Posts Tagged ‘Mittenlit.com’

Bonnie Jo Campbell creates an iconic character in her new book

Wednesday, July 27th, 2011

 Bonnie Jo Campbell will be joining more than 30 other authors on September 11 at the Kerrytown BookFest in Ann Arbor Michigan. Campbell will join a panel discussion of  using Michigan in a novel as a “sense of place”.

“Michigan Voices: A Sense of Place” brings together a diverse group of writers who write about Michigan in many different ways. Laura Kasishcke will bring the voice of prose and poetry centered in the state; Bonnie Jo Campbell will discuss her new novel, “Once Upon a River”, set on Michigan’s waterways; Michael Federspeil brings his extensive knowledge of Hemingway and will talk about his Michigan Notable Book winning Picturing Hemingway’s Michigan; and William Whitbeck will bring his knowledge of Michigan history, the Purple Gang and law. The discussion will be lead by historical fiction writer, D.E. Johnson, whose mysteries focuses on the early automobile industry in Detroit.

It’s easier to name a major author Bonnie Jo Campbell hasn’t been compared with (Edith Wharton comes to mind) than it is to tick off the long list of writers to whom she’s being compared: Eudora Welty, Mark Twain, Raymond Carver, Daniel Woodrell, Barbara Kingsolver and the Southern writer Flannery O’Connor, who might be Campbell’s first choice for comparison.

Not only does Campbell share O’Connor’s penchant for farm animals (Campbell has two pet donkeys, Jack and Don Quixote; O’Connor became famous at 6 years old in a newsreel shown in movie houses around the world for training a chicken to walk backwards), they also share the love of writing about outsiders; Campbell often refers to them in her conversations as “troubled people.”

At a recent book signing and reading in Ann Arbor, Campbell made a point to say she has a “kinship with Southern grotesque writers,” and she isn’t the least bit annoyed by those who would compare her work to that of other authors. She says that’s how everyone organizes his or her brain.

“It’s how we orient ourselves,” she says.

“It’s who we like to think we like to like.”

The Twain comparison seems particularly applicable, given that Campbell has written a book about a journey on a river, switching out Huck Finn for 16-year-old Margo Crane, a sharpshooting Lolita who goes in search of her lost mother.

Margo, like Huck, is destined to become one of those defining characters of literature, a self-assured, tough survivor of everything the river and its “outsider” inhabitants can throw at her.

Campbell said she reread “The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn” several times during her own literary journey, but she noticed it came up short for her in one area.

“More river — it needed more river,” she said.

Campbell delivers on that statement, writing richly textured descriptions of a Michigan river similar to the writing of naturalist and Southerner Wendell Berry or Michigan’s own Jim Harrison.

“I was nervous about the beginning of the book (in which she writes lavishly about the river),” Campbell says. “I was indulgent about nature.”

The first sentence in the book sets the tone, as she describes the river that will become central to the plot: “The Stark River flowed around the oxbow at Murrayville the way blood flowed through Margo Crane’s heart.”

She said she finds rivers so much more alive than oceans. “Oceans are so big, but a river, you can get right up on it. It is full of life. Something is always crawling in or out of it.”

Campbell grew up on a creek, and also spent time at her grandparents’ cottage on the St. Joseph River, gathering not just mollusks but memories that she would later use in her book.

She said she decided to write “Once Upon a River” after readers of “Q Road” wanted to know more about the past of Margo, the major character. Although written in 2002, “Q Road” is somewhat of a sequel to “Once Upon a River” and begins with a grown-up Margo and a 15-year-old daughter.

“I thought maybe there’s more to say about Margo, a middle-aged woman living on a houseboat. How would such a beautiful woman end up living on a houseboat?” “Once Upon a River” eloquently provides that answer.

As in her books “Q-Road” and “American Salvage,” Campbell is especially proficient writing about those at the fringes of life, much like Woodrell did in “Winter’s Bone,” which features another teen in search of a lost parent.

In “Once Upon a River,” Campbell’s resourceful protagonist has the skills of a frontiersman: Hunting, fishing and trapping have become second nature to her.

She can read the river and the forest and their inhabitants — some furry, some slith ering — like a map. It takes her awhile to be able to do the same with people, especially men.

Margo takes up shooting for solace and as a way of centering herself after her beloved grandfather dies. Enamored by Annie Oakley (Campbell’s hero) and equipped with a Marlin Rimfire .22 rifle, just like Annie’s, Margo learns to shoot through endless practice and an uncanny natural ability.

Campbell writes of the experience: “Uncle Cal claimed credit for teaching her to shoot, but while Margo had felt his guidance, she had felt just as strongly the guidance of the gun itself. It held her steady, and then sadness perfected her aim.”

Campbell, a meticulous researcher, didn’t take writing about shooting to chance.

“I knew I would look dumb if I didn’t get it right,” she says.

She consulted a friend who was a master target shooter and practiced with the same rifle she describes in the book until, as she says, “I got pretty good.”

She even put the rifle on her shoulder and walked through her neighborhood to gauge response.

“None,” she said. “I’m like a method actor. I’m a method writer.”

In a similar way, she made sure she got one of the boats that Margo uses in the book just right. An advance reading copy of “Once Upon a River” had Margo in a powerboat — until a relative of Campbell’s pointed out the type of river she describes calls for a pontoon. Campbell went out and found one made in Michigan — a Playbuoy — which she then carefully wove into the book.

The meticulous research does not distract from her beautiful prose, which, like the river she writes about, can hold danger around every bend.

The book has come under so much scrutiny from reviewers that Campbell says she a little embarrassed by all the attention. “Writing is such a private thing, and I’m out in the world now.”

Her privacy really ended two years ago when “American Salvage” was named a finalist for the National Book Award. It was then she stepped onto the fast track.

Before the publication of “Salvage,” she was at a low ebb, having lost her agent. “She dumped me,” Campbell says.

As a backstop, “American Salvage” was published by Wayne State University Press, and Campbell was agent-less until the National Book Award finalists were announced: “And the next day I had 50 e-mails from — guess who? — agents.”

As to being compared to “Huckleberry Finn,” Campbell said, “I can’t begin to compare myself to Twain. ‘Huck Finn’ was a touchstone for me writing the book, but Margo and Finn are vastly different. Huck is a huckster and clever. He toys with people, while Margo is much more straightforward. She’s a survivor, and the need for survival is a different story, especially among gals. I’m just writing stories about troubled people struggling to survive.”

Watch this video discussion with Bonnie Jo Campbell on Lansing Online News.

Kerrytown author has new book ready for the BookFest

Thursday, August 12th, 2010

If you could come up with a phrase to describe the type of writing mystery authors Bryan Gruley, William Kent Krueger, Steve Hamilton and Elizabeth Kane Buzzelli are writing it would be Up North Noir. Gruley’s newest book “The Hanging Tree” which is pure Up North with all its unusual conventions and the charms which you can only find in small towns has his protagonist Gus Carpenter tossed into a decades-old maelstrom. Gruley will be at the Kerrytown BookFest September 12.

The following review first appeared in the Lansing City Pulse.

Two words are in the back of the mind of every author after the debut novel is published: sophomore slump.

At a book signing and reading last year at Schuler Books & Music in Okemos, mystery author Bryan Gruley was asked by a former co-worker from The Detroit News if the thought ever crossed his mind that he had only one book in him.

“He asked that question very innocently,” Gruley said, “but that very afternoon I had turned in the manuscript for my second book to my editor. We both knew it sucked.”

Gruley who won the prestigious Strand Magazine Critics Award for mystery writing and was nominated for the Edgar Award for his first book “Starvation Lake” did what he had to do: He threw out the second manuscript and started over.

“I had my sophomore slump,” he said, “but you won’t get to see it.”

For readers, that was a great decision. Gruley’s second book, “The Hanging Tree,” is a masterpiece of detective fiction, with the right amount of blind alleys that leave the outcome always in doubt. The author, who is the Chicago bureau chief for The Wall Street Journal, has topped his first book while capturing the essence of a hockey-crazy Michigan small town.

Gruley retained his “Starvation Lake” protagonist, Gus Carpenter, a small town newspaper editor and now amateur detective, who returned to his hometown to regroup after a major league scandal at his former news job.

Gruley said what was missing in the discarded manuscript was “heart,” and he set out to find it by rereading his own book and then two books by noted mystery writer Dennis Lehane (“Gone, Baby, Gone,” “A Drink Before The War”). Gruley, who is also a dedicated amateur hockey player, d i s c o v e r e d from his reading that he had forgotten to tell stories.

In his “real” second book he details the tragic story of Carpenter’s second cousin, Gracie, a hometown girl who leaves for the big city, returns home 20 years later and then, six months later, ends up hanging from a tree. Was it suicide, or was it murder? For Carpenter, who was like a brother to Gracie during high school, solving the mystery becomes a personal mission.

Along with the dramatic tension, Carpenter’s love life is cranked up a bit in this second book, His rekindled relationship with his high school sweetheart, Darlene, also a deputy sheriff, is complicated when her estranged husband, a hockey nemesis of Carpenter, shows up to reclaim his wife.

This isn’t the only new development in Carpenter’s life: A newspaper story he wrote about a proposed new hockey rink in Starvation Lake divides the town and threatens his job.

Although the hockey action takes something of a back seat in his second novel, there’s enough on-ice and off-ice chicanery (and an appearance by the Zamboni) to satiate hardcore fans. But the unraveling of Gracie’s life and her untimely death on the community’s hanging tree is center ice.

Gruley said an actual “Hanging Tree” — covered with twisted shoes, boots and tennis shoes — on U.S. 131 near Kalkaska was the inspiration for the story. He first saw the tree while on assignment for The Wall Street Journal.

Although Carpenter does take one detour downstate to piece together Gracie’s former life, Gruley deftly creates a sense of place of the northern Michigan he knows and loves. Not only does Gruley’s father still have a cottage in the region, but early in his newspaper career Gruley worked at an Antrim County Weekly newspaper. (more…)