Among the
treats of writing crime fiction is getting to meet and become friends with
people like Les Edgerton. He’s a raconteur, gentle and generous soul, and hell
of a writer who always has something going on. What that is one never knows.
Les has written noir (The Bitch is as
good a classically-oriented noir book as I’ve read in years), comedy that’s
actually funny (The Genuine, Imitation,
Plastic Kidnapping), and books other writers keep near their desks for the
wealth of writing advice in them (Hooked:
Write Fiction That Grabs Readers at Page One and Never Lets Them Go). That list
scratches the surface; there are over fifteen others listed on his Amazon author
page.
These days,
he's working on a memoir, a new writer's how-to, several novels, several
nonfiction projects, and appearing at various workshops. He invites readers of
his work to contact him. His contact info is on his blog at www.lesedgertononwriting.blogspot.com/
and he has a website at www.lesedgerton.net. His newest release, Bomb!, dropped on March 20 and is why he’s
here today. (See what I did there? Bomb? Dropped? That’s two weeks in a row.
Yay me.)
One Bite at a Time: Tell us about Bomb!
Les Edgerton: When criminal genius Charles
"Reader" Kincaid accidentally alerts a retired
cop to the impending
commission of the perfect crime, the crime becomes a lot less perfect. The plan
is to wire a prominent banker with a remote control bomb and thereby capture untold
millions from a dangerous drug czar. Or is the plan something else? The plot
thickens as hidden family connections come to light and who is betraying
who—and why—becomes a matter of life and death for perpetrators and victims
alike. With wry wit and first-hand knowledge of the underworld, author Les
Edgerton unleashes a cast of quirky characters and dark ambitions that collide
in a tale nothing short of explosive.
OBAAT: Readers love to ask where authors get their ideas and
most authors reply with something along the lines of “we’re tripping over them.
The trick is to find the idea that works best for me.” What made this idea
worth developing, and how much development from the original germ was required?
LE: I came up with the crime first and then figured out who I
could get to pull it off. I sit around dreaming up perfect crimes all the time.
Have a bunch of them at present—all for sale… I’ll give you an example. I have
the perfect way to murder someone and not get caught. If you had someone visit
you or vice versa, for a meal, and drugged them, and when they were out, injected
them with the rabies disease, say with a tiny puncture between the toes or in
their butt—something they wouldn’t notice when coming to, when they finally
learned they had the disease it’s too late to cure. I’m using that in a book
I’m currently writing…
You hit upon
something that exists—that “ideas” thing. I feel the reason many writers never
finish their novels is that they hadn’t thought about it for long enough. They
have perhaps a glimpse of an idea, but it’s just not close to being realized.
They probably have what Blake Snyder called “the smell of the road at dawn”
kind of image. The start of an idea,
but that’s all they may have. The thing you might tell Letterman once your
novel is out and he asks where you got the idea. But, that’s all. For me, it
has to germinate for years in my mind before it’s ready to become a novel. At
that “smell of the road” stage, it’s just an image. A t-shirt. Just not ready
to become a novel.
OBAAT: How long did it take to write Bomb! start to finish?
LE: First draft, about four to five months. But, I wrote two
complete rewrites for my agent and then another three or four complete rewrites
for my first publisher. Each of those took at least a couple of months to do.
OBAAT: Where did Reader Kincaid come from? In what ways is he
like, and unlike, you?
LE: Reader is kind of a guy I’ve been at times. Long time ago…
OBAAT: In what time and place is Bomb! set and why was this time and place chosen?
LE: It’s set mostly in New Orleans and the surrounding
countryside and the time is the early 80’s.
OBAAT: How did Bomb! come
to be published?
LE: That’s a long, convoluted story! Rather than repeat it,
I’ll just refer folks to the material at the beginning of the book as that
tells it in detail.
OBAAT: What kinds of stories do you like to read? Who are your
favorite authors, in or out of that area?
LE: I like to read… good writing. All genres. I have literally
dozens and dozens of writers I love. I always hate to list any because I always
leave off people I greatly admire and just forgot at the moment and I don’t
want them to feel slighted.
OBAAT: What made you decide to be an author?
LE: When I was five, I read my first book and decided then I
wanted to be a writer. I’ve never wavered or had any other goal or dream. At
the time, I thought I could write a better story than the one I read (it was
something by Guy de Maupassant) and I couldn’t then, but I think I’d come close
now.
OBAAT: How do you think your life experiences have prepared you
for writing crime fiction?
LE: Beautifully! Great question. As I said, I’ve wanted to be a
writer my entire life and I remember thinking when I was very young that if I
got lucky, I’d end up being 80 and sitting in a nursing home with that blanket
over my lap… and at that point, all the money, cars, houses, possessions, in
the world would mean very little, but what would have meaning would be
memories, so my entire life has been a quest to attain memories. And, that’s
exactly what I’ve tried to do. As far as crime fiction, I was an outlaw for a
long time and did a lot of criminal things which were all an adrenaline rush.
Spent a couple of years in prison and I knew I’d end up there but it never
bothered me. Just more material.
OBAAT: What do you like best about being a writer?
LE: Creating stories that get people’s attention and affect
their emotions. I don’t care if they laugh, cry or whatever, just so long as
they have some emotion when reading my work. A stone-faced reader is not my
idea of the person I want reading my work.
OBAAT: Who are your greatest influences? (Not necessarily
writers. Filmmakers, other artists, whoever you think has had a major impact on
your writing.)
LE: Mostly writers. A great many have influenced me and I
can’t name them all, but chief among them would be Camus, Sartre, the
aforementioned Du Maupassant, Honore Balzac—most of my early influences came
from my grandmother’s library when I was very young and I just loved their
writing. All except Dickens who I always thought was boring. Took too long to
get to anything good… Camus is my biggest influence. I’ve always wanted to challenge
his talent and just can’t.
Other people
play a role in influencing me. Gordon Ramsey, for instance. If you watch his
shows, and just pretend he’s talking to writers, he’s telling us what we’re
doing wrong and how to fix it. It’s always the same. With chefs, usually the
food sucks. If he was talking to writers, he’d just say the writing sucks. Or,
the restaurant isn’t clean. To a writer, he’d probably say their manuscripts
are sloppy and improperly formatted. I think he’s one of the truly great writing
teachers.
OBAAT: Do you outline or fly by the seat of you pants?
LE: Oh, outline for sure. If I wanted to drive to Adak,
Alaska, I’d grab a map and if I want to write a 350-page novel, I want a map as
well. I suppose I could get there by just driving, but just seems like I’d
waste a lot of time and gas. However, I don’t outline like most people probably
do. None of those Comp outlines with Roman numerals and all that crap. My
outlines consist of a total of 15 – 20 words and five statements. The first statement
describes the inciting incident, the next three the three major turns most
novels make, and the fifth, the resolution. The outline I use fits just about
all forms. I used the same outline to write a short story, a novel, and a
screenplay—all the same story. It gives me a sound map and a lot of latitude.
When I used to be a pantser, it’d take me a year or longer to write a novel.
Using my outline, I can now write a better one in a third the time. Just makes
sense to me to use one.
OBAAT: Give us an idea of your process. Do you edit as you go?
Throw anything into a first draft knowing the hard work is in the revisions?
Something in between?
LE: I hardly ever rewrite except when an agent or editor
requests it. Dana, I’ve been doing this for so long, I can just write a novel
without trying to remember hundreds of details—it’s all just there and I just
have to write it down. I have to think about a novel for about ten years before
I write it. When it’s ready to be written, I’ve already done all the hard work
and I just have to sit down and type. That doesn’t mean when I finish a novel I
have to think about one for ten years! At any given time, I’ve got six or seven
novels rolling around in my head and they’ve been there for years and years. To
be honest, I don’t do a lot of the things I advise my students to do. I don’t
think it would work for most of them (could be wrong!), but it does for me.
OBAAT: Endings are hard and can make or break a book. Americans
as a whole tend to like happy endings, and those are the books that tend to
sell best. What do you look for in an ending?
LE: I don’t know if that’s a fair statement, Dana—about
“Americans as a whole…” I think we’re a pretty diverse people. The folks who
like happy endings I think are the same ones who like movies better than books
and commercial fiction better than truly good fiction. Granted, there are a lot
of those folks, but I don’t think that’s a particularly American trait. I think
the same kind of people are in every culture. And, it doesn’t matter to me. I
don’t write for most folks. The ending I end up with is the only ending that
makes sense to me for the characters. My only requirement is that it not only
be true to the character but that it has to have both a win and a loss for
him/her. I like Flannery O’Connor’s description of the perfect ending—that it
be a complete surprise at the time for the reader, but upon reflection, the
only perfect one.
OBAAT: Who is your intended audience?
LE: My twin. Someone who’s read the same books as I have, seen
the same movies, is the same age, has the same life philosophies, same life
experiences, etc. My twin. If I ever approached an audience any differently, I
think I’d end up not trusting the reader’s intelligence to get it because I
wouldn’t be using the same shorthand I do with someone I know very well. If
some get it and some don’t, I don’t care. The readers I trust will. The rest
really don’t count. There are plenty of other folks they can read. My readers
are extraordinarily smart. I’m very proud of my readers. Nary a one of them
move their lips while reading.
OBAAT: If you could give a novice writer a single piece of
advice, what would it be?
LE: Sit your ass down and write. And read everything you can
get your hands on. I’ll borrow Jim Harrison’s wonderful advice for the same
question. He said that if you wanted to be a good writer, to read the whole of
Western literature for the past 400 years. And, then, time permitting, the same
period of Eastern literature. For, if you don’t know what passed for good in
the past, how can you know what passes for good today? Seems to me to be
perfect advice. I read 5 – 7 novels a
week and have for most of my life. I’ll never read the whole of literature but
it won’t be for lack of trying.
OBAAT: Generally speaking the components of a novel are
story/plot, character, setting, narrative, and tone. How would you rank these
in order of their importance in your own writing, and can you add a few
sentences to tell us more about how you approach each and why you rank them as
you do?
LE: Really only two I much consider—character and story. There
are only two rules to good writing. 1. Be interesting, and 2. Be clear. The
most important is the first. Tell a good story. Everything else will fall into
place if you can do that. Plot is necessary but kind of overrated, in my
opinion. After all, there are only 6 – 8 plots, depending upon whom you talk
to. It has to be there, but I wouldn’t waste a lot of time studying it. Plot is
easy—it’s just a series of causal actions that the protagonist takes to resolve
his problem against increasing obstacles. Setting can (or can not be)
important. It’s secondary, in most cases, to the actual story. And narrative
and tone are just the writer’s voice and my views on that are in my first craft
book, Finding Your Voice. I wrote a whole book on that subject, but it all
distills down into… be yourself on the page, Honey, warts and all.
OBAAT: If you could have written any book of the past hundred
years, what would it be, and what is it about that book you admire most?
LE: That’s easy! Camus’ The
Stranger. It’s the most perfect book ever written. In fact, I keep
rereading it because I’m convinced that Camus wrote it under the influence of
an Eastern philosophy—that you always include a flaw on purpose in any work of
art, so that you didn’t challenge God. There’s a flaw in it somewhere, but I’ve
yet to find it. If there isn’t, we might as well all give up… The primary thing
about it for me is the powerful emotion it arouses in me. Camus did it better
than anyone with something powerful—he didn’t elevate the prose or shout it
out—he turned down the volume. It affected me deeply when I first read it and
since I’ve re-read it half a dozen times each year for fifty plus years, it
still affects me deeply.
OBAAT: Favorite activity when you’re not reading or writing.
LE: Wow. I don’t do anything except read or write these days.
Well, I watch a handful of sports teams I love and follow—the I.U. Hoosier
basketball team, the ND football team, and the S.F. Giants baseball team. Other
than that, I read and write. Seven days a week.
OBAAT: What are you working on now?
LE: About six or seven new novels and other books. I’m blessed
with ADD, which is a fantastic thing for a writer, as it allows me to
compartmentalize and totally focus on each project. I get a lot done, because
if I get bored or whatever with one book, I just close the file and pull up
another one and there’s no wasted time. I don’t believe in that myth called
“writer’s block” so I’m able to get a lot done. Writing’s a job, like any
other, and I’ve never heard of a plumber getting “plumber’s block” or a brain
surgeon getting “brain surgery block” and I’m pretty sure there’s no such thing
for writers either. I think it can be a great excuse for not doing the work
sometimes… I think that sometimes writers want to have written a book, but as
far as doing the actual thing… If I feel like being lazy, I’d rather just pull
out a bottle of Jack and… just be lazy… Call it what it is, rather than make up
a kind of pseudo-intellectual affliction…
Just got back
from four days in Iowa, researching material for a rewrite of a baseball book I
wrote years ago. The market for it has just ballooned and we think it’ll be a
very big seller, so working on that as well as several novels and final edits
for a memoir.
Thanks so much
for having me on, Dana! It’s always a gas!
OBAAT: As always, Les, the pleasure was mine.
8 comments:
Gotta love Mr. Edgerton, although I can tell you first hand there is something else he loves to do when he's not reading and writing: talk. The man can tell stories until the bartender throws you out.
Oh hells, yes. Les is a raconteur extraordinaire. He's the closest person I know to The Most Interesting Man in the World. ("Local pubs turn into after-hours clubs just for a chance to listen to him.")
Nice job on both ends...thanks for the post...
Jack doesn't tell the Paul Harvey "rest of the story." Truth is, when he and I are together we're usually in a battle to top the other guy... which he usually wins! And, Jack? When was the last time a bartender wanted to throw us out?
Only problem with Jack's stories is you know there's gonna be a redheaded gorgeous babe in there somewhere... I don't think Jack is even aware there are blondes and brunettes... not in his world...
I'd love to tell you guys about the time in West Hollywood when Jack and I...
Thanks for the opportunity here, Dana.
Blue skies,
Les
Always a pleasure, Les, and I mean that in the literal sense, not in the "always a pleasure yadda yadda yadda and I say this to everyone because it sounds sincere" sense. You're a treat.
As for Jack, well, just don;t wear the red wig next time you two room together and everything will be fine.
Such an interesting guy. So happy I got to meet him in Raleigh.
Oh, brother, Les ... The Stranger was a big influence on me as well ... did you see the book from a year or so ago that picks up on the case (the Mersault Investigation) Fascinating stuff. I reviewed it here: http://temporaryknucksline.blogspot.com/2015/08/the-meursault-investigation-preview.html
I'm in big agreement with the reading for writing ... I continue to try to catch up ... damn election year getting in the way of reading big time. All best.
Wow, Charlie--I was completely unaware of that book! Gotta get it right now... as soon as I run over to your review and read it. Thanks for the tip!
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