Showing posts with label Michael Wiley. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Michael Wiley. Show all posts

Saturday, February 25, 2012

Turn the Page by Michael Wiley


Michael Wiley writes the Joe Kozmarski PI novels, including most recently A Bad Night’s Sleep (St. Martin’s Minotaur), which January Magazine has called one of the best crime novels of 2011. Winner of the PWA/SMP award for “Best First Private Eye Novel” and currently a Director-at-Large on the Mystery Writers of America Board, Michael lives with his family in Northeast Florida, though he sets his books in Chicago, where he grew up and got most of his scars.



















Turn the Page

by Michael Wiley
When our son was two, we took him to Story Telling Hour at our neighborhood library. He loved (and loves) stories, and he sat on the carpet politely – legs crossed, hands in his lap – alongside other toddlers as a librarian read a tale about a rabbit, a hedgehog, and a train. My son was silent, enthralled. The other kids were too. You could have taken a picture and used it to advertise the value of libraries in young children’s lives. But when the librarian paused, looked up from the book, and smiled at the children, my son yelled, “Turn the page!”

Ever since that day, I’ve thought that these are words to live by, both as a reader and as a writer. Plato says that an unexamined life is not worth living, and he’s probably right, but if he examines it too long and I’m in the audience, I’m going to shout, “Turn the page!”

I want rising action, complications, twists and turns, growing suspense, a climax, and a couple of pages of falling action. I want to lie in bed afterward, smoking a cigarette. Then I want another book, another page-turner.

When I write, I want the same: I want a story – not a theme or a message or a deep meaning – and I want the story to take readers for a ride. In my dream of dreams, hundreds of thousands of readers are lying in bed, smoking cigarettes, after turning the final page of one of my books. Then they pat the book on the cover and say, lovingly, “Again?”

I do have insights, buckets of them: insights about . . . almost everything. You need a political candidate? I’ll give you one. You’re looking for religion? I’ll tell you what I think. You’re searching for a good book to read? You mean after you’ve finished mine? Yes, I have lots and lot of insights and I share them with my family and friends until they scream, “STOP!”

And then I stop, because I know what they want – and it doesn’t involve my lecturing, moralizing, or sermonizing. They want the same thing I want: a story that makes them move, a story that makes them turn the page.

Sunday, August 14, 2011

A Nine-Step Program for Saving the Book by Michael Wiley

Michael Wiley is the author of The Last Striptease, a Shamus Award finalist and winner of the PWA/St Martin's Press Best First PI Novel Competition, and the critically acclaimed mystery The Bad Kitty Lounge. Michael’s third mystery, A Bad Night’s Sleep, released on June 21. In a starred review, Publishers Weekly says, “The relentless pacing [in A Bad Night’s Sleep] makes the pages fly by, and the hard-edged prose is bracing.”

Michael teaches literature at the University of North Florida, where he also has published two nonfiction titles, Romantic Geography and Romantic Migrations, along with frequent articles and book reviews. In the past, Michael supervised emotionally disturbed, at-risk teenagers, taught remedial English at an urban-core business college, and worked for a day and a half as a migrant fruit picker.
 
Michael lives with his wife, children, and obstreperous dog in Jacksonville, Florida.



















“A Nine-Step Program for Saving the Book”
 by Michael Wiley


This post says nothing we don’t already know.

Is the book dying? Well, no, not really. Some readerships (e.g. young adult) have been growing fast. Others have been stagnant. Still others have declined. This is the way it always has been.

But books, especially non-electronic books, have taken a lot of body blows lately. Do they need saving? Maybe. Probably. Sure, why not? What can we do to ensure that the books we love stay in the ring for the rest of the fight? In short: buy them; read them; and encourage others to buy and read them. That’s it. Nothing we didn’t already know.

To state more of the obvious: 

  1. Give books as gifts to others. They work especially well for birthdays, religious holidays, Fathers and Mothers Days, Valentines Day, bridal showers, Labor Day, the Fourth of July, Ground Hog Day, baby showers, marriage engagements –

“Sorry, honey, they were out of diamonds, but here’s a nice Michael Wiley mystery”

– Boxing Day, Guy Fawkes Night, Thanksgiving, Halloween, April Fool’s Day, and New Year’s Day, to name just a few book-ready occasions.

  1. Use your library. Check out books. Meet your friends there. Schedule meetings there. Have public sex there. Enjoy the quiet. Check out more books.

  1. Support your library. If funding for your library is threatened (and it almost certainly is), write to the people who hold the purse strings and remind them how important our libraries are. Throw around some big words that you’ve learned by reading books. (Unconscionable is one of my favorites.)

  1. If a book interests you but you don’t have the money (or the desire) to purchase a copy and your library doesn’t have one in its collection, go to your library website and ask the library to make a purchase. If you’ve already read a writer whose book or books you’ve enjoyed, ask your library to buy their own copies for their collection so that others can enjoy them too.

  1. Give yourself the gift of a cloth-bound or paperback book even if you already have it electronic form. Put it on a shelf next to the Waterford vase.

  1. Talk about books the way others talk about sports, politics, fashion, or the weather.

“Looks like rain today.”
“Yep. A good day to stay inside and read a book.”
“I like your shoes.”
“Thanks. I put them on whenever I go out to buy a book.”
“Did you hear about Congressman X?”
“Sure did. I wish he would close his zipper and open a book.”
“You see the game last night?”
“No, I was reading a book.”
“Run for your life! – It’s a tornado.”
“As soon as I finish this chapter.”

  1. Post your appreciation for good books on FaceBook, and re-post information about author blogs there when you think others might take interest. Post your appreciation for good books elsewhere too: on that new Google thing, in the comments section of the blogs you read, in church bulletins, in email messages, etc. Sneak your book opinions into meeting minutes. Don’t be afraid to wear a signboard in public.

  1. Write short reviews of books you’ve enjoyed, and post them on the websites of online book vendors and online book review websites.

  1. In other words: buy, read, and encourage others to buy and read. Nothing we didn’t already know.

Happy reading!



Friday, August 13, 2010

My Fictional Hero Has Taught Me Everything I Know by Michael Wiley

Michael Wiley writes the Joe Kozmarski mysteries. The Last Striptease (2007) won the Private Eye Writers of America and St. Martin’s Press competition for best first private eye novel and was a Shamus finalist. Booklist called The Bad Kitty Lounge (2010) “howlingly funny,” but the Washington Times objected that it’s too gritty, though Michael hopes that it’s too gritty in a “howlingly funny” kind of way. St. Martin’s Minotaur will publish A Bad Night’s Sleep in Spring, 2011. Michael lives with his family in North Florida.
 







 


















My Fictional Hero Has Taught Me Everything I Know
by Michael Wiley

I’ve never subscribed to the idea that you should “Write What You Know.” The problem is that I live a subdued life. I’m happily married, the father of three, with a car in the driveway, a lawn to cut, and currently no out-of-control habits. I spend little time in dark alleys and no time at all catching homicidal criminals, though I like to think that if one knocked on the door I would have the presence of mind to call 911.

I admire the experience of guys like Barry Eisler, who spent three years in CIA Operations, and – I might as well go for broke here – John Le Carré, who spent five Cold War years in British intelligence. But my own sensitive government experience ended when I was about eight years old and stopping spying on my parents’ cocktail parties from behind the banister, and even my experience with local law enforcement (in which I was consistently the one running away instead of running after) ended ten years later when I cleaned up my act and went to college.

So, what is a writer of noir crime fiction to do when he lives mostly on the right side of the law and keeps daytime working hours? What is he to write about?

The answer, I think, is simple. Anything he wants to write about and is willing to learn. Past experience isn’t a requirement for a writer. But lack of experience is no excuse for getting the details wrong. So, if the writer of noir crime fiction is me, he finds out what he needs to know as he goes, and he lets his Private Investigator hero teach him the rest.

What has my PI – his name is Joe Kozmarski – taught me? Well, when I started writing my first mystery, I wanted to give Joe a hard-shooting, reliable, manly, but not macho pistol. So, I went to the Gun Gallery, which is my favorite local gun range, and asked the clerk, “If I want a hard-shooting, reliable, manly, but not macho pistol, what do you recommend?” “How about a Glock 23?” the clerk asked. Fifteen minutes later, I was standing in the range shooting a Glock 23, and that night, when I returned to my computer, Joe had a weapon.

Since then, I’ve talked my way onto construction cranes, ridden shotgun with homicide detectives, toured port-authority anti-terror checkpoints, and visited many of the places frequented by those who inhabit the pulpier and more noir spaces of life. Joe teaches me how to interact in each of these spaces.

He also teaches me how to deal with simpler challenges. For instance, a couple of years ago, I was in a Sharper Image store, looking among various display items for a birthday gift for my father. The White Noise Sleep Machine? I clicked it on. No, it sounded like an electric mixer. The Deluxe Nose & Ear Trimmer with Vacuum? Nah, I’d known since I was a child that nostrils should stay away from vacuums. An Instant Vacuum Meat Marinator? They had to be kidding – and what was it with Sharper Image and vacuums? A pair of Memory Foam Slippers for Men? No, just no. A Quad Action Percussion Massager? Well, not for Dad, but the sign said that it provided “a deep tissue massage wherever and whenever” the customer needed it. That sounded interesting, so I looked around the store and when no one was watching I hit the On button. It sounded like a White Noise Sleep Machine having sex with a Deluxe Nose & Ear Trimmer, so I quickly hit the Off button. But it stayed on. I hit the Off button again. The massager got louder. I smacked it against my leg. That seemed to turn on the hidden Nostril Vacuum. Customers were staring now. One of the sales clerks was crossing the store in my direction. What was I to do? Stick the massager in my pants and pretend all was well? Scream, “It’s alive!” and run out of the store? Though the moment seemed worthy of a dramatic response, I laid the massager – still vibrating – back on the display, glanced around the store as if I were considering other purchases, and then slipped outside.

I made it home. No police cars pulled me over. My mother didn’t call from across the country to tell me she’d seen my picture on TV. So, I sat at my computer and thought about how Joe Kozmarski would have handled the situation. I could see him wanting to stuff the massager in his pants and pretend all was well or to scream, “It’s alive.” But he wouldn’t do either of these things, and he wouldn’t put the massager back on its display and mosey out of the store. I started writing. I set the scene in the bedroom of Joe’s ex-wife. She’s in the shower. She has asked him to get a nightgown from her dresser, and he has reached into a drawer and pulled out a . . . toy, a dolphin-shaped toy, with an On-Off switch. He switches it on. He can’t turn it off. His ex-wife gets out of the shower and he still can’t turn it off. What is a hard-shooting, reliable, manly, but not macho PI to do? He carries the toy into the kitchen and drops it in the garbage disposal. That’s just the beginning of his problems.

Lesson learned.