Interview: Jon McGoran, Author of Doyle Carrick ecological thrillers Drift, Deadout, and Dust Up
CQ: Your Doyle Carrick books are fast moving,
suspense-filled eco-thrillers, but how much were you motivated to call
attention to our endangered ecosystems? Do you think fiction can help shine a
light on environmental issues, or other important public issues?
JMcG: I’m proud to be a part of
a long tradition of fiction that explores timely and controversial topics. To
me, the issues that I incorporate into my books are not just important, but
fascinating and compelling in their own right.
But I think what they add
to the story must always be second to making sure they don't detract from the
story. My job first and foremost is to tell a good story with compelling,
engaging, believable characters, a well-constructed and propulsive plot. That
said, I do think the issues add to the story, rather than get in the way.
Thrillers often borrow
danger and menace from real world issues — terrorism, the Cold War, other
political threats. It’s a complex world we live in, and I think there are many
aspects of how it works that have sinister aspects, not the least of which is
corporate control over such elemental aspects as food, information and
the environment.
CQ: In Dust Up Doyle goes to Haiti. Your writing skillfully captured
the atmosphere and flavor of the island. How familiar were you with Haiti before
writing the book, and how much research did you need to do? Any advice to
fellow authors on the best way to capture the essence of a place?
JMcG: Thanks! I honestly didn’t
know too terribly much about Haiti before I decided to set the book there, but
I did a lot of research before I started writing it, and actually went there
while I was writing. That helped immeasurably, and I think made
it a better book. That’s an extravagance that isn’t always possible though, so
failing that, I would say research, research, research. And as far as capturing
the feel of a place, there are a lot of visual tools on the Internet,
like Google street-view and Google Earth, and YouTube videos from all over the
world, that can be tremendously helpful not just in exploring places where you
have never been, but in drilling down into places that you might not know as
well as you thought you did.
CQ: Readers have gotten to know Doyle
Carrick. He’s smart, funny and ready to jump in to right a wrong. What was your
inspiration for him?
JMcG: There is a definitely a
lot of me in Doyle, but I think there is in all my characters. When I was
creating Doyle, I wanted him to be funny, because that is important in
characters I like to read, and especially important in character that I am
going to be spending a lot of time writing. But I also wanted to make him very
flawed (like me!) and human. I think Doyle has a certain innocence or naiveté
about him that bristles when he sees a wrong left unrighted. He is sometimes
childlike in his perceptions of what is right or wrong, or unfair. I find it
endearing.
CQ: Who
and what inspires/influences/informs your writing?
JMcG: Current events mostly. I
am constantly bombarded with ideas for stories, and it irks me to no end that I
cannot write more of them.
CQ: In
this age of social media, does the feedback you receive from readers influence
you?
JMcG: I’m sure it does. Getting
positive feedback from people who really like my books is always great, and I’m
always grateful to people who take the time.
And there have been occasions when readers have told me about
little-known phenomena or new developments on issues that I’m interested in or
like to write about, and that is always great. It’s wonderful that social media
and email, etc., makes it so easy to have such a rich dialogue with readers
today.
CQ: When
you’re not writing what do you enjoy doing?
JMcG: Reading, cooking,
binge-watching good TV, spending time with my wife, my son, and my dog, and, of
course, freaking out over the state of the world and our politics.
CQ: Can you tell us about what you are
currently working on? Can we expect another novel in the Doyle Carrick series?
JMcG: I just finished a media
tie-in novel for the TV show The
Blacklist, which will be out in March. I have also been collaborating on a couple of scripts - a TV
script with Erik Arneson and a screenplay with David Greenberg and Sloan Seale.
I just had a story called The Key Man
in Beat To A Pulp and I have a story called Strange Harvest coming out in an
anthology of stories about Jonathan Maberry’s Joe Ledger character, written by
other authors (and featuring Joe Ledger and Doyle Carrick). I’m very excited that my YA science fiction thriller, Spliced is being published later this year and I am working on another near-future
science fiction political thriller that I’m very excited about.
CQ: What
are you reading?
JMcG: Terrence McCauley’s Sympathy for the Devil, Ray Daniels’ Terminated, Chuck Wendig’s Invasive and Megan Abbott’s Fever, all of which I’d been wanting to
read for some time, and which I enjoyed very much. I also just read Paolo
Bacigalupi’s The Water Knife, which
was tremendous. Right now I’m reading Chris Holm’s excellent The Red Right Hand, the follow-up to his
amazing The Killing Kind.

Great interview, Chris!
ReplyDeletethanks! Jon, like you, was fun to interview
ReplyDeleteThat WAS fun! Thanks, Chris (and Merry)!
ReplyDeleteJon, Thanks so much for sharing your thoughts and insights
ReplyDelete