Eryk Pruitt is someone I’m proud to know. Writer, filmmaker, bar owner, and raconteur, theirs is always something going on with him that’s worth knowing about, which means it’s worth talking about. Eryk’s newest book, Something Bad Wrong, drops this month from Thomas and Mercer. I was lucky to score an advance copy and I can say with confidence that, much as I enjoyed his previous work, he’s taken a step to the next level here. I could go on for a while about this book, but it’s always best to let the writer do it, and no one can explain Eryk’s thought processes better than Eryk.
One Bite at a
Time: Welcome back to the blog. It’s been a while. Tell the readers a little
about the story in Something Bad Wrong. Great title, by the way. (We’ll get
to the background behind the book in a minute.)
Eryk Pruitt: Something
Bad Wrong is the story of Jess Keeler, a woman who once aspired to be a
journalist until life gets in the way. Then, after the COVID pandemic, while
reevaluating her career choices, she stumbles upon her grandfather’s notebook
and discovers he was once a legendary local lawman who was haunted by his
inability to solve a sensational crime. In attempting to finish what she
started, she uncovers a trove of family secrets that threaten to tear their
community apart.
OBAAT: I’m a huge fan of your podcast, “The Long Dance.” How much of what you learned from that investigation found its way into Something Bad Wrong?
EP: Thank you
very much, Dana. I think the biggest effect that producing the podcast had on
my fiction was my access to real police work. Previously to that experience, my
fiction had primarily focused on the exploits of criminals, because criminals
were all that I had been exposed to. After working on “The Long Dance” for two
and a half years next to (retired) Major Tim Horne of the Orange County
Sheriff’s Office (NC) I learned not only how investigators work a case, but
also how investigators balance real life scenarios. Tim sent me to DNA
collection classes, allowed me to process a (manufactured) crime scene, and
enrolled me in the local citizen’s academy. Because of all of this, I was able
to feel more confident writing about the other side of the law for once.
BAAT: What was the trickiest part of working the podcast into a novel?
EP: Anyone who’s listened to “The Long Dance” knows there are some pretty insane twists
and turns in the story. The craziest part is that we never would have included them if they weren’t true. So when it came time to loosely adapt these events into fiction, there were so many real life incidents that were cut from the book because it would require too much suspension of belief for audiences to buy it—EVEN THOUGH THEY REALLY HAPPENED!!!
EP: I was
always fascinated by the storytelling in the podcast “Serial,” and wanted to see if there was a way
I could engage an audience in a similar way. The stories of Patricia Mann and
Jesse McBane, which were the foundation of “The Long Dance,” is a crime that,
many years ago, shocked my community. The more we researched it, the more we
felt it was a duty to try and tell the story, bring it to a wider audience, and
tell it in the right way.
EP: That's a
really good question, Dana. We live in the age of Wikileaks and #TimesUp and
#MeToo, which is supposed to make it that much more difficult for people to
behave poorly without being called out. In so many of these cold cases from
decades gone by, the bad actor wasn't necessarily some master villain or evil
genius, but just some asshole whose bad deeds never got publicly exposed. The
villain in Something Bad Wrong had lived his entire life as an asshole,
terrorizing co-workers and women and innocent bystanders, but was allowed to
keep on keeping on because [spoiler redacted]. However, if someone had
documented or exposed this behavior, then perhaps the victims would still be
alive. But that's the way it was for men/women in the days gone by. They were
allowed to act up with very few, if any, repercussions.
EP: By throwing
elbows. There are a lot of things competing for that time, focus, and energy,
and I make sure to defend that time vociferously. It’s what I’ve wanted to do
since I was a little boy and sometimes it takes reminding that the whole reason
I do anything else is to do that.
EP: It was kind
of a mutual idea. I had wanted to do a quarterly through the bar, mostly
because my community of Hillsborough, NC, is such a fervent supporter of the
arts. They pack the house for our Noirs at the Bars. They tip very well
to musicians. They buy the art off our walls. So I wanted to give back to the
writing world by bringing them to some new and passionate patrons, as well as
provide my friends at the bar with some highly entertaining stories.
EP: It was
great to get away. I had once tried to live in Ireland after college and
experienced that country alone as a penniless ex-pat. It was nice to go back
with a bit more of a budget and with the wife. Some of the biggest takeaways
cast our own country in a darker light, and I spent a lot of my focus studying
their War for Independence as well as their Civil War. Irish history is so
fascinating to me and how they overcame centuries of oppressive religious rule,
only to be thrust back into conflict with each other, is a huge lesson that I
doubt our country can learn by example. We’ll see…
EP: My awesome
publishers at Thomas & Mercer have contracted me for a follow up book to Something
Bad Wrong which they intend to be published in the Spring of 2024 which
means I need to get back to work now.
1 comment:
Enjoyed the interview. Also, I was able to obtain an ARC of Something Bad Wrong and the mysticism behind why some writers and novels receive such high praise and other deserving ones fall beneath the radar is quite something to ponder.
Something Bad Wrong has been one of the best novels I've read in some time and maybe it is still early, but in my opinion, it is not receiving the accolades it deserves.
Not only that, when I hear the cries of how "Peak TV" is behind us and see all of the re-boots of old programs, I want to swat producers in the noggin with books like this that are screaming for dramatization. This book would make a tremendous movie or limited series.
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