T Jefferson Parker answers questions about his books and himself, and reveals what the "T" stands for.
When did you first decide to become a writer?
My "Mythology and Folklore" teacher in high school hated our class because we
were troublemakers. One day she refused to teach us, and made us each close our
eyes and pick a book out of a box she'd brought from home. We were to read
silently all period. I got Catch 22 by Joseph Heller and I read it in a few
days. I couldn't believe how funny it was, how hip and right-on. I told myself
that if I could ever write something that would give someone 1/1000th the
pleasure that Heller gave me, I'd be proud.
Where do your plot ideas come from? What inspires you?
The plots usually take shape in the writing or outlining stage. You create
them, like a carpenter laying the foundation of a house. It's a gut feel,
whether the story is good and the plot is right. I'm inspired by everythingthe
front page of the LA Times, a weird dream from the night before, an interesting
story told by a friend, or even sitting at church. Snippets of conversation I
overhear, things I see and experience, life itselfthe mind drifts, hatching
disastrous plots. But I'm inspired most of all by novels. There's something
about a good, I mean a very good, novel, that sings straight into my heart.
You have written many different kinds of characters but they all seem to
share one thingthe loss of someone close to them, either through death or
divorce. Why do you think this loss is a key factor in the makeup of your
characters?
Loss just seems to me such a common, universal thing. I mean in the end
you're stripped of everything, even your heartbeat. And along the way you will
lose many, many things. No one is immune. Everyone can understand it.
Why does Southern California provide such prime locations for your novels?
Orange County is the most densely populated county in California, home to
people who live in poverty as well as billionaires. It has a long history as a
place for entrepreneurs, "visionaries", hustlers and the like. Government is
very friendly to business. Business basically runs the government, so the
government is often corrupt. My book, Silent Joe, deals with the bizarre
marriage of commerce and government in Orange County. Laguna Beach, in
particular, is a pretty little coastal town, and when I first moved there years
ago it inspired Laguna Heat and then Little Saigon. I still write about Laguna
Beach, even though I don't live there anymore. My latest novels feature San
Diego because I've moved nearby. I've found that city equally fertile ground for
ideas. There's a real energy in SoCal, a real buzzpeople are high energy, and
feel very entitled to pursue their happiness with absolute vigor. Sometimes it's
comic and sometimes it's criminal. Either way, plenty of good material.
Will we see more Merci Rayborn novels, or have you plans to turn any of your
stand-alone novels into series?
Good question, and one which everybody asks. I thought Rayborn was a rich,
challenging, still immature character and that she was left at the end of The
Blue Hour in a rather precarious circumstance which is why I wanted to continue
her story in Red Light and Black Water. While I loved writing those three
novels, right now I'm satisfied that her story has been told.
I particularly enjoy writing stand-alone novels. Stand-alones demand a
different kind of storytelling from a series novel, perhaps more complete than
what is required for the episodic nature of a series. Right now, I don't plan to
turn any of my previous novels into series but, as so many other authors have
said, if one day I find those characters speaking to me, then I'll have to
change my mind.
Your novels have touched on pretty heavy stuff, like the Vietnam War,
immigrants, police corruption, local politics, right wing extremist groups,
child molesters, rapists, cancer, death, divorce. Is your intention to make a
social or political statement with your novels?
No, not really. I write about those things because I'm interested in them. I
don't lecture or pontificate or make statements on those subjects, but I hope to
make people think about them. Making people thinkI think that's more valuable
than rendering an opinion.
Your very first book, Laguna Heat was a bestseller and made into an HBO
movie. How did you handle that kind of instant success?
I was so young and dumb I thought that every book was a New York Times
bestseller and got made into some kind of movie or TV program. I glided along on
that handy belief until Little Saigon was published three years later. No
bestseller. No movie. Critics hit it hard. Luckily, I was off and running on a
new book by then, which became Pacific Beat. One of the beauties of writing a
novel is that it can be consuming. You just don't have time to worry about
things that aren't directly related to the scene you're working on.
What is a typical work day for you?
I start around six-thirty and end around five, but that's not all writing.
There's lunch, correspondence, all the business things you need to attend to.
When it's going well I sometimes will write a full eight or nine hoursI just
refuse to do anything else. When it's not going so well, that's when all the
distractions become welcome and you'll use them to keep from the much harder
work of putting together a story.
What kind of books do you like to read? Any authors you can recommend?
I love all kinds of books, so long as they're good ones. I'm a real fan of
that generation of American novelists that falls between mine and that of Updike
and Bellow. Which is to say Thomas McGuane, Jim Harrison, Richard Ford, Harry
Crews. I love Gabriel Garcia Marquez, John LeCarre, Elmore Leonard, Norman
Mailer, William Kittredge, John Gregory Dunne, Thomas Harris, and Jonathan
Lethem to name a few. I finally read California Fire and Life, so Don Winslow is
now on my list. His novel, The Power of the Dog is one I highly recommend. The
list keeps growing and growing!
What are your long-term goals as a writer?
At the end of my life I'd like to hold one of my books in my hand and know
that it is, in every applicable way, an excellent novel.
Any advice for struggling writers trying to get a book written and published?
I think it's important to read good books, if that's what you're trying to
write. What you read is your nutrition, your creative diet. Don't be afraid to
just sit down and write. Trust your muses if you're lucky enough to be visited
by them. My advice is to work fast and read it later. Finish, finish, finish. If
you read it later and don't like it, throw it away and start over. You know, the
secret to writing is that generally speaking, it should be exciting,
interesting, evenyes...fun. If it doesn't engage your sense of play and
challenge and exploration, then you'll have a tough time finishing something.
It's hard work. You huff and puff, but still, there should be exhilaration in
it. When I write I kind of live for the next sentencetrying to find just the
right thing to say, then the right way to say it. Also, don't think you have to
write a whole novel in six weeks. If all you can steal is one hour a day to
write, write a page a day and you'll have a 365 page manuscript in one year. The
pages really do start to pile up.
More Questions About Jeff
Do you have an
autographed book plate you can send me?
If you'd like one signed bookplates, please email Maggie at www@tjeffersonparker.com
with your mailing address and she'll take care of everything.
What does the T. stand for?
Not a thing. No, really. Nada. Zip. Nothing. Jeff's mom always explained it
by saying she thought the T. would look good on the President's door.
How can I get in touch with Jeff?
Email www@tjeffersonparker.com to reach the author. Whenever there's a break,
Jeff loves to read your emailwhat could be better than getting feedback from
your readers after closeting yourself in an office writing all the time?
Unfortunately, due to volume, he isn't able to answer it all. We're really
sorry that personal replies aren't always possible but we figure it's like this:
the more time Jeff spends writing novels, the happier we'll all be, right? So,
if you need a reply from Jeff, please be patient. Thanks!
I have a great idea for a novel. Can I discuss it with Jeff?
If you have a great idea, you should write it yourself and reap the reward.
Please don't send any unpublished work or story ideas. These are emails Jeff
will never see. His lawyer has sent us strict orders to cull any such requests.
What about movies based on Jeff's novels?
In 1987, HBO made Laguna Heat into a TV movie with Harry Hamlin and Jason Robards. The other novels, especially the Merci Rayborn series, has garnered a
great deal of interest from Hollywood. All the novels are either under option or
about to be optioned at any given moment. Many novels that are optioned aren't
always made into movies right away; that's how Hollywood works.
Reproduced from T Jefferson Parker's website with permission of his "webmaven".
Unless otherwise stated, this interview was conducted at the time the book was first published, and is reproduced with permission of the publisher. This interview may not be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the copyright holder.
We must believe in luck. For how else can we explain the success of those we don't like?
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