroneous. It's more that certain things were surprising about some of the details of what was going on, how people were persecuted by the FBI. I guess vis a vis things like phone tapping. I got a lot of my assumptions about that based on film and television, and so I thought, Okay, well, it must be a certain sort of way. And what I was not expecting was that it was actually absolutely bonkers. You could have a situation whereby so if you had more than one phone, but all the same line, one would ring. But then the other would ring a few seconds later. And it would really clue you in that actually something was amiss. 

And then it would get odder than that. You might answer the phone and nobody would be there, which more or less tracked with what I assumed might be the case. But what did often happen was that you would answer the phone and what you would hear was a recording of one of your very own conversations that might have happened, like a few days or a few weeks, or even further back than that. And, of course, what I thought was Well, now wait a minute, if someone would obviously pick up that their phone was being seriously interfered with. And that's when it hit me. Well, yes, of course. And that's the point. Yeah, because it comes back to what we said before. It's about the fear. 

Mindy:

Yeah, so they wanted people to know. 

Sarah-Jane:

Exactly. That's how your silence, people. That's how you get people from continuing to live comfortable lives, you know? But, I mean, if if someone is always looking behind them about themselves, that they can't be looking forward, you know people are less likely to continue to be activists or engaged with any level of society. If if they're now that nervous about what may be going on, it was an eye opener. 

Mindy:

That's fascinating. So fleeing to London, then she still suffered persecution. Wiretapping. Intimidation, things like this. So I have to say I personally don't know much about McCarthy era outside of the U. S. So, like, how would that work? Were British forces doing this? Was this the FBI. 

Sarah-Jane: 

Well, this was the FBI, and it's interesting. I mean, I was thrown. That was another thing that that really stunned me when I read it. But most European governments found the whole concept of the blacklist ridiculous. And even though they themselves were not exactly pro Communist, neither did they agree with what was going on in America. And to the extent they could, they did try to protect people, but things would happen. The American Embassy would send out erroneous notifications to Americans abroad, saying, Oh, you have to come to the embassy and bring your passport. We need to check it for something or other in the hopes that they would indeed come, and then their passport would be sequestered. And even if perhaps there was not grounds to arrest them, they would effectively find themselves stateless. So various and sundry things like that were going on, and it was pretty shocking. But the British government, to its great credit, really did try and help people as much as it possibly could, but also people really had to help each other.  

Mindy: 

What's interesting to me is that, of course, the 1950s was not all that long ago, and I remember 10, 15 years ago now, when Elia Kazan was given the Lifetime Recognition Award by the ah, by the Oscar by the Academy. And I was pretty young when it happened. I used to follow film really closely, and I remember watching that year and the camera pan the audience and there were quite a few actors that were not applauding and were not standing up and were refusing to participate, and I didn't understand why. And I ended up like asking my mother, and she explained a little bit about how he was one of the people that was giving up names and, uh, reporting on other people in film and then was rewarded for that with some of these roles that he was being recognized for. It was so interesting to me because, like I said, I was pretty young and I had no concept of the blacklist and McCarthy era like it meant nothing to me. And then here, you know, 40 years later, there were still repercussions, and there were people who were refusing to participate in the celebration of this person. 

Sarah-Jane:

Oh, absolutely. He was widely unforgiven, in large part because it was generally believed that he didn't have to do what he did, right? Whether that's true or not, I don't know. But indeed, the fact remains that he decided to name names and his career absolutely soared, whereas many others who were certainly just as talented and capable as he saw their careers ruined forever. It's a complicated question. I mean, it's interesting, because a large part of my research, I read memoirs. A lot of people were fairly philosophical about those who named names, saying, You know, it's difficult because obviously not everyone had the same opportunities and comforts as others. So whereas there were some who you had some other resources and could manage, there were others who were really caught. You know, if they had young Children or, perhaps elderly relatives, all of whom were relying upon them.  

And they could get philosophical themselves and saying the names are already known. So what difference does it make if I named them? Which, by the way, was true. So they went ahead and did it for the sake of their livelihood. And yeah, and and years later, there some who were able to say, well, it wasn't the choice I made, but I understand it and others who said, you know if we'd all stuck together. But who knows? It's complicated. That's why the playwright Lillian Hellman you called her memoir of the period Scoundrel Time. So many people were indeed scoundrels, but they were made to be by a situation that, you know, forced this upon them.  

Mindy:

Yes, and it's It's very difficult to put yourself in that type of situation. A lot of people - I work with high schoolers. I worked in a high school for about 15 years, and God bless them. I love their youth and their courage. But most often they haven't had enough experience yet in the world to understand a complex situation like that. Most of them, not all by far. but very often and with younger people and some naive adults too, saying things, they'll go, well, if that would've happened to me, I would have done this or I would have done that. It's like, No, you don't know what you would have done. You do not know until you're there. You cannot say with any type of conviction how you were going to perform or behave in a high stress situation until you are in it.

Sarah-Jane:

Oh, no, completely. And you know, these people's lives were just being intruded upon every day. They knew that they were being followed by FBI agents, and they knew that, you know everything they did, you know, and any any research they did in the library, the post they were receiving you, even even the groceries they were shopping for. They knew that all of it was being scrutinized. It is very difficult to live under after a while. Yeah, it's very grating of it's no wonder relationships fell apart. You know, there were schisms between children and parents, whole families where, there were whole groups of families who you know, really never spoke to each other again. It has is very, very complicated.  

Mindy:

It is complicated, complicated situation, and it's something that I see, you know, the same dynamics are at work in different areas, always. I mean, there are different parts of the world in different time periods where there are those who have the power and then those with less power and the people that are speaking out, and the people that are trying to squelch their voices, and it's always... it's the same dynamic. We're just wearing different hats, I think. 

Sarah-Jane:

No, completely, completely. And that was certainly something I had at the back of my mind whilst I was writing, and that's something I was hoping to put across. History is never really that far away. We always do need to think about what's come before, what's happening now and how could we apply it? And what can we try to do to do better this time around because that's the one thing that history does give us. It does give, you know, we have the opportunity to do better.

Mindy:

Very much, very much. Well, and that's when my students are saying things like, Well, this is what I would have done, you know, if the Nazis came for me and I'm like, Well, hey, you might get your chance. 

Sarah-Jane:

Yeah, fantastic.

Mindy:

Last thing. Why don't you let listeners know where they can find you online and where they can purchase the book.

Sarah-Jane:

Well, of course, I always say, please purchase from your local independent bookshop. We love our independent bookshops. For people who happen to be listening. right now, we haven't discussed it but you know, we are in in the middle of dealing with the Corona virus. And of course, not a lot of people are going out shopping. But it is a good time, particularly now to try and support independent businesses. Many independent bookshops will do online orders or even in person deliveries. You know, you just need to call and ask. That would be wonderful. Got to support our local businesses. Um, as for me, I have websites. Sarah janestratford dot com I am on Instagram at Sarah Jane Stratford, Twitter at Stratford S. J., Facebook, Where all else? The book is also available from the libraries. We also we do love our libraries. 

Mindy: Writer Writer Pants on Fire is produced by Mindy McGinnis. Music by Jack Korbel. Don't forget to check out the blog for additional interviews, writing advice and publication tips at Writer Writer Pants on Fire dot com. If the blog or podcast have been helpful to you or if you just enjoy listening, please consider donating. Visit Writer Writer Pants on Fire dot com and click “support the blog and podcast” in the sidebar.

Tom Lutz on The Constantly Changing Landscape of Publishing

Mindy: Welcome to Writer Writer Pants on Fire, where authors talk about things that never happened to people who don't exist. We also cover craft, the agent hunt, query trenches, publishing, industry, marketing and more. I'm your host, Mindy McGinnis. You can check out my books and social media at mindymcginnis dot com and make sure to visit the Writer Writer Pants on Fire blog for additional interviews, query critiques and more at WriterWriterPants on Fire.com

Today's guest is Tom Lutz, editor in chief of the l. A Review of Books, a non profit dedicated to promoting writing about literature, culture and the arts. Tom teaches creative writing at the University of California in Riverside and is on a quest to visit every country in the world. 135 down, only 60 to go. Tom has dovetailed his wanderlust and passion for writing into seven nonfiction books, some on travel one on the history of slackers, another on the history of tears. His first crime novel, Born Slippy, was published in January. Tom joined me today to talk about some of the monumental changes he's seen in publishing during this decade as well as how global trade and politics affects every day artists.  

Ad: This episode of Writer Writer Pants on Fire is sponsored by Hi Fi Candle Studio

Hi Fi Candle Studio fuses music and wonderful scents together to bring you love at first light. Our wood wicks crackle when you burn them, resembling the soothing sound of an old vinyl record, and our soy wax produces a cleaner burn. Try out our debut collection to experience the cashmere berry scent of Raspberry Beret or the warm cocoa butter smell of Uptown Girl. Visit. Hi Fi Candle Studio dot com. That's H I F I candle studio and use the code PANTS at checkout to receive 20% off.  

Mindy: You're the editor in chief of the L. A Review of Books, as well as being a creative writing teacher at the University of California and a novelist yourself. So you have been in the publishing industry ins and outs for a while. My listeners are mostly made up of aspiring writers and also some published authors, so a lot of them are really interested in hearing about the industry, in general. You've been around and seen things come and go, so if you could just talk a little bit about the industry in general, where it's been where it is now and where it could be going.  

Tom: I should preface it by saying, Nobody knows anything and that includes me. It's a, uh it's an industry where things have been changing very fast for a long time. For a couple of decades now, things have been changing very regularly and very quickly. Whatever one guesses about the way things are today, they're going to be different again tomorrow. So with that caveat, obviously the big change in our lifetimes is the e emergence of Amazon as the dominant player in book distribution. What happened when that happened, is that they kind of made their mark in the world by offering books at a much lower prices than anyone else. That helped put the big chains out of business. It put a lot of small book stores out of business, help squeeze publishers profits quite a bit. They require publishers to give them a bigger discount than other distributors have in the past.

Now that I'm also a publisher, we LARB publishes books. Now we are putting out six or seven books, a year and once every couple of months. I get a notice from Amazon that the amendment they're gonna pay me for book dipping down a couple more pennies. Its a couple more pennies each never a big change. But it's always a change in their favor, and that has made everything tougher for publishers. Publishing was always a tough business to be in. Imagine if you were selling pants, just clothing stores, clothing store bought the pants and they could, at any point up for years could just send you back any of the pants that they didn't manage to sell and expect full price in return. And have you pay the shipping in both directions. So it's a very strange business to begin with, different than any other business.  

Tom: And it's always been tough for publishers to make a living. Amazon has changed the margins, and the margins were never very large. It's a tougher and tougher business for publishers to survive in, and one of the ways I think publishers have done it is by, like movie studios, relying more and more on blockbusters. If they can kind of always be looking for blockbusters. Used to be that a prestige publisher would have the majority of their list being books that the editors really cared about and a couple of books each year that would sell more copies than anything else, but maybe were not dear to the editors’ hearts. They're just the books that would support the place, the midlist books, as we call them. The books that were never expected to sell a 1,000,000 copies.

 Those books have been harder and harder to publish, and that's got mostly a bad impact on writers but maybe a good impact on readers in that lots of tiny publishers like us have popped up to pick up all of the books that the big publishers don't oh, don't publish anymore. We're publishing those books. We can't pay the author very well, but the books are getting out there. So it's the It's the best of times and the worst of times.  

Mindy: The mid list, as you mentioned, keeps feeling that squeeze, too. It's harder and harder to get published, and I know myself as a YA author. The past 15 years has just been kind of a free for all for YA. It grew and expanded incredibly, and now it is going back to the median and it's shifting. And it's becoming more and more difficult to get picked up to break in as a YA author. And it's becoming more difficult also for those of us who have been around for a while to continue to publish because, as you were saying, publishers are relying on those big black busters. And as soon as you have one book published that maybe didn't do so well, your profit and loss sheet doesn't look good anymore. They're less likely to give you a livable advance. You may not even get published if you have one book that doesn't do well. Continuing a career is very difficult now. If you're midlist.

Tom: It is. It is because a publisher can look at a book. They think - you know what this could catch on. This could be a seller. Let's let's take a chance on it. And if they do that once for you and it doesn't sell a lot, then it's very hard to get them to take the second chance. And if they take the second chance and that doesn't go over, you're kind of SOL. Tt is becoming tougher. People I know who used to get $50,000 advances on their books are getting $5000 advances. People that used to get $5000 advances are getting $500 advances, and people that used to get $1000 advances are getting no advances. At every level, things have gone down a little bit. Stephen King. Still, he's fine.

Mindy: Right?  

Tom: Yeah, The perennial sellers, the David Baldacci's, and Michael Connelly's. They're doing fine. If you're on a rack at an airport, you're doing fine and you're making a perfectly good living off the mid list, as we call it, which is, everybody else is having a tough time. On the other hand, if you're a new author and you are trying to have your first book published, it's never been easier. You can't make any money, probably, but you can, but you can if you certainly wish, you can obviously self publish. But even without self publishing, there are lots of places that are that are willing to take a risk, especially at a print on demand basis, and let you try to get your wares out there. 

Mindy: You mentioned airports It's funny how once you've been in the business a while you start to learn what are indicators of success. And getting shelf space in an airport bookstore is a definite indicator of success as well as just being out in a Kroger, a Target, a Walmart. If you get shelf space in those that is a big deal, your publisher put you out there. It's just funny to me as an author the things that you learn. So if I'm walking through a Target and I see one of my friends on the shelf, I take a picture and I text them right way like Did you know that you're on the shelf in Target? You know, and that's a huge deal. 

Tom: It's a very big deal. I mean, it's both. It's both an indicator of success, and it's a perpetuater of success because once you get into a venue like that, you're going to sell more books. Roughly 25% of all books are sold in those big box stores. If you're in there, the sense is that you're you're already in the top selling category or you wouldn't get there. I have a friend who sold 50,000 copies of her book on one day. Costco bought 25,000 and Wal Mart, about 25,000 in the same day. 

Those stores sell an enormous number of books and more books than all the independent bookstores put together. It's a major thing getting in there and the airports, as well. If you get into an airport bookstore, you're gonna you're gonna sell more copies than you possibly could any other way. 

One of the things I should say too, is that I'm you know, I started life as a literary historian. Well, I started life as a carpenter, but once I started going to school in my late twenties and then went and got my PhD, I was a was a literary historian, and I watched the kind of publishing industry in America from the 19th century through to the present. And there have been waves in which a few companies start to buy up all of their rivals. There's consolidation that means that they're getting run on a strict business basis, and they tend towards blockbuster understandings of what you should do and what they should publish what they shouldn't. 

When that happens, a bunch of little publishers pop up, and this was true at the turn of the century again in the 19 twenties. In the 19 twenties, you know, Alfred A. Knpof and his wife, they started a publishing company in their living room. Basically, Simon and Schuster were a couple of booksellers who didn't like what they were getting from the big publishers and decided to start a publishing house in the back room of their bookstore. Most of what we think of as the great literature from the 19 twenties was published by these little tiny houses, and I think that we're in a period like that now, where the little houses are publishing really interesting, great work. It's hard for it to find its full potential audience, but history will be kind to the little publishers. 

Mindy: I don't know if you saw the news just broke. Ah, maybe two or three hours ago, but Hachette Book Group, bought I don't know how many backlist but a few 1000 off of Disney Hyperion today. A little more consolidation going on. 

Tom: And that means that you have to get your ideas past the businessman. And also, you know, the other thing that's changed is that everybody has Bookscan. It tells you exactly how many copies of every book that that was ever sold. And it used to be that your agent could go into a book seller say, Oh, yeah, has his last book her, her last book did really well, especially among young people, The publisher can look at Bookscan and say, Well, it sold, 375 copies. I don't think that's really well, and, uh, we're not interested. So amazing amount of information helps the business people win the argument against the editorial people over and over again.  

Mindy: Yes, certainly. And something else that the average just reader doesn't realize is how politics and global economies can effect an author. So, for example, the cost of paper with trade embargoes in China has changed my experience as an author. I don't get as many arcs as many review copies of my books. They simply don't exist anymore. I have some. I don't have the amount that I used to have and, again, just global politics. I had a couple of Turkish foreign language deals that went belly up about two years ago because there was so much political turmoil in that country. And it's interesting to me as an artist, a writer living in rural Ohio. Political turmoil in Turkey directly affects me. Those ripples in the pond hit everyone.  

Tom: Yes, they certainly do! And of course, the paper shortage, one of the main causes of our current paper shortage, which is hitting everybody. And it's making delivery dates late and everything else. Paper shortage is a serious problem right now, and one of the causes of it is that Amazon is buying an enormous amount of paper for the cardboard boxes that they ship, not just books, but everything else to people in. They're part of the paper problem.

 Well, one other thing about the global economy. It impacts us because of desktop publishing because it's so easy. If you want to become a publisher, you can do it tomorrow. Build a book on on your computer. You can send it off to a printer on your computer. You're gonna have it. You can have copies, uh, in a matter of weeks. So it's very, very easy. And that means that piracy has become incredibly easy as well. Yes. So the very first copy of Michael Wolf's look about the Trump administration. The very first copy I saw that was on the street in Bangladesh. Somebody offered it to me a stack of books and it hasn't even been published yet in the U. S. It was the only the only way it was available was as as an advance review copy. And it was already kind of for sale by hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of kids that are running around in the traffic selling books to people on the street.  

Mindy: Wow. And that is a physical copy. An e copy is even easier to pirate. I know a lot of people don't realize, but the way the current copyright law is set up, if you find someone that has illegal download of your book available, you can send them a takedown notice and they take it down. And they are in compliance with the law by taking it down. And all they have to do is change that URL and put it up again.  

Tom: Yeah, yeah, yeah. I've found several of my books online. Yeah,

Mindy: Me too. It really is like hitting gophers at the at... the fair game? 

Lutz.png

Tom: Yeah, it's Whack a Mole. On the other hand, what are we gonna do? Quit show business? As they say, No, I'm not gonna feel right if I'm not writing and therefore we want to publish them and therefore we live with the world we're in. What most of us are doing is figuring out ways to monetize our expertise that is not strictly tied to the copies we sell of a book. A lot of us that means teaching as I do at a university, all sorts of other activities. Kind of like what you're what you're doing right now is a way to kind of monetize your expertise is a way to kind of take what you know, develop an income stream out of it. That's what kind of what what writers need to do now. This has always been true for poets. It hasn't always been true for fiction writers. Poets have never been to make a living from selling copies of poetry books. Not for the last 150 years. It's something that they're used to and we're just learning. 

Mindy: Side hustle is half my income. 

Tom: Exactly, exactly. But most of the writers I know are into multiple side hustles, and that's, uh, that's how they keep body and soul together. 

Mindy: So, speaking of different mediums, we talked about print books and paper, and we talked about E books as well, on the problem of pirating. Audio has exploded recently. So why you think that happened? And what are the pros and cons?  

Tom: I don't see any cons to it. I like to listen to books. I mean, I think it's a slightly different experience. People talk about the difference between reading in paper and reading electronically, and I don't I find that when I'm in the throes of a reading experience, but I'm really wrapped up in a book. I don't notice whether it's paper or or a Kindle or even a phone. I just I'm just kind of wrapped up in what's happening. But audio is a significantly different. It's different to listen to a piece than it is to read it. I love the audio experience in a way that I love television, and I love movies, and I love movies on the television and movies in the theater. They're all slightly different experiences.

But I'm completely platform agnostic in terms of my own enjoyment. I think that the reason that audio is taken off has to do with the fact that we have, everyone has a player in their pocket at all times. Most Americans commute at least a little. It has become a standard part of most, of a lot of people's commutes to listen to books. The Podcast Revolution has made us think more often about what's available to us to listen to rather than immediately just popping on the radio in the car. And we're in a world in which our audio experience is a is a kind of central part of our daily lives, and books have benefited from that.

Mindy: For me as a consumer in the past, before we had digital audio books, I didn't use them because I can read faster than the performer is narrating. If I were to use an audio book like a CD player in my car, obviously when I'm driving, I can't be reading a physical book. But I'm making slower progress than I would be actually holding a book and reading it. But now, with the digitals, you know I can listen to them at 1.5 speed or two times speed, depending on how fast the narrator goes. And so now I'm just destroying my TBR. I have long drives when I'm doing school visits or going to a library for an appearance or a bookstore, and I can I can listen to three novels in a week. Now the digitization of the audio book has made. It's completely changed how I consume my books now.  

Tom: Yeah, me too. I like 1.25 If you're at 1.5, you really have to kind of pay attention a long time. And you can at 1.25 you can drift a little bit. 

Mindy: Lately, I have had the experience of falling asleep on a plane while listening to an audiobook and waking up and just being like, I have no idea what's going on. 

Tom: You know, having ti backtrack, that is a downside. I mean, when you're you know, I think that experience we all have had when reading a paper book that you're flipping through pages  and you realize you've been technically reading for for 10, minutes. But you stopped actually processing it and then your eyes, they're going across lines, and so you have to go back and find where you are. That's fairly, it's easiest to do in a paper book. It's a second easiest to do in an electronic book, and it's the hardest to do. Audio wise, absolutely.

Mindy: Backtracking on audio is tedious. 

Coming up Tom's first crime novel, Born Slippy and tackling the topic of toxic masculinity. 

Mindy: So let's switch tracks and talk about your first crime novel. Born Slippy. It came out in January. So if you could tell my listeners what Born Slippy is about. 

Tom: Born Slippy is a bit of a literary thriller that's about a very, very bad man named Dmitri, it's told from close third person Perspective by Frank. He represents the kind of reader's view of things, but he's also a little bit slower than the reader. I've always liked these novels, from Tristram Shandy to Candide, to The Great Gatsby, where the the narrator is a little bit slower on the uptake than the reader. We're a little bit of ahead of the narrator, Frank Is that is that guy.  

He is fascinated by Dmitri and repelled by him at the same time. For some reason, Dmitri keeps coming by to find him and look him up over the years. And, uh, they keep a friendship going against all odds, because Dimitri is a terrible human being in all sorts of ways. A charming, sociopath. So he is charming and this and I think he's really fun character to read. We don't like those Tony Soprano, Walter White, kind of terrible people, but ah, we're fascinated by them. We stay, we stay with them, and Dimitri is kind of fun that way. So let's just say mayhem ensues.  

Mindy: Born Slippy is pitched as a provocative, globe trotting, time shifting novel about the seductions of and resistance to toxic masculinity. So what do each of these characters Frank and Dimitri bring to the page in terms of toxic masculinity? 

Tom: I was very conscious of the long history of the kind of buddy novel and the buddy, you know, if you think of On the Road and the buddy film, the main character and the sidekick and the way in which novels and films are have always been models for how to be in the world for men and boys. Sometimes models of bad behaviors was as well as good behavior. 

I was interested in thinking about how it is that misogyny gets re created. Was that there was a period when we really we thought we fixed this. Feminism came in and kind of steered us all right. And now we understand how misogyny operates and we're no longer going to do that. I mean, you know, I've had students telling me that they're not feminist, cause there's no reason to have feminism anymore. We've solved problems. Well, we know, of course, no. If we if we haven't all along the way, we know that that's not true. 

And the question is, how? How does a guy like Harvey Weinstein how does he keep showing up? He's basically my age. I grew up learning what was wrong with with that kind of man. Why didn't he learn it? And I think that one of the reasons is that through all of those years, men were being taught to be more sensitive and less sexist. At the same time, these images of unbridled's male working out of their own kind of fantasy lives on the bodies of women that just continue to take place. And we had our James Bonds in the sixties, and then we had our Tony Soprano's in the in the nineties, or in the office. So we kind of continued to have models of that kind of masculinity in front of us at all times, and I think that there's something very seductive about that. Freud would say that it's so that we can indulge in wish fulfillment fantasy all of the time, and one of the wishes is to be ultimately powerful and ultimately unanswerable to other people. 

And so I was interested in looking at this basic narrative structure. The buddy narrative and how it reinforces keeps, keeps alive fantasies of male dominance is not always the issue. That is that I don't think that's what men are looking for In a lot of cases. I probably you know, in the case of something like Harvey Weinstein, it is about dominance. But for a lot of men, it's not about dominance. It's about having what you want with no consequences, something for nothing. That's the American dream anyway, and that also functions in the realm of sexuality. 

Gender stereotypes are kind of kept alive through certain kinds of myth making, and I wanted to let these two characters run through what that all means. Frank is a guy who really would like to be a decent person. He really is trying to be a decent person at the same time that he's having these other ideas about what, how he might live. But he wants to be a decent person. He just is a little bit of a dope about it at one point. You know, I guess that this is not giving too much away. He falls in love with Dimitri's wife and decides that he's gonna rescue her. And he's completely unaware that rescue fantasy is itself completely misogynist fantasy. She doesn't want to be rescued. As it turns out, he remains blissfully unaware of that.  

Mindy: You know, it's interesting you mentioned feminism and running into the attitude in classroom situations where people say, you know, we don't need it anymore. We're all equal. It's funny. I was in college and I remember being in a classroom where one of my teachers introduced herself and and said, you know that she was a feminist and a couple of people groaned and it was mostly boys And she was like, I want to inform all of you that you are feminists, too. She said, If you're sitting in here right now with these girls sitting next to you and you don't question that they have a right to be here in this room than you're actually a feminist. 

Tom: Yes, You're the effects of the feminist before you. Yes, exactly.

Mindy: And it kind of blew all of their minds. And it was a lot of the girls were kind of hiding our smiles behind her hands. It was a good moment.

Tom: I should say to that, you know, I'm talking about the kind of idea content of this narrative that I really think that it's kind of just fun. What I really wanted to do was write what you know. Graham Greene called "an entertainment." I wanted it to be fun for readers, and part of that fun is indulging the fantasy life that I was talking about and what I'm hoping is that at some point you think - Oh, oh, I see. I see what what's happening here. I'm enjoying this in exactly the way that I probably shouldn't be. It's a multi layered experience. I hope.

Mindy: It's also the novel Born Slippy is also described as darkly comic, which is what you're angling at here. Um, that's a difficult thing to pull off. Dark humor is often misinterpreted. How do you go about approaching something as difficult as the topic from that angle of the dark humor? Because that's tough, especially in the, you know, the current climate.  

Tom: Yeah, it is. And I think that I think I solved it by having Frank be a little bit out of it. The humor is dark, but he is not himself a cynical person. A lot of dark humor has a cynical protagonist who looks at the world in very dark ways and that can be tough to take over time and can wear on you. That you, you root for Frank. You think he's not a bad guy. He keeps being taken advantage of is funny, but not because he feels the darkness of the humor. It's partly that he's doesn't quite get that, that makes it funny.

Mindy: Lastly, why don't you let my listeners know where they can find you online?  

Tom:  I have a website now. Tom Lutz writer dot com It has, You know, it's about all of my different books, about Born Slippy. has a calendar of where I'm showing up for readings and that kind of thing. 

Mindy: Writer Writer Pants on Fire is produced by Mindy McGinnis. Music by Jack Korbel. Don't forget to check out the blog for additional interviews, writing advice and publication tips at Writer Writer Pants on Fire dot com. If the blog or podcast have been helpful to you or if you just enjoy listening, please consider donating. Visit Writer Writer Pants on Fire dot com and click “support the blog and podcast” in the sidebar.