Ian Dawson On Writing Fiction From Personal Trauma

Mindy: Welcome to Writer Writer Pants on Fire, where authors talk about things that never happened to people who don't exist. We also cover craft, the agent hunt, query trenches, publishing, industry, marketing and more. I'm your host, Mindy McGinnis. You can check out my books and social media at mindymcginnis dot com and make sure to visit the Writer Writer Pants on Fire blog for additional interviews, query critiques and more as well as full transcriptions of each podcast episode. at WriterWriterPants on Fire.com. And don’t forget to check out the Writer, Writer, Pants on Fire Facebook page. Give me feedback, suggest topics you’d like to hear discussed, and let me know if there is someone you’d love to see a a guest.

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Mindy: We’re here with Ian Dawson, author of Midnight House, which released earlier this year. And part of what makes this such an interesting topic is that the story is based upon your own experience of being kidnapped when you were younger by two older teen boys. So if you would like to talk a little bit about that traumatic experience and how it ended up coming to a place where it became a novel. 

Ian: Thank you for having me on. Actually, Midnight House is the second book, the first book, The Field, which came out in 2018, that's based on my experience of being abducted. The second one is Midnight House, the follow up. So in 1993 I was out in the field behind our Redding neighborhood playing hide and seek with a friend of mine. He was hiding. I was seeking, I turned the wrong way down a gravel road, found myself being pursued by two older boys on bikes. They caught up to me and they dragged me into a clearing, terrorized me for several hours until they finally punched me in the face and let me go. So it was a very traumatic experience. A decade after it happened, I was thinking about it as a first person account of what happened and then that slowly evolved into a fictional story that was based around the actual event. And then that became The Field

The woman who read and edited the first book was like, you should make this into a series. I initially had no intention of making it a series. Then I started thinking about what I could do and then I thought of some ideas for the second book and that became Midnight House and that took about five years from initial idea to completion. And then the first book took about 15. I’m hoping the third book gets a lot shorter time from idea to completion. 

That's sort of the genesis of how this series came to be. And they’re young adult novels. I mean they're intense, they're very suspenseful. My mom had to put them down a couple times while she's reading them because especially since the first one is based on true events and the second one has things that have happened to me but it's more fictional. 

Mindy: How old were you when this happened? 

Ian: I was 13.

Mindy: Things are bad enough when you're 13, to then have to endure something like that. I can't even imagine where you ended up, diving into that place in your memories and that experience in order to write The Field. I know a lot of authors find therapy through writing and not necessarily just even as directly as writing their own lived experience, but even just for a general release from the experiences of everyday stress of real life. But when you're dealing with something that is obviously extremely personal like that, I can see it maybe going either way on any given day. And you said it took 15 years for you to really coalesce this into a final product. So was it therapeutic on some days and then maybe on other days it was just reliving a horrible thing? 

Ian: It was cathartic in a lot of ways, they never caught the two guys, so they're still out there. Because it's fiction, I basically made things go the way I wanted them to go to make a more effective story. There is the kernel of truth that was spun into a fictional narrative, but there are things in the book that didn't have to do with me. I had two other characters that were very intense, I wrote them and I had to take a break because it was like, wow, I can't believe I got that dark and went to that place. But that's one of the crazy things about writing is it allows you to take yourself to those places without actually going to those places. But you can still feel all those emotions and those feelings and that intensity. And then you hope that translates from the page to when the readers are reading, they have the same feeling. 

Mindy: Absolutely. I agree entirely. My book, The Female of the Species is a rape revenge vigilante justice book and there's actually a scene where my main character sets a pedophile on fire, burns him alive. Didn't pull any punches on that scene. And I fully expected to get some push back and I didn't. I've never had anyone say to me, you know, that was too much or you went too far and I think exactly what you're saying is what's happening. You get to do this safe exploration of an action that you might wish you could take. But you know that you cannot, for many reasons, be they moral or legal. I think it's really interesting and I think it's a really good point. It also gives you an element of control when you're writing about something that specifically happened to you in your case. In my case, just anger at the world and things that happen to people in it and kicking back on fighting back in a way that is safe. 

Ian: Absolutely. And I think that's the fun part about the writing process, especially the drafting process with The Field and with Midnight House, I would take sequences as far as outrageous as I possibly wanted to. And then I was able to pull it back. So you don't have to censor yourself in the draft because no one's going to see it. So you can just go there and then maybe you read it again, you go - well as a young adult novel, so maybe I shouldn't put that in there and let me just sort of scale that back. The first book. Some of the reviews said it was a little too violent for a young adult audience, but it's like, well, there's nothing really nonviolent about child abduction and childhood trauma, which are two things that are dealt with in the first book and then the aftermath of that is dealt with in the second book as well. These are themes that really don't have a happy essence to them. 

Mindy: Yeah, I write YA too, and I pull zero punches. I worry a little bit about push back. But to be honest with you, I'm always ready for those responses. So, for example, my third book is a gothic historical thriller set in the 1890s. It's about a teenage girl who's pregnant because her father has been abusing her. And I've had some people say, you know, why would you write a book for teens about a young girl whose father is sexually abusing her? And I'm like because that's who it happens to. This is not a shock to them. And they need to see that this happens. And those who do have to live through that experience can be aware that they are not alone. This is not some freak aberration. It is not their fault. And those that are moving in the peripherals of that situation might be able to pick up some clues and be a little more aware of things that might be going on in someone else's life. 

I really have never myself as a writer, held anything back. Now, as you're saying, your first draft is no holds barred. Full send. You go for it. And then you can dial back if you think it's necessary. I definitely have had my editors say, you know, this needs to be dealt back a little bit. Usually he's right. If I have a moral ground to stand on and it's like, no, this is here for a reason. But you know, this might be a little too much description of puking. All right. You know, I'll give on that.  You choose your battles. 

Ian: I think young adult novels, especially in 2021, have more leeway themes and the content that they can express. 

Mindy: Absolutely. Absolutely. I was a young adult librarian and I understand the arguments from both sides because the gatekeepers, they have to worry about their jobs and parents do know their own Children better than anyone else. So if a parent says - this book is not appropriate for my child - more than likely that parent is probably right because they know their child, so I don't have a problem with that. What I have a problem with is when a parent says - this book is not appropriate for any child.You do not know all Children, so you cannot make that claim. 

Ian: Oh yeah, like the parents groups who tried to ban Harry Potter. 

Mindy: I had a few book challenges when I was in the high school library and one of them was for Harry Potter, but it wasn't like... they hadn't actually read the book, they just heard that there was witchcraft and I said - okay, here's what I want you to do, I want you to go home and I want you to try the spells and if they work then there's a problem.I am very much against sugarcoating anything. For teens, especially older teens, they're either living it or they've already seen it or they've already done it. 

Ian: Yeah, because I think especially when you're dealing with YA novels that are based in the real world, you're dealing with real world themes. I think every young adult, you know, witnessed what happened last summer. I don't think you can sugarcoat what happened with George Floyd and that whole horrible situation. Kids are very perceptive, They know what's going on. Sometimes they know more than their parents because oftentimes, parents try to shield their kids, the kids are going to find a way around whatever. Most people, even adults, if you tell them, don't do that, they're going to go do it and say, well, what's so bad about it? 

Mindy: Yeah, I just spoke at a conference a couple of weeks ago to youth services librarians. And I don't have answers for everything. Obviously if I did, I wouldn't be a novelist, but I talked about black and white thinking and how we approach sex education of course, but also drugs and how we bring it to our Children in the school system, especially public school systems and it is very black and white. This is bad, This is good, don't have sex, don't do drugs. And when the kids start to get older, they develop some obviously very natural urges, but also just a curiosity and a desire to explore different things. And I've always thought about those quote unquote good kids that are just simply growing up and maturing and all of a sudden they're like, oh no, I'm not good anymore. I want to do this. This is a bad thing. And I think it can really damage some of our kids. And then those that are already living in a world that has alcohol abuse or drug abuse or sex abuse, they're being told this is bad. And then they're like, oh, I'm bad. 

Ian: Our war on drugs in America is very odd because if you look at films from the past, like Reefer Madness how they start to teach people. And it's like yeah, the war on drugs really didn't work because you can watch Reefer Madness now and go, I know people who smoke pot, they don’t act like raving maniacs who go out and homicidal binges, just like wait a second, who was endorsing this? 

Mindy: Yeah, like literal, actual propaganda. Like we were saying earlier, fiction is a good place to do safe exploration. You don't have to smoke or have sex or or even perform violence in order to get that, I'll use the word “satisfaction” out of experiencing it in a book. 

Ian: You have fictional characters who can make bad decisions and then you can see the consequences of their bad decisions, but no one's affected in real life. Like you said, I don't think we should shy away from reality, where in the end it's like, oh yeah, and everything's okay. No, we're not in Full House. 

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Mindy: Now I think when we talk about things that make people uncomfortable when we talk about assault. I'm an athlete. I grew up on a farm. I have been in pain. I have been injured and hurt many many times in my life. I have never had anyone hurt me on purpose. And I think from what I know, from people that have experienced that there is so much trauma involved and in your case at the age of 13, a breaking of innocence in a way, I would imagine. I don't know your background, so I don't know if this was your first experience with violence.

Ian: Yes. 

Mindy: Then, yeah, I can't even imagine what it would be like to suddenly be thrust into a situation where people are hurting you on purpose and even for their own enjoyment. 

Ian: It was surreal. The experience was surreal because you're like, is this actually happening? It's very hard. I think even as an adult, it would be a surreal experience. You have no way to know what they're gonna do next or they're gonna try next or what the plan is. So that was also very scary, is the unpredictability of the situation. You know, when I got home, the police were in our driveway and I told my parents what happened, the police didn't believe me. They pulled my dad aside and they said that maybe he's just making this up. My dad was like, he's not that type of kid. If he says this happened, this happened. There really was no follow up. I think they called my mom a couple weeks later and they're like, well, we don't know, we don't know, they may have been from out of town. You know, it sticks with you. It gives you an interesting perspective on how real police sometimes can be when it comes to something like this, not to completely denigrate the police. 

My experience with the police is that the guy who comes and sings the, you know, “just say no to drugs guy,” you know, at the school and Mcgruff, the Crime Dog, you know, “take a bite out of crime.” One of my favorite shows is Law and Order, Special victims, unit. Similar situation. I'm a victim of a crime. Olivia Benson, she would have solved this, she would have figured this out. 

Mindy: You really had the veil ripped away in a lot of different ways, Not only did you very suddenly and abruptly experience violence, but you also found out that the good guys, the people that are supposed to be there to protect you and help you and the people you've been told that you can depend on might not necessarily have you as their priority.

Ian: And that's one of the reasons why in the book Daniel, who's the main character, he's abducted. Daniel's best friend, Kyle, basically takes it upon himself to figure out what happened. So the reason it took so long to write this is because the first version involved Daniel getting abducted and then Daniel's dad and a cop near retirement, were looking for him. And it was extremely boring and uninteresting because they were boring characters. And then I had Kyle out searching for him and then that made it much more interesting and exciting. I had Kyle, Daniel's best friend, pacing at home, worried about his friend and then Daniel was being held captive, it's like, well I have two passive characters... like this isn't working, they need to be doing something. So Daniel is trying to escape and then Kyle is trying to find him, okay, now they have an active goal to pursue. So that really changed how the book was in crafting the book and then it was I was able to up the stakes. 

Mindy: That's a hard thing to learn. I know, like having any type of active characters, making sure that everybody is not passive. That's when you do have to learn over time. And you said it took you 15 years then to really put together the first draft of the first book,The Field? I think that's really interesting and I think it's a really cool way, too, kind of combat that overnight success idea that I think a lot of writers look for. It exists, I've seen it happen, but it is rare. And like I myself was trying for 10 years to get an agent before I got published. My fifth book was the one that got picked up and I think it's really useful to talk to people such as yourself who put in 15 years worth of work and I'm sure took breaks, walked away, thought about it, came back revised, redrafted, how did you keep up the feeling of this is worth it? I want to keep doing this? 

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Ian: I kept coming back to it. I graduated from UC Davis By the time 2003 rolled around. I saw it on my computer and revisited it. And that's when I sort of realized this isn't very good. But the idea was there I built around it and then over time moved to L. A. And then I got my masters in screenwriting. And so I'm taking all these classes about story and character and dialogue kept going back to it. And it wasn't easy. I mean, there were times, it was just like, God, it's like - this isn't working, you know? And I'd walk away. I mean, it wasn't me consistently Every single day for 15 years going back to it. There were times and it was like, leave it for 2 to 3 months and then I'll come back to it. And there will be times when I was like, I just be bored at home and just go back to it. And then every once in a while you have the situation where things would just click OK? Yeah, I see where this is going. 

Once I gave it to a friend’s mom who was an editor and she read it, she gave me feedback and she really liked it and she gave me suggestions and notes. And so I was able to revise it from there. Novels have lots of layers to them. And sometimes it takes time for those layers to evolve and come to the surface. You could be focused on story in your first draft. And then as you go back through and you're rewriting, then your characters start to get their parts in a more clear way, and then dialogue and then description that it all sort of comes together. So, I think that's something that's important for new authors to know, is that this takes time, this isn't a one and done. Because sometimes you have to write it, walk away, come back and go, oh, I'm going to get rid of that. You have to enjoy what you're writing, even if it is something as traumatic as using a real world experience, such as mine for The Field. You have to enjoy the process. You have to enjoy the characters you're writing. If you're begrudgingly going back to your manuscript, there's a problem. You’ve got to enjoy what you're writing and you'll be doing it for the right reasons you do. You have to care about it and you have to be willing to go back to it. 

Mindy: I love what you're saying about taking those breaks. You, like you said earlier, this wasn't 15 years of you hitting your head against a brick wall. No, you can't do that. I tell people that all the time, I would take huge breaks sometimes 3,4,6 months because you cannot continually look at your own work and hate it or have other people tell you it's not good enough. In my case, I was querying agents for 10 years and you know, I just kept getting rejections rejections rejections and you can't healthfully live that way. Taking those brakes is important. 

I want to talk too, then about your publishing experience. So why don't you tell us a little bit about the route that you chose? 

Ian: When I was in the process of writing The Field, I had sent out query letters to different publishers. Most of the responses I got back were - this is not what we're looking for at this time. Back then, It was vampires and werewolves. Dystopian novels, zombies. These are the hot tickets, real world fiction really wasn't a thing at the time when I was working on this book. So I started doing research and Book Baby seemed like a good fit because I was able to find my own cover artist. I love both covers that he's done. The first book, I made the mistake of just going with an e book. That's what I started with. Then got my publicist. She was like, oh, you should probably have a paperback too, with the second book. It was cheaper to do both at once as a package, then do both separately. 

One of the reasons I went the self publishing route was I just wanted to get the book out there. That was one of the main things because you hear these stories of course, you know, Stephen King and Carrie was rejected like 87 times and he had a nail on his wall where he put all his rejection letters. And I was able to figure out a budget and that's the important thing. If you're going to do this, it is not not the cheapest way to go. But if you're able to budget and make sure that you can not go into too deep of debt and can still afford to pay your bills and your rent. Because it used to be that if you self published, that was like the scarlet letter. You know the thing - oh you self published, Oh that's not good. But it's like now, you know the book is on Amazon and Barnes and Noble and Walmart, Target. It's more mainstream and I think it's because YouYube and podcasting has made everybody a content creator. So self publishing is just another way of being a content creator. E books and paperbacks, they're just another avenue for creativity for people to use now. So I think it's been more legitimized over the past decade. 

People need to know if you go this route, you're not going to be on the New York Times bestseller list. That's the reality of it. Don't expect to make a bunch of money and don't expect to be on the bestseller list. But have a plan to pay yourself back. So I've been very fortunate being able to work this entire pandemic because I was able to budget, I wasn't able to do other things, I was able to squirrel money away in order to do the second book during the pandemic. 

Mindy: You don't expect to hit the bestseller list. That's true in traditional publishing as well. I have I think 12 books out, I've never hit any list, I'm certainly not rich, but I'm able to, you know, make a living at this and I supplement My and come with teaching and with substituting, doing the podcast, makes a little bit of money on the side. I do actually self publish under a pen name with two other co authors that are friends of mine and you're so right about how self publishing has changed. 

It sounds like we're about the same age and we were both entering into the publishing world right around the same time, I had the same experience yet different in some ways, I had written urban fantasy and was trying to get at that out there. And my problem was there was too much of it. These are a dime a dozen, we don't need another urban fantasy author. One day I'm going to self publish those books, but they've been under my bed for probably 15 years at this point because it just, it hasn't come back around and there are very different voice in a different genre than I write in now. So more than likely I will self publish those and self publishing like you said - It used to be, if you self publish something, it was like you were selling old meat out of the back of your van. Like people were not into that. You could not expect anything like a traditional exposure a lot of the times. People did look down their noses at that and that's just simply not sure anymore. 

I travel a lot. I go to a lot of different conferences and festivals and, I see self published authors with tables right next to traditionally published authors. People want to read what they want to read and they will be attracted to what they're attracted to. Most readers can't differentiate between a self published book and a traditionally published book. They pick it up, they look at the cover, they read the blurb on the back and they make a decision. They don't look to see who the publisher is. 

Ian: And if you're self publishing, it goes back to liking what you're writing because if you're not writing on assignment and you're doing it for yourself, you're not going to make a bunch of money and you're not gonna get the fame and fortune. You have to like what you're writing, you have to enjoy the process and enjoy what you're writing and that gets you through because it's the story that keeps you motivated. As soon as you get into the money as a motivator, I just don't think that that is an effective motivator when it comes to creativity. 

Mindy: The last thing. Why don't you let listeners know where they can find your books, The Field and Midnight House and where they can find you online. 

Ian: If you want to buy the paperback versions of either book, you can buy them on Book Baby. I have promo codes for both on my website, which is The Field YA.  Letter Y letter A (for young adult) dot com. I'm on Instagram and Twitter at the field Y A. So you can join me there and also my website, I do blog posts. I just finished a series about story structure and I also do Writers Workshop Wednesday where I’ll profile an author and put like Youtube videos of interviews with them. 

Mindy:            Writer Writer Pants on Fire is produced by Mindy McGinnis. Music by Jack Korbel. Don't forget to check out the blog for additional interviews, writing advice and publication tips at Writer Writer Pants on Fire dot com. If the blog or podcast have been helpful to you or if you just enjoy listening, please consider donating. Visit Writer Writer Pants on Fire dot com and click “support the blog and podcast” in the sidebar.

Fading Fame: Pam Munter on Women, Aging in Hollywood, & the Casting Couch

Mindy: Welcome to Writer Writer Pants on Fire, where authors talk about things that never happened to people who don't exist. We also cover craft, the agent hunt, query trenches, publishing, industry, marketing and more. I'm your host, Mindy McGinnis. You can check out my books and social media at mindymcginnis dot com and make sure to visit the Writer Writer Pants on Fire blog for additional interviews, query critiques and more as well as full transcriptions of each podcast episode. at WriterWriterPants on Fire.com. And don’t forget to check out the Writer, Writer, Pants on Fire Facebook page. Give me feedback, suggest topics you’d like to hear discussed, and let me know if there is someone you’d love to see a a guest.

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Mindy: We're here with Pam Munter, author of Fading Fame: Women of a Certain Age in Hollywood, which tells the fictionalized stories of old Hollywood actresses and addresses some of the issues that we talk about today, such as the MeToo movement. it obviously is in the news and constantly being updated, of course, as people continue to come forward with their stories. But the casting couch in particular is hardly a new reality in the world of Hollywood. So if you could tell us a little bit about the book Fading Fame and how you came to write it.

Pam: I have always been in love with Hollywood. That's no secret. Since my first movie at age five, it never quite left me. I'm really a writer of nonfiction. And mostly what I have written up to this point has been nonfiction. I wrote a whole bunch of stories about old, mostly dead Hollywood actors and actresses for classic images and films of the golden age. And so I've always written to some extent about Hollywood. When I got into the Master of Fine Arts program, though, I was told that writing nonfiction was not enough. And I had to have a second genre, which kind of freaked me out, because nonfiction is all I've ever written and really all I ever read. I thought, OK, well, I'll try my hand at fiction. So I got into my seminar and the instruction was to write a short story. Well, I barely knew what that was because I read them in high school and college, but it had been a long time. So I thought, you know, I'll have all this information about Hollywood. What if I take that bulk of data and mess with them a little bit, fictionalize it and produce a short story? And out came the first, actually it's also the first one in the book called “Frances.” It's about Mary Pickford and her best friend, Frances Marion, who was a screenwriter. 

And some of the story, of course, is true. They were friends. Francis Marion was an extremely successful screenwriter. She was the first woman, in fact, to win two Oscars for screenwriting. Mary was, in fact, a pioneer in Hollywood. She was the first woman to form her own studio. Believe it or not, before the 1920s. And then she and Douglas Fairbanks and D.W. Griffith and Charlie Chaplin founded United Artists, which was a major studio that was still in operation today. So it was irresistible. I mean, these are such rich characters to write about. After I wrote that story, it turned out to be quite successful, almost immediately published, much to my shock. I thought, you know, maybe there are more women whose stories have yet to be told. And so each of the stories in Fading Fame, which is a collection of 10 short stories about women of a certain age, each of them have a grain of truth to them. But of course, they're fiction. And I just love putting it together, it was so much fun to give these women space and to hopefully engender some empathy in the reader for these women and what they went through.

Mindy: You say that you yourself have always been interested in films and a golden age of Hollywood. What is it about this that draws you so deeply?

Pam: Well, as a kid, the only mass media we had, the only information we had about Hollywood were movie magazines, and they were fake. They were pretty much written by the studio publicists. You know, there were five major movie studios that controlled the information flow. But I believed all of it. I just thought it was wonderful. It was a fairytale that you could walk around Hollywood and be discovered. And God knows I tried. And I believed the fairytale lives of these people. And before I knew what I was hooked. I mean, I later, of course, learned that hardly any of it was true, that there were gay people and people who were divorced many times and child abusers. And I mean, things we weren't supposed to know. I later found out, but it didn't dim my love for that era at all. And of course, they produced some pretty fine films

 Mindy: Talking about that golden age and the arena of women, because women have a shorter shelf life in Hollywood. If you could talk about that?

Pam: Oh, absolutely. Absolutely. And a lot of the women in these stories just ran out of time. They were hired because they were sexy and willing to engage in casting couch activities. But then, you know, after a couple of years, that they were bankable was not as important as the fact that they were no longer casting couchable, to put it politely. And so movie studios moved on. They were disposable commodities. 

Mindy: I feel like today things are changing somewhat. I can, of course, speak to how casting works. But I know that in media and in advertising, you are seeing more of a representation of people of color, people with all body shapes. It's not all the the white, fragile beauty that was always pushed upon the public for the longest time. Speaking then about the similarities and the differences now, do you think that progress has been made?

Pam: Well, changes have been made. Certainly we have mass media and everywhere you turn around, there's the 24/7 news cycle. There's very little we don't know now. To put it romantically, some of the magic has gone out of Hollywood. In a way, we know too much. We know who's suing whom and who's doing what to whom all of the time. Has it changed? Well, you know, one of the reasons it has changed has been the dispersal of power in Hollywood. As I said, there used to be five major studios with five nasty, old, white men in charge of it who could do what they wanted. That's no longer the case, Harvey Weinstein aside. There are so many companies now and independent producers, women have options. So it's not quite as restrictive. Is there sexism? You bet. I mean, every time you open the paper or go on Google you see #MeToo. It's there.

Mindy: Speaking about women in particular. I know, of course, that women feel pressure to keep up their looks, keep up the image of youth, even if it's fading, even if it's leaving them. And hopefully we are moving away from it. But we're used to seeing Botoxed faces and faces that change and women that change their looks like Renee Zellweger, you can’t even recognize anymore. And they go under the knife to sometimes an extreme extent. Were those options available to women during the golden age? How did they go about attempting to preserve their youth. 

Pam: Well, some were, but of course, the joys of plastic surgery that most of the technological innovations have happened in the last, what, 20, 30 years? They could fix your nose pretty easily. Facelifts were riskier. With Rita Hayworth, who, of course, was a bombshell in the 40s, they changed her hair line, which they thought was important, but mostly they did it with makeup. They didn't do a lot of surgery back then, so there weren’t options. If you got old, well, that was just too bad. Look at women who tried to keep looking young, and it's sort of sad to see that they feel they have to.

Mindy: Speaking of makeup, I know I don't know much about Marilyn Monroe, I'm not a fan girl, but I read Blonde by Joyce Carol Oates, and she talked about how Marilyn's personal makeup artist would work on her as she aged for hours and hours, getting her just right even to walk out of the trailer.

Pam: And, you know, she was only thirty six when she died. So you talk about aging and it's pretty cruel.

Mindy: Yeah, absolutely. Thinking about that makeup and of course, the irony being that the more of the makeup and the chemicals that you're piling under your skin, the more you're actually aging your skin.

Pam: Yes. And of course, we didn't know about tanning and the costs of that kind of thing on skin cancer in those days. And so you'd see movie stars sitting out by the pool, you know, getting tan for the next role.

Mindy: When we talk about women and the various things that we will do and you don't even have to be in Hollywood to do these things. You certainly don't have to rely on your looks as income. We all participate in it. The attempt to not age is certainly not restricted to Hollywood. These women that have aged out and like you said, Marilyn Monroe was only thirty six when she died. What was considered aging out? Like at what point were they bringing in the fresh crop and it was harder for women to attain any type of role or interest?

Pam: Boy, I don't know. There wasn’t a cutoff point. I think it had to do with box office to some extent, the whims of those five white men who decided that there were better, more exciting women lining their office waiting for their next break. 

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 Mindy: You mentioned that you yourself have a history as a performer. Why don't you tell us about that?

Pam: Well, as part of falling in love with Hollywood, I think, you know, I was convinced that anybody could do it. I don't believe that anymore, but certainly I did then. One of my undergraduate degrees is in theater. So I started doing some of that. And as I got older, I realized that you really couldn't have a career in that, that was stable. There was a lot of common sense in my life. So I know better than that. I grew up to have a lot of college training and other things besides theater. But when I finished my career as a clinical psychologist, I decided to jump into show business full time, which I could do. And I had the luxury of doing that. 

I went to an actor's conservatory. I took singing lessons. And I started appearing in independent productions in Portland, Oregon, which is where I was living at the time. Got an agent, got some film parts, and started traveling the country with a jazz cabaret show, played all the major cities in the country. I needed to play that out. I needed to find out what I was capable of doing and to experience really from the inside what some of my heroes had gone through. And I'm so glad I did it. My last gasp was I decided to learn to play the cornet. When I was a young girl, girls didn't play that instrument. They didn't play trumpets and cornets, they played flutes and violins. And so I thought, screw that. I'm going to learn to play the coronet. And I formed a Dixieland band. We were traveling around the area I live in now near Palm Desert, doing shows. I was singing and playing the cornet. And that was the last really showbizzy thing I did. Now I'm just writing about it, which is a lot more fun in some ways.

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 Mindy: And when you talk about writing about Hollywood, this particular book, Fading Fame, is fiction. But you said you've done quite a bit of nonfiction writing as well. It was a topic close to your heart. So who are some of your favorite Golden Age of Hollywood actresses, and what are some of your favorite stories from that time?

Pam: Well, I fell in love with Doris Day, very young. My first movie, in fact, was hers. It was called Romance on the High Seas. And she had a really blockbuster part; it was her first starring role. One of those magical things, you know, she's discovered at a party and she's hired and boom, she is a star almost overnight. I love that story, of course, because that's the myth of Hollywood. But as I followed her career, I realized that all was not wonderful with Doris Day. One of those stories, of course, would have to be about Doris in Fading Fame, because I felt I knew so much about her already and her travails later on. The more I read, the more I realize how victimized she was and how oppressed. You wouldn't know that because Warner Brothers created this Sunny Girl next door image for all of us that she maintained all of her life, really. But it wasn't quite true. When she was discovered, quote unquote, at this party, she was signed to a contract by Michael Curtis, who was a very well-known director. People know him really for having directed movies like Casablanca, for instance, but he was a predator.

A recent biography came out about him that suggested that he was a compulsive womanizer on the set. Doris had to pay her dues to be involved with that. She was signed to a contract by Jack Warner, who was another famous predator. You know, we didn't know all of that. So you have to wonder, what did she go through to get where she got? And where she got was fame. You know, she was famous. She was obviously very talented. I mean, a wonderful actress and even better singer. And had a wonderful career, and really she was one of the few people I think of, the women I have written about in Fading Fame who had a satisfactory ending to her life. You know, she left the career when her husband, who bilked her out of millions of dollars, died. She went on to found animal foundations, moved to Carmel, and had this huge operation. But she loved what she did then, and most of the women in the book didn't as well. So her story is sort of a tale of Hollywood. What you had to do and how to escape successfully.

Mindy: And a lot of women didn't escape successfully.

Pam: That's right. They didn't. One of the people I discuss in the book is Joan Davis, who your listeners may not know or remember, but she was a vaudeville performer for years. She had a very popular radio show, top rated, and is probably best known for her starring role in a TV sitcom about the same time as I Love Lucy premiered. It was called I Married Joan, and it was very popular. And she did it for three or four years, I think. My story deals with her short term affair with Eddie Cantor, who was also well known at the time. And her ending was sad because of her alcoholism. She pretty much drank herself to death. And again, the time was up for her. She couldn't get a deal. Her television show was canceled. She was too old by that time. She was in her 50s. Way too old to be hired by anybody. And that's a more typical ending, not necessarily the alcoholism, but the kind of petering out of a life.

Mindy: Yeah. Without having something else, another interest, something else to live for. Well, and I think that's true of anything. If a person is completely sold into and dedicated to one thing, if that one thing is no longer available to you, that's devastating.

Pam: Oh, you're right. And certainly Hollywood stardom required a 24/7 dedication. I mean, that was the only way to be. And they had no hobbies or interests outside, really, of themselves, to put it bluntly. Everything was around being successful, being famous, being known, getting fans. You know, all of that was what was most important to them. So when that went away, there was nothing. They didn't even develop close relationships, many of them, Doris, for instance, her closest friends were her schleps, you know, people who worked for her. And that's a very different kind of friendship than you or I might develop.

 Mindy: When you talk about yourself and making that transition from being a performer to being a writer. What kind of skills were useful in both?

Pam: Well, I'd always been a writer of some sort. You know, I started a typewritten newspaper when I was nine, and I got so much reinforcement from teachers. And in high school, I was editor of the paper and I wrote movie reviews every week. When I was a psychologist, I wrote a newsletter for my clients. And of course, I wrote academic articles which were required for being a professor at the university. And when I did showbiz after that, I wrote my own shows. Cabaret, you do a lot of talking you sing, but you also have patter, as they call it. So it wasn't difficult to make the transition to writing. 

I started by writing about, again, old dead movie actors that I was curious about from my childhood. I was watching TV once, and I saw a movie featuring five actors who pretended to be teenagers. Actually, they weren't teenagers, but the series was starring “the teenagers.” And I sort of wondered about the lead actor whose name was Freddy Stewart. As much as I studied film, nobody I knew had ever heard of this guy. And he made, you know, maybe a dozen movies in Hollywood in the 40s. So the first article I ever wrote was a research piece about Freddy Stewart, because I was curious. And I went on to write, as I say, a couple dozen more about people I wanted to know more about. So really, it was an intellectual, emotional curiosity that got me started writing about Hollywood more aggressively than I have been in the past.

Mindy: And what led you to become a psychiatrist? Because that is so divergent from these creative urges of writing and acting.

Pam: I think people work in mental health because of their own personal experiences. You know, I was raised in a loving but dysfunctional family and wondered how I turned out the way I did because I'm nothing like them. And again, a curiosity about my own life, I think, led me to read books about human development and personality development. I wanted to know more. And so I went back to school. I got a master's degree in psychology, admitted into a Ph.D. program in clinical psychology. I knew I wanted to be in private practice because I'm a very independent person. I'm happier not working for somebody else. And did that for 25 years, really, and loved every minute of it. The only reason I left was managed care, a movement which kind of removed my independence in big ways.

Mindy: That in-depth knowledge that you have about the functioning of the id and the ego and everything that comes into play and is fed very much by Hollywood and everything about the scene there. Does that help you when you're writing about these women? Does it give you some insight into who they were and why they made the decisions they made?

Pam: Oh, absolutely. I think a strength in my writing is my ability to get inside their head. There's a lot of internal dialogue, in these stories, really more than action, because I have a sense of what they were probably thinking and experiencing internally. And I enjoyed writing about that. I actually met some of these women over the course of my life, but I didn't know them very well. So I was guessing. But one can predict, really, if you have a certain set of characteristics in your life, some experiences you have to undergo to get to where you want to be, the things that happen inside your head. You know, the way you characterize your own self is very different than how you may present yourself to the outside world. And that divergence, I think, is fascinating.

 Mindy: Definitely. And I think it becomes even more fractured when you have people that are not only having to convey a certain manner to keep up a public performance at all times, but also then having to put on a new hat every time they walk out of a trailer, come onto the set.

Pam: It's all artifice. It's all image. More so back in that golden age, perhaps, than it is now. I think people, as you suggested earlier, I think that things have changed enough that women can be themselves more now and they know who that is than they might have in the golden age. That's good.

Mindy: I feel like it would be mentally exhausting to have to keep up performance 24/7. 

Pam: It becomes so much who you are and you lose track of who you are, you know, and a lot of these women, because they were in the business so young, missed important developmental stages and developing a personality. You know, again, the friendship and the trial and error of education. A lot of these women didn't have much education. If anything, I don't think Mary Pickford went to school at all

Mindy: When you were working on Fading Fame, you mentioned in your email to me that it had a unique writing process. Can you illuminate that?

Pam: Well, it was done in chunks. You know, I had done this story, as I mentioned earlier, for my class, and I thought that would be it. I just wanted the degree to get out. And what I didn't think about writing anymore. Again, I'm not a fiction writer, but I got encouragement from not only the quick publication, but my classmates who were telling me it's good and I should be writing more. And so it came in spurts. The next one was, of course, about Doris, because it was so easy for me to write. I just sat down and out it flowed. I knew the crux I wanted to talk about the violation done by her husband in stealing all our money and how she might react to that. 

And so one followed another one of the stories called “The Curtain Never Falls,” is about an older woman who is in a wheelchair in a nursing home. And probably there are the rest of her life. And I got the idea for that story, because I was watching a documentary about Rosemary, who was a cabaret performer, and she's best known for being Sally Rogers on the Dick Van Dyke Show. The documentary was in her last years of her life. And she said to the interviewer, “you know, some nights I lie in bed and go over my act.” And I thought, wow, I mean, there is a story there. This woman who's about to die is still fantasizing, performing.

Mindy: I can speak to how I, as a writer, then go out and, of course, you know, have to do public speaking and panels and interactions. And that, too, is a performance in many ways. And it's something you do kind of analyze. Think about how you could have done it better. It can. It can make you crazy.

Pam: Yes. Yes. We are our own worst critics. No, no doubt about that.

Mindy: Absolutely. And that applies to both those public performances and our writing in private.

 Pam: Yes. I try not to reread anything that I have published. I did two CDs when I was singing and I never, ever listened to them because I know I'd be frustrated and want to go back and do it all again.

Mindy: I tell everyone that once it's in print and once it's out there and published there, I don't think there's any point in reading it or really interacting with it any further, because you can't change it. And you will, of course, improve as you continue to write. And if I read my first book, which was published in 2013, but I wrote it in 2010, 11 years, a better writer now I have 11 years more experience if I were to read it. I'm sure I would want things differently.

Pam: Oh, yeah. Yeah, I agree. And just move on, you know, see what's next. As you say, there is a learning curve to writing. And I found that the more I wrote, I think the better writer I became. I've never been a lyrical writer. I'm very meat and potatoes. I want to tell you the story and move on. I don't think I'm ever going to be any different, but I'm learning to describe things better and to immerse myself better and to throw in more dialogue and some of the things I've learned over the years.

Mindy: You end up populating that toolbox.

Pam: You're right. Yes. That's a good way to put it.

Mindy: Last thing. Why don't you let listeners know where they can find the book, Fading Fame and where they can find you online?

Pam: Absolutely. Amazon, which of course sells everything, also sells Fading Fame. And you can find my memoir there, too, which is called As Alone As I Want to Be, which is a little bit about the saga of my Hollywood adventures up and down. I can be found at Pam Munter dot com

Mindy:            Writer Writer Pants on Fire is produced by Mindy McGinnis. Music by Jack Korbel. Don't forget to check out the blog for additional interviews, writing advice and publication tips at Writer Writer Pants on Fire dot com. If the blog or podcast have been helpful to you or if you just enjoy listening, please consider donating. Visit Writer Writer Pants on Fire dot com and click “support the blog and podcast” in the sidebar.

Mary McCoy on Jumping Genres & Misleading Representations of Romantic Love in YA

Mindy: Welcome to Writer Writer Pants on Fire, where authors talk about things that never happened to people who don't exist. We also cover craft, the agent hunt, query trenches, publishing, industry, marketing and more. I'm your host, Mindy McGinnis. You can check out my books and social media at mindymcginnis dot com and make sure to visit the Writer Writer Pants on Fire blog for additional interviews, query critiques and more as well as full transcriptions of each podcast episode. at WriterWriterPants on Fire.com. And don’t forget to check out the Writer, Writer, Pants on Fire Facebook page. Give me feedback, suggest topics you’d like to hear discussed, and let me know if there is someone you’d love to see a a guest.

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Mindy: We're here with Mary McCoy, author of Dead to Me, Camp So and So and also I, Claudia. Her forthcoming book, Indestructible Object, is about a Memphis girl who starts an investigative podcast to figure out whether love exists after her personal life goes up in flames. So with that backlist and with this upcoming book, it's pretty clear that you do a lot of genre hopping, which is something that I do as well. So I would love to talk about that. First of all, maybe your thoughts on why you are a genre hopping writer and then the thoughts on whether publishing is kind to that or not.

Mary: It's funny, I was thinking about that before we started talking and I'm like, why do I do that? Because the first answer that came to my head was - I'm trying to entertain myself when I write. I think it's more than that. I think it also speaks to the kind of reader that I've always been. Like I've never been a reader who just reads one kind of thing. I've always read across genres, non-fiction, fiction, even as an adult. I read books for children, books for young adults. I read a lot of adult fiction, too. So I think it makes sense that you write the kind of books that you want to read. Why do you do it?

Mindy: It's a great question and my response has been that I write widely because I read widely. So all of my inspiration, any ideas that I have or stories they can come from anywhere, focus on anything. So it's something that I just believe has always been part of my wide curiosity as well. I'm just like you. I read everything. I read nonfiction. I read fiction. I read Y.A. I read for adults. I don't read romance. That's just not my thing. But I will read anything as far as genre goes. I don't mean to be particular, but I don't understand just reading in one genre. I know people that do. I don't think I could ever have that kind of diet in my reading. So I read widely. And I think that that means that any of my ideas and any of my inspiration also happens across a wide spectrum.

Mary:  Something my agent actually pointed this out to me, that this is something I do. She said, It seems like when you start a project, you have also set yourself some kind of little challenge. I think that's true. I think whenever I'm working on a project, I want to tell a story. But I also have set some sort of... like I think that this might be just outside my abilities. And I want to see if I can grab it. So I don't know, maybe that's why I do it as well. Like, I'm trying to grow as a writer.

Mindy: Well, I think that's a really good point. I know with my book A Madness So Discreet, that one is historical. And when I wrote it while I was getting ready to write it, I was really excited about it. And I was doing all this research and looking at everything that I had going on and really just like, yeah, this is going to be great. And then when it came time to write it, I kept putting it off. I researched for 18 months before I even started writing it. And a lot of the reason why is because I was afraid that I would not be able to pull this off because it's historical and it's a mystery. And my main character is a selective mute. So there wasn't a lot of chance to be working with dialogue. 

So, I mean, it was a huge challenge. My book that came out in 2020 is called Be Not Far From Me, it's about a girl that is lost in the woods. It's a survival book. It's basically like Hatchet but with a girl. She is alone in the woods, Ninety eight percent of that book.

Mary: How do you do that? That’s got to be damn hard to write.

Mindy: When I started writing it and I was just like, I would come and I would sit down in front of my laptop and I'll be like, OK, so what's going on now? Oh, yeah, she's in the woods. There's no one to talk to. 

 Mary: Just her own terrible, terrible thoughts.

 Mindy: Many of my friends that are writers have sent me messages or emailed me because they actually saw that challenge. I'll get emails from readers. They're going, gosh, I love this book, thank you. But I get an email from a writer and they're like, how the hell did you do that? And I like those challenges, changing things up. I think you're right. I think that's a really good point. Switching things around to challenge yourself

Mary: Like in Indestructible Object a lot of that story is told in podcast transcripts. And like that was something that I wanted to play around with. But part of the story is the main character is running around trying to get her parents to tell her the story that they do not really want to tell her, over the course of the book, trying to draw that story out from them and then working that into the narrative as well. Because - and this is something my editor pointed out to me - when you're writing a young adult contemporary novel, the point of the book can't be getting to the bottom of her parent's mystery. You have to keep the story focused on her and her life and what she's going through. And that has to be the center of the story. That was an interesting challenge as well. You know, I love a book where someone digs up family secrets. 

Mindy: I write small town stuff, so, yeah, family secrets are always big,

Mary: You and I have a weird amount in common in addition to our alliterative names, like we both grew up because I grew up in western Pennsylvania in a small town. Used to be teen librarians. 

Mindy: Oh, yes, absolutely. Yeah. And I think that probably also contributed to my reading and writing widely because I was always reading things that normally I wouldn't, so that I would be able to do good at my job and be able to, you know, give the books to kids that needed those books. So, yeah, I think that that definitely contributed to me reading widely and writing widely as well.

Mary: Yeah. And it's funny, I'm not a young adult librarian anymore. I'm now an art librarian and I feel like I'm not nearly as well versed in what's going on in young adult literature as I was when I worked with it with teens. And I miss it a little bit. There are times I'm like, oh, what's on trend right now? What is everyone reading? I have no idea, unless I go on Twitter, but it's a terrible place to be.

Mindy: Well, I don't go on Twitter unless I have to. Weirdly, a lot of people that I know had this problem - COVID hit and it should have been like our time for readers. We should be like the happiest people on Earth. And I had a hard time reading over COVID for whatever reason, nothing was speaking to me. I've been really struggling with reading lately, but part of it is because I'm writing so much, I get no breaks from words. It's all I do is words, words, words. So when it's time to relax, sometimes I'm like, no, no more words.

Mary: I had this a similar problem the first few months of the pandemic and actually the book that was kind of my drought breaker was Felix Everafter by Kacen Callendar. I read that book and it was just like a beam of sunshine. And I don't know, it opened a floodgate and I was able to read after that. I was also like all during 2020, pretty much from March 2020 through December 2020, I was on deadline. I was doing all of it, doing my revisions on Indestructible Object. And I discovered that being on deadline during a pandemic works pretty well. Being Focused on something that is the very immediate future, trying to be a creative person, writing first drafts during a pandemic is proving to be slightly more difficult. I’m just having a really hard time getting into that headspace right now, which… it's never really happened. I've never experienced it. I wouldn't call it writer's block because I know what I want to write. My body's just like, no, no.

Mindy: I understand I'm in a similar position and I don't want to write. It's when I sit down in front of my laptop... I mean, it's always work, but it feels kind of like drudgery. And yeah, I don't know why. It's partially because I'm an outdoor person and I don't like the way my publishing schedule is currently set up where I'm drafting in the summer. It makes me sad. I want to be outside and I want to be working. And it's like, you know, my flower beds don't look good. My garden is a mess. I haven't even been out there. And that tends to drag me down a little bit. So that's part of it for me. If my drafting was in the winter months, I would be probably much happier. Speaking of that genre jumping, when you talk about the different types of books that you read, but then also what you write, do you think that publishing or maybe your sales numbers would be kinder to you if you just picked a thing and stuck with it?

Mary: I don't know the answer to that. I feel like I will keep doing this as long as I can get away with it. And I feel like maybe at some point I'll be told no and I'll listen to that. But I don't know. I also wonder if at some point I won't just return and go full circle in a way. Like the book that I would like to try to write next is a mystery. My first book was a historical mystery. I feel like along the way through my four books I have, I don't know, that there's definitely a through line, but there's a trajectory. 

I heard from a young reader who has read all four of my books, and she said, I liked this one the best. I feel like you just keep getting better. Which was really nice to hear from someone. I was just talking to a friend the other night who said the same thing. And that's good to hear. 

And I think about my first book, Dead to Me, which is like this Hard-Boiled detective novel, and I remember having conversations with my editor while I was working on that book. And the whole time she was like, could you give her some feelings, too? She's a real cool customer. And I was like, no, she can't have feelings. That's too hard. And then Indestructible Object is nothing but feelings and characters who talk about their feelings all day long and are either really in touch with their feelings or trying to be. That's a nice journey to see, because I think that in some way reflects something of a personal journey, not just a creative one.

Mindy: I've had similar feedback over the course of writing, for as long as I've been writing and having my critique partners be like, how does she feel right now? And I would have so many comment bubbles on the sides where it was like - and she feels how? And people really pushing me to dig into those feelings and that internal monologue that is definitely part of the craft that you get better at. You don't necessarily see it at first. When you are a newer writer or an early writer, you are just thinking plot most of the time. All the time. But you want to get everything down on the page so that you don't lose it. And that is a progression of events. I know that I have gotten better as I get older and I'm writing more. I don't have to go back in and layer in feelings as much as I used to.

Mary: Something that I feel like I've gotten better at over four books is making that translation between what's in your head and what actually shows up on the page, because I would miss that early on. I would know what the character looked like and I would know what they were feeling, but I hadn't actually written it. And it would take feedback from critique partners to realize that like, oh, I never actually put that on the page.

Mindy: I depended too heavily on inferences. So like. but like in this dialogue right here, you can see that that's how she feels and it varies. But you're right, you're the author, so you already know how they feel or what they look like or what they're wearing. And so you don't necessarily put it on the page, but you feel like you see it that way because that's what it looks like. And you didn't necessarily do a good job of actually putting it on the page. That is something that you learn as you go.

I think, too when it comes to the genre hopping. I think I have 12 books out, maybe 11, and I've got two more coming. I have kind of begun to settle because I've written everything from historical, mystery, fantasy, post apocalyptic. I've written a little bit of everything, contemporary thrillers, and I have started to find a little bit of a groove, like you were saying before, about a through line. All of my books, like you read any of my books from the fantasy to the contemporary thriller The Voice is there. The grittiness and the feeling is, is there, that this is a Mindy McGinnis book. But it may not have the same genre or the same style because my style can vary pretty widely. 

And some of my books, like A Madness So Discreet and then my fantasy books are written a little more with a literary bent. Whereas my first two books, the post apocalyptic books, they're very sparse just to reflect the landscape and reflect what's going on in the world. But when I have a book that has a little more of a rich setting, the language changes. So I am a little bit all over the place and I do think it has probably hurt me in terms of finding core readers, in terms of my publisher knowing how to market me. I do think that that probably has not done me a lot of favors just in terms of straight up book sales.

Mary: Yeah, and I don't know for me, I don't know how much of a commercial writer I am, so I don't feel like it impacts me quite as much. I'm a mid-lister, I guess I feel like over four books there are readers who have come with me because they like the style, they like the voice. You're saying, like you can tell when you're reading a Mindy McGinnis novel. I think something like that develops when you're writing. Do you ever feel like like you're just trying to see what you can get away with?

Mindy: All the time. I'll write something and I'll be like, oh, that's not going to make it, you know, but we'll see what happens.

Mary: I mean, I remember when The Female of the Species came out and just everyone was like, I can't believe she got away with that. Like, she just... she got to do that? And that was what made me realize - and this is probably why I'm still writing Y.A. - because I feel like you can really be experimental in Y.A. You can do things in a way that they would never let you do in the adult market. And I think it's a very exciting place to be for that reason.

Mindy: Yeah, I do. I think so, too. I think that you can have some fun and play with young adult, because I think the younger readers are going to be more receptive. My most recent book has, it's written in three POV’s and one of them is a panther. And most of my readers have been like, oh, that's really cool. But then it's like I've had adults that are like, what the hell are you doing? I'm having fun. 

Mary: Exactly. 

Mindy:   The Female of the Species is a good example. So I think that was my fourth book and I was not, and I still am not like a very well-known writer. I have a group of people that really love me and will buy every book that I write, but that's like maybe five hundred people. I don't have a huge audience. I definitely think that there is a perception that I sell more than I actually do. If I'm being totally honest, I'm probably actually, as far as numbers go a mi-lister. I just get away with a lot. And I think honestly, that's part of the reason why I get away with it. 

I mean, The Female of the Species should be banned. Like there's no reason why that book should not be banned, other than it isn't read as widely as some other books that get banned. This Darkness Mine, when I wrote that, I was like, oh, this is getting banned. No, not not a peep. And I think it's just because they aren't read enough and that's fine. It's like - I'm ready to be banned. I think it'll be great. Every time I write something. I think, well, this one's not going to make it and I keep getting away with it. 

But I think that's partially because I do have a reputation that I write the way that I do. And the people that like it already know it. And that's who's going to pick up my books. It's people that already know who I am.

Mary: I think we've both been called gritty. My first couple of books got called Gritty. My second book definitely got called Weird. The word that keeps coming up with Indestructible Object, every review that I have seen of it, the word Messy seems to be the word. I've decided, I don't know, I don't think everyone means that as a compliment. But I've decided to wear it as a point of pride because it's a book about human relationships and human emotions and those are rarely tidy. Or if they are tidy, they're not interesting.

Mindy: No, absolutely. Absolutely. Yeah, I get a lot of Bleak and I'm always like - Is that good or is that like… Well, I mean, it was supposed to be. So I guess I did it right.

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Mindy: Talking about Indestructible Object, the book that I'm drafting right now deals with a girl, a young girl who is creating a podcast. So I think that's really interesting that you're doing the same thing, because I am also toying with writing out the podcast, like the transcript as a chapter.

Mary: Was Courtney Summers the first one to do it with Sadie

Mindy: Yeah.

Mary: My book is very different from Sadie because there are no villains and no one dies. And the podcasts are about art and love instead of murder. But it's a very satisfying format to write. In my third book, I, Claudia the last section of that book is written entirely in court transcripts. So there was something similar stylistically and I don't know, I hadn't listened to a lot of podcasts prior to writing this book and I do now. It was easy to kind of fall into the rhythms of it. 

And there are actually two different podcasts in the book. There's the one that she produces with her boyfriend. It's called Artists in Love, and every week they tell a different artist's love story. Then they break up and he's gone and she's kind of in a tailspin. And she ends up starting her own podcast to sort of investigate the mystery of why her parents, who are in the middle of getting divorced, got together in the first place because they just seem like such a doomed couple. So the podcast kind of ends up being about this mystery and about trying to figure out whether love exists, whether love is ever worth all the goddamn trouble of it.

Mindy: Yeah, yeah, yeah. I love it. I think that's wonderful. I love the experimental structure as well. I'm playing with it too. In mine. It's like you're saying- it's a team, it's two girls. It's an unlikely duo that ends up having to do a podcast together because they don't have enough history credits to graduate because they had a guidance counselor that just did not do his job. One of them is like the valedictorian and the other one is barely going to graduate. And so they have two very, very different voices. And they end up getting involved in a mystery that nobody even knew existed, a disappearance, someone that disappeared 40 years ago. Nobody even knew she was gone. 

Both of them with their different approaches where the valedictorian is just kind of like, oh, my gosh, it's so horrible. And I can't get my mind around the darkness of the situation and where the other girl is like, I am so not surprised. Yeah. A teenage girl disappears. Oh, yeah. That that's never happened before. And just having these really, really very divergent voices. And they each hosted a different episode. So I haven't written one of the episodes by the rougher girl yet, but I wrote the one that's by the valedictorian. 

And so it was kind of fun to play with because I was writing it. How would she do this? Like, what is her voice going to be like on her podcast? It’s going to be very serious. But I was like, we're going to really heavy hand this, like it's going to be a little too much and she's going to take herself very seriously. It was a really good way to investigate that character.

Mary: That sounds fantastic. Does it have a title?

Mindy: Right now it's a working title and I hope it does stick most of the time it does. What they're supposed to be doing is just doing a historical podcast about their small town. There was a week in and this is actually true -this happened in my small town. Forty years earlier, there was a tornado that wiped out the town, a flash flood that came in right after that. And then the only murder that has ever occurred in the town happened in that same week. Everybody from the town calls it the long stretch of bad days. So that's the name of the book. 

Mary: Oh, wow. I love that. 

Mindy: Thanks. And it's not all my hometown, the tornado is my hometown. The flash flood is like the next town over and the murders are completely made up because nobody dies where I live. But, yeah, I'm excited about it. And I'm playing with that format, like you said, that podcast format. So it's fun. I mean, I really enjoy it. 

I love the question in Indestructible Object. What is love? I've been divorced twice. I think that's a wonderful topic for a teenager to be interested in. It might help them discover some things earlier rather than later.

Mary: That was something I was really trying to do in the book. I feel like people get a lot of bad information about love and relationships and what constitutes a healthy or a successful relationship. Like often what constitutes success is it lasts until you die. Nobody cheats and nobody fights. And there's so much variation in between. And I think that a relationship can end and can still be a success, you have other options with people then, like we can't be together anymore, therefore you suck. And I have to just sort of burn down all the memories. 

There are no villains in Indestructible Object, which is funny because my first three books all have these villains who are so bad like they’re badness is visible from space. And to have in this book be something that's a lot more nuanced that you don't need to have someone who is the bad guy necessarily, because just the way that people bounce off each other, the way that they communicate or fail to communicate, that can create all the conflict and tension and the things that can blow up a relationship. 

Although I will say this like the main character, she's an imperfect character. You find out as you go further in, like at the beginning, she's really idealized to this relationship with her boyfriend that's just ended. But the more you learn about their relationship, the more you begin to see that it was not perfect at all, like it never was, that they sort of enjoyed telling each other sort of the story of themselves. They looked really good on paper.

Mindy: I really resent the TV shows and the movies and the books that I read that cast love in a certain light where you were always happy and nothing ever went wrong and he loved you so much. I get very frustrated with the way - it is changing, but I was a librarian for 14 years and I would get so irritated when the main character's love interest, the male was so just genuinely perfect. And he takes care of his little brothers and sisters and he volunteers at the Humane Society and he plays guitar and he cooks dinner for his family and he never even looks at other girls. You are the only girl that exists. And I'm like, bullshit. Yes, he does. He looks at other girls because he's a boy. 

It would frustrate me because I would read when I was younger, too. It's like I would read these books about idealized love, where it’s like you are the only one for me and I have found you and we will be together forever. Then dating someone and being like. So you really seem to look at Kathy a lot. And I'm thinking, oh my God, this relationship is never going to work. He is attracted to someone else. And it's like, well, that's just biology.

Mary: I don't know. I feel like some of those grand romantic gestures can often be, They're not always weaponized, but when they are deployed upon you, they're very difficult to resist because you're being fed, like there's a moment where in Indestructible Object, where the main character and her boyfriend, they've broken up and he shows up at her house, like in this grand, like I want you back kind of gesture. She knows even then she should say no to it, but it's just too alluring. And she's getting the thing that she wanted like the thing that fills in that particular narrative, she should say no to it and she can't.

Mindy: That's something I've always felt about public proposals and someone is proposed to in public and people are like, oh, my God, it's so sweet! And I’m like NO! Because she can't say no now.

Mary: But when they do say no, it's so rich.

Mindy:  I know there was a Tumblr for a while. I don't know if it's still out there. And it was all like public proposals gone wrong. I love that because it was like, this is reality. We don't always get what we want. And it’s guys, it's girls, it's both. And it's like people really putting themselves out on the line and being told no, being rejected. And it's heartbreaking to watch, but it's also real. That's reality. I would never say I grew up reading romance, but there was definitely like a summer where I think I was probably fifteen or sixteen. And I read a lot of Jude Deveraux and Kathleen Woodiwiss, so I read a lot of romance. And it was all very much like that, swoony, our eyes met and our fates were sealed. And that is just not how it works. And even the best possible relationship in the world, if you're not fighting, something's actually wrong because somebody isn't saying something.

Mary: What I was reading when I was in high school, I never went through a romance reading phase, but I was reading like. Pete Hamill and John Irving and John Cheever and all the Johns - mid century American masculinity romance novels. And that narrative is like, oh, I'm middle aged and emotionally battered and this person is going to save me. It’s just as much a fantasy.

Mindy: I have a lot of thoughts about the way relationships are portrayed and when you see a messy one, I really enjoy that. I know Friends is coming back and the kids are watching Friends. But I watched it through high school and then in college and then I stopped watching it after college. But I remember when Ross and Rachel broke up like my entire dorm was watching it. It was one of the best fight scenes that I've ever seen. It was very realistic, like they were yelling and then they were crying and then they were sorry. And then they were like, we really love each other, but this just isn't working and we don't know why. And they're both sad. It was just like a real relationship.

Mary: Well, I did not expect Ross and Rachel's relationship to show up in this conversation.

Mindy: I don't know. I've been because the friends, everybody's watching Friends again and people are wearing t-shirts and everything. I was really invested in it as a teenager. As an adult, If it's on, I'll watch it and it just doesn't do anything for me. But I remember being probably 18 or 19 when that episode aired and being like, oh, yeah, this is actually realistic. This is nice.

Mary: And, you know, there are people who were never quite into Ross and Rachel again. Once they broke up the first time and then got together, it was kind of like, well, they're not perfect anymore. So I'm done.

Mindy: Which is just not real at all.

Mary:  Well, I mean, happy endings are all about where you stop telling the story. The first time that I ever thought, that I ever really saw that, it hit home for me was when I saw the movie The Graduate. And the movie ends with the big romantic gesture. He actually pulls it off. It goes well. And then the scene of them just driving away on the bus with these horrible expressions on their faces of like, oh, - we done fucked up and now we have to live with the consequences of our own actions. 

And I remember really resisting that at first, the movie ending. And I was mad like that was my initial response of like, no, you can't you can't do that. That's not right. That's not how you tell a story. And then I realized, wait, no, that is exactly how you tell a story.

Mindy: I read very recently. I actually read The Hunchback of Notre Dame because I've never read it before.

Mary:  I haven't read that. 

Mindy: Oh, God. OK, so I talked about it on the podcast before. I don't know who at Disney read that and was like, this is a children's movie. Oh my God. The priest like flat out attempts to rape Esmeralda. Esmeralda is 14 and her knight in shining armor, whose name I forget. He literally can't even pronounce her name like she decides she loves him because she likes his military helmet, literally. 

Mary: Oh, no. 

Mindy: Oh, yes. She likes the way he looks. And then she's like, I love you. Let's get married. And then she even drops it where she's like, You don't even have to marry me. I will just be your mistress. That's fine. Let's make this happen. And he's like, You're so cute. My little pet, he’s patting her head and he won't, he can't even pronounce her name. And everyone ends up dying. Literally, the entire cast dies except for her lover, whose name I can't remember. But the very last line of the Hunchback of Notre Dame, it made me so happy because it said, as I forget his name, we'll just say it's Greg. It says, As for Greg, he suffered the worst fate of all. He was married,

Mary: I guess, at Disney. They were like, well, if we got away with The Little Mermaid and making that palatable to an audience of children, surely we are invincible now. We can adapt this.

Mindy: It was really good. I enjoyed the book. It was fun to read. It was very well written. Everyone dies, Esmeralda is hanged. Quasimodo crawls into her grave and just chooses to lay there until he dies. And as for him, he was married and it was the worst fate of all. The worst of all. Thanks for that happily ever after. 

Last thing, why don't you let readers know, first of all, when the release date is for  Indestructible Object, where readers can find the book and where they can find you online.

Mary: It came out June 15th. It is available anywhere books are sold. And my website is Mary-McCoy.com. I just got two pieces of good news yesterday. I found out, first of all, that Indestructible Object, there's going to be a paperback edition. And I also found out that it was nominated for YALSA’s Best Books for Young Adults list they produce every year. And it's funny, that just felt like such an achievement unlocked. Like four books, and I've never gotten that honor before. It felt really special.

 Mindy: Absolutely. And I don't think that people realize you don't automatically get a paperback. You have to sell well enough in hardcover in order to get a paperback release.

Mary:  Yeah, this is the first time that's happened. I did just find out also my second book, Camp So and So, which this is wild - that book came out in 2017 and it's paperback edition is coming out next May. That's nice to know that you've written something that's kind of had that much of a long tail on it.

Mindy: Any positive things, no matter when they come in this industry you embrace.

Mindy: Writer Writer Pants on Fire is produced by Mindy McGinnis. Music by Jack Korbel. Don't forget to check out the blog for additional interviews, writing advice and publication tips at Writer Writer Pants on Fire dot com. If the blog or podcast have been helpful to you or if you just enjoy listening, please consider donating. Visit Writer Writer Pants on Fire dot com and click “support the blog and podcast” in the sidebar.