Frank Zafiro is a name I’ve been familiar with for a while,
tied into the crime fiction community as I am, but I’d never met him until this
year’s Bouchercon in St. Petersburg. Raconteur, bon vivant, man about town, former
military and retired cop, Frank’s the good when looking for an authentic voice
in crime. Unlike many with that pedigree, Frank’s writing is highly
entertaining and reads like butter.
Frank has written at least half of 26 novels and contributed
to many short story collections. For a complete listing, head on over to his web site, which also contains lots
of other educational and entertaining stuff. Bonus info: “Zafiro” is a pen
name. I’m not going to tell what his real name is, but “Azfori” is an anagram.
Draw your own conclusions.
One Bite at a Time:
First off, it was a real treat, one of my personal Bouchercon highlights in St.
Petersburg, to get to meet and spend some time with you. I write police
procedurals and have received comments about how I get most things right, but
you write police procedurals drawing
on your history as a cop. Fill us in on your law enforcement background.
Frank Zafiro: It
was a definite highlight of Bouchercon to meet you and get to hang out. It was
a blog post that you wrote that really made me feel more comfortable about
going to the conference in the first place, and then as serendipity would have
it, you were one of the first people I met, so that was cool.
I spent twenty years and a day as a cop in Spokane,
Washington (River City is a thinly veiled version of this burg), retiring in
2013 as a captain. I was fortunate enough in my career to do a lot of different
jobs and see many different aspects of the department, whether as an officer or
detective, or later as a leader. As a result, I experienced Patrol,
Investigations, K-9, SWAT, Hostage, volunteers, Dispatch…pretty much every part
of the agency. In my leadership role, I got to see beyond even the PD,
interacting with other agencies, other departments within the city, and various
elements within the community. I had good experiences and bad ones, and
(although I didn’t look at this way at the time) all of those were valuable to
me as a writer.
OBAAT: I was
familiar with your name more than your work when we met and my ears perked
right up when I learned you write a series of police procedurals set in River
City, as one might expect for an author who writes a series of police
procedurals set in a town called Penns River. What’s the scoop on River City?
FZ: Well, as I
mentioned, it’s a thinly veiled Spokane. In fact, the more I write in River
City, the less I change about geography or other aspects from the real city it
is based upon. The series itself is a police procedural with an ensemble cast.
The first book, Under
a Raging Moon, was purely patrol
level (which is fairly uncommon in the genre), but the net has since widened as
the series has progressed, first to include detectives and some mid-level
brass, and now the entire breadth and width of the agency from the chief’s
office on down.
That said, there are a few characters that have primacy, and
the core character of the series for me has become Officer Katie MacLeod. She
definitely has a supporting cast who play large secondary roles, but since book
#3 she’s definitely who I’d say is the main character. Other big players
include the veteran patrol officer Thomas Chisolm, Detective John Tower, and
Lieutenant (spoiler alert: he is
promoted in book
#5) Robert Saylor, among a host of others.
Since these are written in third person with multiple viewpoints,
the reader gets to see what is happening from a variety of perspectives. As the
series progresses, the reader also gets to see the development and changes
these characters go through, and to share their history.
Essentially, I want the reader to feel like s/he has had a
career at RCPD, and has seen all that has happened around them.
OBAAT: There
definitely ain’t no flies on you. Your web site lists 26 novels and
18 anthologies contributed to. In the past three weeks alone, Book 5 of the
River City series (The
Menace of the Years) dropped, Book 3 of your Ania series was
re-released (Closing
the Circle) and a new series of novella was announced. Plus you
do monthly podcasts.
How do you balance all of this?
FZ: Meth.
No, not really. Coffee, though.
After I retired from law enforcement, I spent about four
years teaching leadership in a national program that took me all over the US
and Canada (including your old stomping grounds). This was great for both
personal and professional reasons, but it did take its toll on my productivity.
I hung up my PowerPoint clicker for good back in December of 2017, which
allowed me to write full time. With that being my primary focus, I’ve been able
to get a lot more work done.
Also, my first novel was published in 2006, so some of those
numbers have been accomplished more though longevity than rapid writing.
Sometimes I do have to take a step back, however. I put my
podcast on hiatus during the summer months in order to spend more time with my
wife (she’s a teacher).
I guess the simplest answer to your question about balance
is simply to be aware, and to manage my time.
OBAAT: You’ve
worked on several collaborations with other authors, so you must enjoy the
process. Tell us a little of how that works, how the process differs from
partner to partner, and what you like best about it.
FZ: You’ve
exposed another reason for the number of books I’ve written – I cheated. Eleven
of my books are co-authored, and a twelfth will be published by Down & Out
Books next year. When you only have to write half a book to take credit for
having a whole book published, it sorta skews your numbers!
My first collaboration was with my friend and colleague, Colin
Conway. We wrote Some
Degree of Murder together, and
set it in River City. At the time, we set the book ten years ahead of the most
recent RC book I’d released (Heroes
Often Fail, set in 1995). The format was a dual first person narrative
with alternating chapters. In other words, I wrote one character (a police
detective) and Colin wrote the other (a mob enforcer). We both wrote in the
first person. I wrote a chapter with my guy, then he wrote one with his. As
such, the reader gets the intimacy of the first person, but a wider viewpoint
than in traditional first person books.
This format has actually served me well. Jim
Wilsky did the same thing in our Ania novels. Eric
Beetner and I went this route with our Bricks & Cam Job series, and Bonnie
Paulson and I stuck with it for The
Trade Off.
But Lawrence
Kelter wanted to go with a single POV in The
Last Collar, so I gave it a go, though not without some apprehension. I
was concerned that two writers penning a single first person voice would end up
sounding schizophrenic. In the end, though, our styles blended well to create a
singular voice. We went the same route in Fallen
City, though with multiple, third person viewpoints. That worked so well that
I was happy to use that same format with Colin in our newest book, Charlie-316 (due in 2019).
To date, I’ve collaborated with five different authors on
twelve books. Four men, one woman. They hail from New York, California, Texas,
Idaho, and Washington. Pretty varied group, but they all have one thing in
common… great people. And that made the process an absolute joy. In each case,
it was akin to those writer meetings over coffee that always have you coming
away jazzed up and full of positive writer energy. I enjoyed the entire
process, from the planning, to the writing, to the revisions. All of us were
very good about putting egos aside, or at least subordinating ego to story, so
I don’t recall a single argument. Disagreements and discussions, sure, but all
of it focused on bettering the book.
I wrote about become a collaborator in a D&O
blog post, if people find that process interesting. I also
interviewed all of my collaborators in an episode of Wrong
Place, Write Crime, if readers want to get their take on how it all
went down.
OBAAT: I came
across the Ania series while researching this interview. It sounds fascinating,
a main series character who moves through stories that are the schemes of
others, carving out her own niche. How did you come up with the idea?
FZ: Actually, I’m pretty sure Jim Wilsky came up
with the idea for the first book, Blood
on Blood, once we decided to
write a novel together. We put some meat on his bare bones idea, but the
initial story wasn’t about Ania. It focused on two half-brothers who were
cooperating and competing to find the loot from their father’s last heist. Jim
invented Ania in an early scene with his character, and as the story grew, so
did her role. It was a classic case of a character refusing to be ignored and
ultimately hijacking the book, or at least part of it.
Once we finished the first book and started talking about
our next one, we realized that she was the thread that would connect the
series, even though she wouldn’t be the one actually telling the tales. Her POV
is only shown a scant few times throughout all four books. Instead, we see her
through the eyes of the two protagonists, and in each book, those two
protagonists are different – Mick and Jerzy in Blood on Blood, Cord and Casey in Queen
of Diamonds, John and Andros in Closing
the Circle, and Boyd and Hicks in Harbinger (due December 2018). This keeps the
air of mystery around the character of Ania, and allowed us a lot of freedom in
setting up each new locale and story.
OBAAT: You and I
share several things as writers. We collaborate with the James Brown of crime
fiction, Eric Beetner (he does all my covers); we both contributed to Lawrence
Keltner’s Back Car Business
anthologies (me in Volume
1, you in Volume
2); we both were selected for Thuglit anthologies (you in Hardcore Hardboiled, me in Blood,
Guts, and Whiskey), we both write for Down & Out Books, and we both
revere Ed McBain and Joe Wambaugh. (I just finished reading McBain’s Tricks) last night. What sets those two
apart from the rest for you?
FZ: Well, Wambaugh
for a couple of reasons. One, he really pioneered the cop-to-writer persona. He
made it something legitimate, and if someone looks at my series and gives it
some credibility because of my background, that’s because Wambaugh forged the
way. Secondly, he wrote about cops the way they really are (I mean, a little
dramatized, but still accurate), and he made that okay, too. In my River City
books, I strive to show the reality of being a cop to the reader. Sure, it is
amped up and all of the exciting things seem to be happening to a small cast of
characters, but outside of that, it is very realistic. Wambaugh not only made
that okay, but attractive. He essentially created a sub-genre of the police
procedural – former cops writing realistic police fiction.
I think McBain’s ability to build a department with
recurring characters and take the reader on the long journey with those
characters really stands out. It has definitely inspired me to try to do the
same thing with River City.
Right up there with McBain and Wambaugh, I have to say
Lawrence Block is an inspiration when it comes to recurring characters. The
lessons from his Scudder novels are valuable for me in my Stefan Kopriva
mysteries, but good writing like his applies across the boards.
1 comment:
Great interview, Frank, and I'm glad you're still writing great novels. Keep them comimg, my friend..
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