Interview with editor Mark Tavani

Mark Tavani is a Senior Editor with Ballantine Books. He edits both fiction and nonfiction and works with a range of authors, including Katherine Neville, Steve Berry, Charlie Huston, Barry Eisler, Justin Cronin, David Corbett, Jenny Siler, and Mike Greenberg. He graciously agreed to answer some questions.

Q. Why are so many books published that don't seem to be terribly well written? Is this just a purely subjective thing (i.e., a matter of taste)?

A. Sure, part of it is subjective. I can think of books that I couldn't stand—literally, books I couldn't finish—that a colleague swore by. And of course I've acquired novels that colleagues of mine have read and loathed. On a larger scale, I'm often shocked that reviewers and readers dislike certain books that I or the editor believed in, and I'm just as surprised when I see a book praised that I thought was obviously flawed. It's certainly been rare, but I can say there have been times that I have disappointed by a book but unable to get the author to go any further in addressing what I see as its flaws and have published the book—only to find that a great number of readers and reviewers love it just as it is. So yes, it's highly subjective.

Beyond that, though, there's no skirting the issue that publishers—sometimes in an earnest attempt to keep the lights on, and sometimes in a far more cynical fashion—publish books they know to be bad but which they calculate readers will buy in big numbers. And when it comes to books that are first and foremost entertainment—like action thrillers—I think the argument holds up. Most publishers these days publish a mix of entertainments and books that are, in some fashion, important. Well, sad to say, but the important ones rarely pay the rent. In the current state of business, it would be easy for a publisher to argue that not publishing some very commercial (if terribly written) books would be irresponsible.

Q. Has the Hollywood mentality (the big opening weekend, the big hook, the big name, etc.) taken over publishing? Is it still possible to have a successful, lasting career as a fiction writer -- the kind that provides a decent middle-class income -- if you're not a bestseller (and likely never will be)?

A. Yes, the Hollywood mentality has found its counterpart in publishing: instead of the big opening weekend, it's the first two weeks on sale. But it comes down to the same thing.

It is possible for a writer to have a successful, lasting, what we call "mid-list" career, but it's increasingly rare. And even in the cases of many writers who accomplish that, the writer, the publisher, or both might actually be trying desperately to reach a new level of popularity. So even when it does happen, I wouldn't think people are sitting around thinking, "Yay, we've managed the exact same number of sales six books in a row! Way to go, team!"

There are many high-level reasons why this has come to be, and a lot of them are based in the big-time corporate approach to business that now defines most publishers, but the end result is that yes, we have gone much more in this direction.

Q. How hard is it in today's marketplace to break out a new author? Is it even harder for someone on the midlist?

A. Incredibly hard. For one thing, it feels exceptionally difficult to grab the attention of a wide number of people for the purposes of pushing a book. There are just so many other things to waste your eye-power on, like email, and blogs, and online newspapers, and YouTube, and CNN, and movies about super heroes. It can be done, of course, as it happens at least a handful of times each year, but most cases of authors breaking out are perfect storms—so even when it happens it's hard to pinpoint how a publisher did it.

In some cases, a book is big from the moment it's bought, and that carries straight through until it hits the list. A good example would be The Historian by Elizabeth Kostova. In some cases, a book is acquired optimistically but it begins to become a breakout when the accounts like it and buy it in a great quantity. No better example of that than The Da Vinci Code. And there are books that find their way because of great reviews, and there are books that find their way because an author does incredible events all over the place, and there are books that find their way because of some freak bit of publicity. As to that last one, legend has it the The Hunt for Red October was off to a fine start when the sitting US President happened to be mention he was reading it and loving it—and suddenly you had a sensation.

Of course it is more difficult to break out someone who has been on the midlist. If the author has been steadily and smartly building their brand (a great website, good contact with fans, contact with booksellers, attendance at book events, blah blah blah) that can be something of an advantage. But even so, there comes that moment where a publisher has to convince the accounts that the time has come to take a big step forward on orders for this particular author. The publisher's sales rep makes her or his case, the account’s buyer looks at what the author has sold in the past, and the game begins.

Q. I keep hearing that fiction is harder to sell than ever before. Is that true? What segment of the fiction market is doing the best?

A. There's truth here, but I think it's hard to say that it's exactly as it sounds. I think that even today, in most years, the very biggest selling books are fiction. Harry Potter, James Patterson, Dan Brown, John Grisham. But I do think it's true that it has gotten much harder to position fiction that doesn't have obvious breakout potential. Whereas with fiction you’re often stuck trying to find new ways to say, “I love it and I think you will, too!”, with a nonfiction project it can be a great deal easier to pinpoint the appeal and the audience. It can be easier to document. It can be easier to quantify. So, yes, nonfiction is easier to sell. But I still think at the end of the year that many of the biggest successes are novels and plenty of the disappointments are on the nonfiction shelf. 

Q. What's the one thing you'd like all authors to know when they sign their first publishing contract?

A. One thing? Hmm. Where their book truly might fit in the marketplace. Meaning, I think it's crucial that an author have healthy but realistic expectations. If the author thinks his book is The Stand and his publisher thinks it's a fun little horror novel, problems will result.

Q. Do you like it when your authors blog, are active on social networking site, etc., or would you rather they spent that time writing?

A. In a perfect world, my authors spend all of their time writing, reading, traveling, eating startlingly good food, and holding long and fruitful conversations with fascinating people; they're always being productive and always coming up with new ideas. In that same perfect world, blogs don't exist and social networking sites are scoffed at. But hey, that just ain't how it is. The realities of business and promotion intrude daily on an author's life, and I fully support the efforts each author can make towards expanding their presence, reach, and brand.

Given how things work these days, readers demand to be in touch with their favorite writers. They expect some kind of return for their loyalty, and blogs and social networking sites give authors some kind of realistic way to accomplish that. When I was young, I remember many times reading and re-reading author bios upon completing a book I loved. I was often fascinated at the thought: that person created this book. It seemed like a magic trick. How could that dad-looking dude have created this sprawling fantasy novel? How could that librarian-looking woman have penned this achingly beautiful story about an abandoned child? My favorite book when I was young was The Outsiders by S.E. Hinton, and her bio was one of my favorites: at the age of sixteen, this girl had written one of the most incisive and memorable novels about teenage boys ever written. I never understood how she got it so right; I admired her in all kinds of ways. All of that said, it never even crossed my mind that I could write to her, or meet her. Nowadays, I think a lot of readers not only think that, but they expect it. Some demand it. And it's unrealistic for an author to ignore that.

Q. What's the most important thing an author can do to help his/her career, other than write a great book?

A. The most important qualities for an author to have are energy, creativity, and flexibility. Which is how I'd like to answer the question. But that's not what you're asking. I guess the most important thing an author can do is, in the beginning of the process, to have a few very frank conversations with your agent and your editor. From those conversations, amass all of the realistic information you can, read between the lines, develop accurate expectations, ask for what you think you can get, let the rest go, and move forward full speed ahead.

Interview with literary agent Molly Friedrich

Poets & Writers magazine has an excellent, in-depth interview with literary agent Molly Friedrich. Friedrich has been in publishing for three decades and is one of the top reps in the business.

This piece is long, but it's full of important information. (As a colleague, a bestselling author, put it: "This should be required reading at all writers conferences.")

Here's just a sample:

Q. How has technology changed the business from your perspective?

A. I'll tell you, what is hard about being an agent now is the Internet. The Internet is both the joy and the bane of everybody's existence. The bane part of it for me, for an agent, is that it used to be that authors were in isolation. Which was partly bad, obviously, but it was also a good thing because they really got to focus on their work and confront what was on the page. They weren't distracted and hyped up by too much information. Today, if you are a writer of a certain genre, you feel that you've got to get blurbs, you've got to cultivate all these people, you've got to go to this or that event, and on and on. So you have writers who aren't really being given enough time to write the best book they can write. And meanwhile they have become a kind of awful consumer. There are a lot of conversations about who has what. Like, "Well, Joe Blow has shelf talkers. Why don't I have shelf talkers?" No! I don't want to hear about Joe Blow's shelf talkers. You don't have shelf talkers because your career is set within an entirely different context than the person you just mentioned. They all compare notes. They compare advances. Part of it is that they have been told it's no longer enough to just write a good book. They are told that they have to get out there, press the flesh, have blogs, have Web pages, and get advance quotes from everybody and their dogs. Then they're told, "By the way, don't you think it would be a good idea to do two books this year?" This is insane! It is altogether too fast. Everything in this business is too fast.

I recommend reading the whole thing.

 

Michael Connelly interview on Evil E

Evil E, the monthly blog perpetrated by Elaine Flinn, has a new edition up and it features a terrific interview with Michael Connelly.

Here are my questions from it:

DAVID MONTGOMERY:
You’re probably tired of hearing this question, but I’ll ask it anyway... Do you foresee an end to the Harry Bosch series?  He’s aging in real time, so we know he can’t last forever.  But I’d sure be sad to see him go.  How much more life does he have in him?

MICHAEL CONNELLY:
Well, I certainly see the need to end the forward progression of the series with Harry as a cop. He’s 58 this year and the reality is I have maybe 4 or 5 years before it starts bending reality. But I can always go backwards. There are a lot years in his life I haven’t written about. I could also extend the series with his life after LAPD. So it will all come down to whether or not I continue to be interested in him. If that continues then i think Harry will continue in some way.

DAVID J. MONTGOMERY:
So many of the best crime writers are former journalists... Robert Ferrigno, Laura Lippman, Jon King, Denise Hamilton, etc.  What is it about being a reporter that lends itself to writing great crime fiction?

MICHAEL CONNELLY:
I can only guess at it, and of course there are so many great crime writers who were not journalists. But the one thing I think has helped me is the process of journalism. No matter what the story is, you never get enough space to say what you want to say. So you learn to make every sentence count. You make them short and to the point. You look for the one telling detail rather than 50 details that don’t get to the point of what you are communicating. You try to have every quote carry information the reader needs. So in a perfect news story nothing is wasted. It creates a certain velocity in the story. I have tried to carry that over to my fiction, even though now I don’t have the same constraints in terms of space and length.

Check out the whole interview -- there's some interesting stuff in there.

In other news, Elaine injured herself and is currently laid-up. We all hope she makes a full recovery soon!

New Evil E

Elain Flinn has a new Evil E column up, featuring an interview with author Jason Starr. Here is my contribution:

DAVID:

Jason, you’re closing in on 50…Isn’t it time to cut the hair?  Do you ever get tired of writing about creeps, crooks and cons and just want to write about a preschool teacher or something?  (not that I want you to do that…unless it’s a preschool teacher who’s also a dominatrix.)

JASON:

Whoa, Dave, I think I have about a decade to go before 50, but nope, I ain’t cuttin’ it, not until it starts falling out in a serious clip anyway, and you never know when that’ll start to happen.  We have a picture in my family of a great uncle who lived in Russia about 80 years ago.  In most of the pictures he has this thick, dark hair, and then in the next picture, boom, Kojack.  So I may wake up one day and find it all on the pillow…  But I’ll tell you what - if Barry Eisler gets a crew cut, I will too.  Deal?  If I thought of a preschool teacher who I thought would make a great character in a crime novel, I’d go for it.  But, as you say, there would have to be something off about him or her.  I think my strength is in writing about edgy people, though I think in my recent books like THE FOLLOWER, and some of the other projects I’m working on (including a graphic novel for DC) I’ve been expanding my approach, varying points of view more.

Check out the whole thing. It's good.

Interview with literary agent Simon Lipskar

Simon Lipskar, a literary agent at Writers House, is one of the top agents in the business. He represents a wide range of writers, including major authors in literary and commercial fiction, narrative nonfiction and young adult fiction. He graciously agreed to answer some questions.

Q. What's the best way for an unpublished writer to get an agent?

This is going to sound agonizingly reductive, but the answer is to worry less about finding an agent and more about writing the best possible book.  If the book is great, old-fashioned queries (though hopefully with less paper waste via email submission) are the best way to garner interest.  But don't bother looking until you're confident your book is as good as it can be.  I guess part of the question you're asking is if going to conferences and meeting agents on the prowl will help; my basic feeling is usually not.  What you're selling is on the page: if it's there, it's there, if it's not, it's not.

Q.  What do you look for in a prospective client?

More reductiveness: a great writer.  A determined writer.  A writer who's willing to work as hard on her craft as her career (and vice versa).  Recognizing that writing is a solo act but publishing is a team effort is helpful, but I'll represent a raging egomaniac who is a brilliant writer -- the work always comes first, period.

Q. What are publishers buying right now?

The further adventures of reductiveness: books they can sell.  What that is precisely changes from time to time, of course.  In terms of thrillers, which are your primary area of interest, editors are looking for thrillers that aren't like all the others.  Sure, there's still money to be made writing Da Vinci Code knockoffs, but that's growing staler by the moment.  Originality and freshness seem to be the watchwords on everyone's lips.  I should also add that there's a pretty sour vibe in publishing these days about the marketplace, even more so than usual; nobody is feeling all that great about the health of the bookselling market, and that makes for nervousness all around.

Q. Does it make any sense for writers to try to write to the market or is that a futile enterprise?

Almost invariably futile.  I know one or two cases in which writers wrote books specifically to catch a particular wave in which this gambit worked, but usually this just serves to waste vast amounts of precious time.  Writers should write the books they love.  That way, no matter what the market says, their time wasn't wasted.

Q. What's the one thing that you think all writers should know about the publishing business but don't?

That most of us (publishing folks) really love books.  That most of us really care about publishing books well, that we take it personally. This is not a business for folks who are just looking for a job to pass the time -- it's well beyond 9-5 for most of us, and it usually doesn't compensate the average editor or agent nearly well enough given the amount of time, dedication and passion he or she gives.  So often I get the sense that writers think we really couldn't give a damn about books and publishing them well -- and that's just a profound misreading of this business and the people who work in it.

Otto Penzler speaks

Otto Penzler, the famed (and irascible) bookseller, critic and editor, is the subject of Elaine Flinn's latest interview over on Evil E. I wanted to share two of his responses, both dealing with Ross Thomas. (The questions were asked, in order, by myself and Jason Starr.)

DAVID:  I know you’re a great admirer of the work of the late Ross Thomas, as am I.  Is there anyone writing today whose work you’d compare with his?

OTTO:  No.  The spectacularly gifted Ross Thomas was in a class by himself.  The closest I’ve ever read is Thomas Perry, whose Metzger’s Dog was so Ross Thomas-like that I almost thought Ross had written it under a pseudonym.  Perry’s later books retain the similar, clear prose style, but the plots are not as varied as Thomas’.  If you ever read someone as good as Ross Thomas, please let me know immediately.

JASON: What are the three most memorable books that you’ve edited?

OTTO:  The Dark Fantastic by Stanley Ellin, a book about a racist that his regular publisher for more than 20 years, Random House, and the legendary editor, Robert Loomis, didn’t have the guts to publish.  Out on the Rim by Ross Thomas, the first of a three-book contract for which he was paid a million dollars.  I begged him to bring back Artie Wu and Quincey Durant, the stars of Chinaman’s Chance, and he did.  Then, in the original version of the manuscript, he killed Georgia Blue, a character with whom I’d fallen head-over-heels in love.  He allowed me to browbeat him into saving her life.  Blood on the Moon by James Elroy.  It was titled L.A. Death Trip and had three times as much violence as the published version, still one of the most violent books one is likely to read.  Rewritten several times over an 18-month period, it was the first hardcover book of Elroy’s career and the beginning of a long friendship.

The whole interview is fascinating, so hop on over and check it out.

Interview with Robert Ferrigno

John J. Miller at National Review Online interviews Robert Ferrigno about his new book Sins of the Assassin (one of my favorite books of the year so far).

For anyone afraid that this book might be too politically-charged (it's not), Ferrigno says not to worry. It's "an entertainment with some meat to go along with it" and if it "doesn’t work as an edge-of-the-seat thriller, then I’ve failed as a writer."

Needless to say, he definitely has not failed.

Outtake from Yorba Linda Star interview

Here is a question from the interview I did with Patti McCoy Jacob that was cut for reasons of space. I thought it might be interesting to some.

PMJ: Any advice for someone interested in reviewing books but unsure how to begin?

DJM: Read, read, read. Read everything you can get your hands on, including reviews. Find critics whose work speaks to you and study their reviews. Figure out what they're doing and how they're doing it. Then experiment with expressing your own thoughts about a book; what was good, what was not-so-good. You not only have to be able to form interesting insights about the book, you have to be able to express them in an interesting way. It's something few people seem to be able to do well.

I would also advise people that the only reason to write reviews is because you love books and have thoughts about them you want to share. Don't do it because you think there's money in it. There isn't.

Interview with me, part 2

Since it can't all be about Guyot, here is part 2 of the interview I did for the Yorba Linda Star. (Many thanks to Patti McCoy Jacob for doing such a great job.)

In case you're too lazy to read it, here is the last question, which might be of interest:

PMJ: Finally, who are your favorite mystery/thriller writers?

DJM: Michael Connelly, George Pelecanos, Laura Lippman, Barry Eisler and Robert Ferrigno. Those are my picks for today...

All Guyot, all the time

Screenwriter Paul Guyot is interviewed today in the St. Louis Post-Dispatch.

Here is the question I found most interesting:

Q. What was it like when you lost that big bet with renowned critic David J. Montgomery?

A. It was devastating. It was bad enough to be publicly humiliated like that. But then Montgomery came over to my house and did a dance on my face, just to rub it in. I still have the scars...mostly on the inside, but they're there.

Check out the whole interview for more startling revelations.

Interview with me

Patti McCoy Jacob interviews me this morning in the Yorba Linda Star. Among the topics discussed are what influenced me to become a critic, what I like about it, how I choose books for reviews and a few others. (Note that the address of my website is wrong. The site mentioned is the one you're reading here.)

Tales of the Teapot

Who says we don't give any love to the cozies on CFD?

Author Julia Spencer-Fleming, a favorite of mine and a current nominee for the Gumshoe Award for Best Mystery, conducted interviews with her fellow nominees for the Agatha Awards.

Authors Earlene Fowler, Jacqueline Winspear, Nancy Pickard and L.C. Hayden, discuss their lives, books and craft.

Check it out.

10 Questions with Philip Hawley, Jr.

Phil_hawleyAuthor of Stigma (2007)

February 26, 2007

By David J. Montgomery

Philip Hawley, Jr. is a pediatrician in Los Angeles who drew on his experience volunteering among remote Indian tribes in Central America to writes his debut novel, Stigma. He is also one of the most-promising new thriller writers to come along in quite a while.

Q. You already have a successful career as a pediatrician at a prestigious children's hospital in Los Angeles. What made you want to be a writer? Temporary insanity?

A. Looking back, yes, there was a moment of insanity. It came when I was re-reading Robert Ludlum's The Matarese Circle and I thought, "Hey, I can do this. I can write a thriller novel!" Of course, the naiveté and ignorance that allowed me to so grossly underestimate the Mr. Ludlum's accomplishment also protected me from giving up when a rational and well-informed appraisal of the soul-smothering challenge that lay ahead might have caused me to quit before writing the first paragraph.

Q. So after you made the decision to write a book, why did you choose a thriller?

A. The literary arc of a thriller – especially the classic scenario of a lone hero in peril, battling to restore order in a chaotic world besieged by malevolent forces – offers a fertile and seemingly limitless canvas for storytellers. When done well – that is, when the novelist tells a dramatic and suspenseful story and introduces me to characters I care about – the thriller, I think, is the ideal literary form.

Q. Stigma contains detailed information on black ops-type stuff: tactics, weapons, equipment, etc. Did you do a lot of research – or is there something in Phil Hawley's past that we should know about?

I've been threatened by a knife-wielding man in a hospital emergency room, twice accosted by armed gunmen on the streets of Los Angeles, and once fired upon. Each of these had only to do with random chance, and my red belt in Tae Kwon Do didn't once prove useful! Only in my boyish imaginings were there high-stakes global issues at play in these events. In other words, I have to rely on my overactive imagination – and a modicum of research – when writing about black ops.

Q. How much of you is there in the character of Luke McKenna (the protagonist of Stigma)? Do pediatricians often pack heat?

A. Despite rumors started by Paul Guyot, I don't pack heat. It may surprise your readers to learn that very few baby doctors carry concealed weapons.

Q. Stigma probes some interesting moral and ethical questions, particularly with regards to setting limits on medical science. Did you have these questions in mind when you began to write the story?

A. One question that has concerned me for some time is this: As science makes possible previously unimaginable medical interventions, where is the boundary beyond which we should not travel? I didn't set out to write a novel exploring this question, but, clearly, the issue crept into the story through my subconscious.

I don't have any special insights concerning this issue, nor do I offer any solutions. But one thing seems clear – in the very near future, these issues will force themselves on a global human society that seems reluctant to deal with them.

Q. What was the most exciting part of having your first novel published?

A. That's an interesting question, because like many writers I'm not comfortable in the limelight. Even the small amounts of attention that come my way are somewhat daunting. The "excitement" of publishing is not something I seek.

However, there have been many pleasurable moments along the way, and most are quiet ones. Writing "The End," which I did not do until I'd finished the final rewrites of Stigma, was one of the high points of this journey.

Without a doubt, the most blissful moments come when I talk with readers who are genuinely touched by my story – readers who speak of the story's characters as if they're real people. For me, nothing else comes close to that experience.

Q. Have you had any thoughts of retiring from medicine to write full-time?

A. No. I love both careers, and in that sense I'm very lucky. The most difficult challenge is finding the time to give each career what it demands.

Q. What advice would you give to aspiring writers?

A. I'm still shocked when asked this question. After all, I've walked only a few paces along the literary path.

Having acknowledged that, the best advice I've heard is: Write every day and read good books.

Beyond that simple counsel, I'm not certain there are any universal truths. As Somerset Maugham once said, "There are three rules for writing the novel. Unfortunately, no one knows what they are."

Q. What's the last book you read?

A. Odd Thomas, by Dean Koontz. Odd Thomas – what a wonderful character!

Q. What's next for you?

A. Completing book two, which is a sequel to Stigma. Don't ask me how it ends, though! My stories seem to write themselves in the subconscious, and I rarely see more than a few scenes ahead.

On the Bubble with Elain Flinn

As part of her contributions to the new Murderati blog, mystery author Elaine Flinn does a series of interviews called "On the Bubble." Her most recent victim was none other than me.

Check it out.

p.s. Yes, I paid her to say those nice things about me.

About

David J. Montgomery writes about authors and books for several of the country's largest newspapers, including the Chicago Sun-Times, Washington Post, Philadelphia Inquirer and Boston Globe.

In the past, he has contributed to such publications as USA Today, the South Florida Sun-Sentinel, Kansas City Star, Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel and National Review Online.

He lives in the Washington, DC suburbs with his wife and daughter.

Email David J. Montgomery

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