Jochem Vandersteen is the creator and master of the Sons
of Spade web site, dedicated to private investigator fiction. In
addition to being a tireless seeker and promoter of new PI fiction, Jochem is
no mean hand at it himself. His Noah Milano series, where the scion of a Mafia
family addresses his mother’s dying wish to go straight, yet can’t quite get as
clean as he’d like despite his best efforts, is as original an outlook as I’ve
seen. His Mike Dalmas stories are great pulpy fun, and a new character, Lenny
Parker, shows great promise.
Jochem has branched out into including other writers in
anthologies of PI fiction. His most recent collection, The Shamus Sampler 2, launched last
week. I can’t brag on it too much—I’m one of the contributing authors, and it
would be indelicate of me—suffice to say it’s a solid and varied look at the
genre. I read it over the weekend and can honestly say I am flattered to have
been included.
Jochem took time from his busy schedule of being Jochem to
answer some questions about himself, and The
Shamus Sampler 2
One Bite at a Time:
You’re Dutch, born and raised. How did you become so fascinated with American
private eye fiction?
Jochem Vandersteen:
I guess it all started seeing the Spenser
For Hire TV show and finding a translation of a Spenser novel in the library
the next day back when I was a kid. I loved the tough guy pairing of Spenser
and Hawk and found his views of manhood inspirational. Several years later I
became a fan of comics, horror, and sci-fi but when I walked into a bookstore
at a train station I spotted a Spenser paperback, picked it up and got hooked
again. From that I went looking for other PI books to read, having run out of
Spensers and found out it wasn’t just the writing I liked but also definitely
the genre. So I guess you can blame it all on the great Robert B. Parker.
OBAAT: Is there
Dutch PI fiction, by which I mean stories about Dutch detectives set in The
Netherlands?
JV: There is
hardly any Dutch PI fiction. In reality we have some PIs working here, but the
genre is not very popular here. Probably because PI’s here don’t carry a gun
and thrillers focusing on female writers thrive much better here. That’s why I
write in English.
OBAAT: How did
the Sons of Spade blog get started?
JV: I figured it
might serve to promote my debut novel, The
White Knight Syndrome. I soon found out PI writers are a great bunch of
guys always happy to do an interview and supply review copies. With all the
sounds of the gene dying I started a personal crusade to get people to read
more PI fiction.
OBAAT: Apart from
Dashiell Hammett (obviously), who do you consider to be the pinnacle of the PI
genre, both past and present?
JV: Of course you
can’t beat Hammett or Chandler… But as you can see from the first question I
really admire Robert B. Parker. He showed us that the PI can be a modern kind
of guy and still be tough. Without him I just don’t think there would still be
written as much PI fiction as there is now. His prose is always so lean and
mean, his characters so lively… There might have come better writers in the
genre after him, but no one has left a bigger mark.
OBAAT: What
prompted you to branch out into editing anthologies?
JV: There are a
lot of PI writers whose work deserves to be noted, but the old anthologies of
the Private Eye Writers of America that I used to love don’t come out anymore.
So I figured, why not try to publish a PI anthology myself?
OBAAT: How were
the authors for the Shamus Sampler
anthologies chosen?
JV: Some were old
friends, some reacted to my call for submission. All know how to write a lean
and mean story featuring private eyes.
OBAAT: What do
you like best about putting the anthologies together?
JV: Discovering
cool new authors.
OBAAT: What do
you like least?
JV: Not much
really. Getting people to read it sometimes feels like work a bit. I have to
say my pals Keith Dixon and Sean Dexter have been a great help getting it all
out in print. It would have been a much harder job without them.
OBAAT: You’ve
established a considerable footprint in the world of PI fiction, as proven by
your ability to get heavyweights such as Reed Farrel Coleman and Tim Hallinan to
write the forewords of your collections. How does that feel?
JV: It feels so
great to communicate with the writers I admire. Imagine an actor on a small
stage show e-mailing with Robert DeNiro… The fact writers like Reed or Timothy
Hallinan are willing to help me out shows me my work is appreciated.
OBAAT: Do you
feel the blog and the anthologies compete for attention with your own fiction,
or do they complement it?
JV: They
complement it. More lovers of PI fiction mean more potential readers for me, so
that means more reasons to write my own fiction. I do have to admit it becomes
harder and harder to find the time with all these other doings.
OBAAT: Tell us a
little about your own fiction.
JV: I write
mostly PI fiction myself such as the Noah Milano series. That one focuses on
the son of a mobster looking for redemption and working as a security
specialist to find it. I also published some pulpy hardboiled action stories in
the Mike Dalmas series and have dabbled in superhero fiction and some horror
stuff. I also have a story by myself in the second Sampler, featuring roadie /
PI Lenny Parker. Right now I’m working on a new series as well.
OBAAT: What’s
next for you?
JV: I am
currently writing the first in a new series of novellas featuring Vance Custer,
a true crime writer who is willing to investigate your case… as long as he gets
the book and movie rights.
Cool interview, stellar anthology. I'm delighted Jochem included my story in it, alongside so many PI authors whose work I enjoy reading.
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