Hilary’s debut novel, The Damage Done, won the 2011 Anthony Award for Best
First Novel, and the Crimespree Award for Best First
Novel. The book was also a finalist for the Macavity Award for Best First
Mystery, and the Arthur Ellis Award for Best First Crime Novel. The novel’s main
character, Lily Moore, is, like Hilary, a travel writer. While their personal
lives have little in common, they do share a few things, such as a love of
vintage clothing, classic Hollywood movies, and Art Deco design. The sequel to
The Damage Done is The Next One to
Fall, a mystery set in Peru that Forge published on February 14, 2012. The
third book in the series, Evil in All Its Disguises,
will be published by Forge on March 5, 2013.
Her work as a travel writer has allowed her to visit places such as Peru, Easter Island, and Israel. Ironically, Hilary has spent much of her time writing books about her hometown, Toronto, and her adopted city, New York, where she’s lived since October 2001. She’s written 11 editions of Frommer’s Toronto and the first edition of Frommer’s New York City Day by Day, in addition to co-authoring five editions of Frommer’s Canada. In March 2008, she launched the Gluten-Free Guidebook, a website for people with celiac disease and gluten intolerance. (Hilary was diagnosed with celiac disease in 2004).
Hilary’s claim that she will do anything
for a story is something that she’s had a few opportunities to regret. It sounds
great until she finds herself diving for shipwrecks in the icy waters of the St.
Lawrence River or swimming with sharks in the Bahamas.
She got her start in journalism in 1995, when she moved to New
York for five months to intern at Harper’s Magazine.
When Hilary returned to Toronto, she joined the staff of Canadian Living magazine as a copy editor. Her first
freelance article, “Death Takes a Holiday” — about a
New Orleans cemetery — was published by The Globe &
Mail. She left her day job to write full-time in June 1998.Her work as a travel writer has allowed her to visit places such as Peru, Easter Island, and Israel. Ironically, Hilary has spent much of her time writing books about her hometown, Toronto, and her adopted city, New York, where she’s lived since October 2001. She’s written 11 editions of Frommer’s Toronto and the first edition of Frommer’s New York City Day by Day, in addition to co-authoring five editions of Frommer’s Canada. In March 2008, she launched the Gluten-Free Guidebook, a website for people with celiac disease and gluten intolerance. (Hilary was diagnosed with celiac disease in 2004).
Robin Spano’s debut novel, Dead Politician Society, follows Clare Vengel on her first undercover assignment after the major is murdered in the middle of a speech. The sequel, Death Plays Poker follows Clare through her second assignment as she traces a string of poker players who are strangled in their hotel rooms.
Robin grew up in downtown Toronto and now lives in Lions Bay, BC. When she’s not lost in fiction, she loves to get outside snowboarding, hiking, boating, and riding the curves of the local highways in her big black pick-up truck.
Her historical role model is Winston Churchill, more for his independent thinking than his drinking. Her secret dream was to be one of Charlie’s Angels, but since real life danger terrifies her, she writes crime fiction instead.
She’s a founding member of Off The Page Toastmasters – a public speaking group for writers. She’s also active with Crime Writers of Canada and Sisters in Crime’s Toronto Chapter.
She is married to a man who hates reading and encourages her endlessly. Which is great, because it’s Keith who drags her away from her computer to do all those fun things outside.
Robin grew up in downtown Toronto and now lives in Lions Bay, BC. When she’s not lost in fiction, she loves to get outside snowboarding, hiking, boating, and riding the curves of the local highways in her big black pick-up truck.
Her historical role model is Winston Churchill, more for his independent thinking than his drinking. Her secret dream was to be one of Charlie’s Angels, but since real life danger terrifies her, she writes crime fiction instead.
She’s a founding member of Off The Page Toastmasters – a public speaking group for writers. She’s also active with Crime Writers of Canada and Sisters in Crime’s Toronto Chapter.
She is married to a man who hates reading and encourages her endlessly. Which is great, because it’s Keith who drags her away from her computer to do all those fun things outside.
Two Women Chat …
by Hilary Davidson and Robin Spano
Hilary: The highlight of my summer was the week I spent at
your house in June. In a way, I still can't believe it happened. One minute, we
were talking about doing an event with a couple of other writers, and then
suddenly, I was at your house in B.C. with Ian Hamilton and Deryn Collier, and
we had a week of events together. All of this after I met you for two minutes
at Bouchercon in San Francisco! When I started writing crime fiction, I didn't
expect that it would lead to making new friends and having slumber parties at
their houses, but it has. Writing fiction has made my real life more surreal.
Does it ever feel that way to you?
Robin: Surreal, um, definitely. Maybe because our job
description is to go deep into our heads for several hours and write down the
things we see in there. And then share those happenings with the world in the
most public way possible.
At first I found that contrast hard – and I think I wrote
more superficially about my characters, as a form of self-protection. But the
more I write, the more natural it feels to pull the truth out from deeper
inside, let my characters be more flawed and more real. In some ways, I think
the most neurotic parts of ourselves are the most universally interesting to
readers.
What really shocks me is how fun I'm finding the public part
of the job. That tour with you and Ian and Deryn was a highlight of my summer
too. I loved our late night gossip sessions with wine in the hot tub.
I also enjoyed our CBC interview. Kevin Sylvester asked some
great questions, like how we handle genre snobbery – that phenomenon where
highbrow literary readers dismiss genre fiction out of hand. I find it easy to
dismiss any snob back – I feel like they're the one limiting their world by
shutting a portion of it out. But I have crime writer friends who get really
bothered by being slapped with a philistine label. What's your take?
Hilary: I think "literary fiction" is mostly a
marketing term. If a book has an instantly recognizable theme — mystery/crime,
sci-fi, romance, dystopian universe — it gets lumped into genre. Calling a book
"literary fiction" is, to me, an acknowledgment that nobody can
figure out what box it fits into. It's like a big bin of miscellaneous prose,
some brilliant and some decidedly not.
Being snobby about it seems silly when you look at the issue
from that perspective, but some people are. I got an email a week ago from
someone my husband went to school with, saying — I'm paraphrasing here — that she
wanted to write a mystery novel because that would be so much easier than a
literary book. To my mind, that's even crazier than someone saying, "I
only read literary fiction, not mysteries," which I've heard more than a
few times. When I hear that, I know I'm talking to a person who wants to be
seen as smart and tasteful, and has some insecurities about it.
Talking like this makes me feel like I'm back in your hot
tub, wineglass in hand. What surprised me about staying at your house was that
I got a lot of writing done that week. I never thought I'd be able to stick to
my schedule with other people around. What's your writing schedule like when
you aren't taking care of a house full of writers?
Robin: Ha ha. I hope your friend is reading this. I originally
thought I'd start with a mystery because it would be easier to write too. (I'm
a reformed genre snob, true confession.) But I quickly found that it was harder
because not only do you have to make sure the characters have interesting
growth arcs and the dialogue rings true and all the other facets of
"literary" fiction, but you have to fit in clues and red herrings and
suspects in a way that keeps the reader guessing and satisfies their curiosity
at the end. I love the puzzle-making aspect of writing crime fiction – for me,
the craft is the perfect blend of art and science – but there is no way anyone
could convince me a mystery is easier to write.
I had a friend email me last week. He's a literary writer
trying his hand at a chick lit novel. Which I totally love – I think it's great
for writers to explore lots of genres and formats. But he asked me if he should
dumb down (okay, he called it "simplify") his language to cater to
genre fiction readers. He's a smart guy, and I understand where his question was
coming from, but I told him no way. I give my reader full credit for having a
brain. I explained that the only difference between literary and genre fiction
is that genre has a specific plot designed to entertain, and literary, well,
uh, needs no plot, really.
Normal writing schedule = first thing in the morning,
always. Then the day could take on different shapes. This week I have a
gardening project I'm passionate about, so after I've worked for a couple of
hours I get my grubby clothes on and go out and play with my hoe and the
bramble roots. Gardening, I'm learning, is great for mulling fiction. Sometimes
I mix in some socializing – I'll meet a friend for coffee or lunch or a walk in
the woods. Other days I'm intense and write all day. I think my favorite breaks
involve driving – the Sea-to-Sky Highway has these wicked curves and gorgeous
scenery; it relaxes me to spend time on it.
What's your schedule like? Living in Manhattan, it must be
hard to stay at your desk all day.
Hilary: I remember the Sea-to-Sky Highway from my visit —
that was so beautiful. In some ways, New York is full of distractions, but when
I leave my apartment, I feel like I'm on a research mission. I walk a couple of
miles each day, and things I see and overhear end up finding their way into my
work. I also work out a lot of problems with plots while I'm walking. When I'm
sitting at my desk, it can be hard to take a step back and get the perspective
I need. Letting my mind wander while I walk frees me up to work out knots in
the book.
My schedule is pretty steady. I like to write in the
morning, partly because I can keep a leash on my social-media usage and web
surfing. In the afternoon, I'm much more distractible. I'll have 50 news
stories open in my browser, thanks to my Twitter friends. I sometimes write in
the evening, too, usually when I'm in the closing stretch of a novel.
I tend to get consumed by what I'm writing. Dan jokes about
me wandering into traffic when I'm working on a first draft, especially with a
book. I see the story through the main character's eyes and that puts me inside
Lily's head for extended periods of time. But it's an odd feeling, because I'm
also on the outside of the story, peering in. I know all of these things about
her that she would never tell anyone. It's a strange, complicated relationship,
because we have some things in common (we're both travel writers) but there's a
lot that's different (our family histories and personal lives). What's in like
for you, writing about a character that has some of your traits (like your love
of motorcycles!)?
Robin: I think you've said it really well – the relationship
between Clare and me is strange and complicated.
I have enough in common with Clare that I feel perfectly
comfortable crawling into her skin and seeing the world from behind her eyes.
Because she's young and hot-blooded, I especially like taking out my real life
rage through her fictional temper.
She's also different enough that I don't feel like I'm
writing an autobiography. She's more fearless, more confident, she'd prefer
watching TV to reading a book. And I really don't understand how Clare can
prefer that watery piss they call Bud over the full-flavored IPAs I like to
drink, but she is who she is, right? That's the thing about a character – they
take on their own life, and you just have to let them be who they are,
documenting what you can catch of them.
I think my favorite part of writing about Clare is the
vicarious living. I choose her cases based on where I'd like to go undercover –
a poker tournament, a ski resort town. I'm thinking maybe Hong Kong next. How
do you choose Lily's next destination?
Hilary: It's mostly intuition. With THE NEXT ONE TO FALL, I
never had a moment of doubt. I always knew the book would be set in Peru, and I
never considered setting it anywhere else. With the third book, EVIL IN ALL ITS
DISGUISES, the process was different because of legal concerns. Even though
that book is pure fiction, it was inspired by the very real, and very tragic,
story of a Frommer's editor who went missing at a resort in the Caribbean. My
agent was worried about the legal implications of basing the novel in a similar
setting. I ended up deciding to use Acapulco as the setting, largely because of
its Hollywood history — Ava Gardner and Frank Sinatra vacationed there,
Elizabeth Taylor married Mike Todd there, John Wayne owed a resort there.
Acapulco has a glittering past and a gritty present, which made it perfect,
since it's the kind of spot Lily would gravitate toward. The irony: I've never
been to Acapulco! I didn't want to pretend that I had, either, so all of the
Acapulco scenes take place in a hotel where a journalist goes missing and Lily
becomes a virtual prisoner. Being trapped at the hotel ends up giving the book
a Gothic feel, which I wanted.
I feel that there are a lot of happy accidents that work
their way into my writing, and discovering Acapulco's Hollywood history was one
of them. Does that ever happen to you when you're writing?
Robin: Ha ha, I'm glad you didn't write a fake travelogue of
Acapulco. I'm looking forward to reading this glass castle third book of yours!
Yeah, happy coincidences happen all the time. Most times
when I run into a wall, the creative work-around ends up leading me to
someplace much more rich and interesting than if I'd been able to go in a
straight line like I'd originally planned. My third book, DEATH'S LAST RUN, was
absolutely brutal to write. I'd get one plot line in place then realize I'd
just pulled the rug out from under another plot line. I was six months late
delivering it to my publisher because I just couldn't get all the threads
working together. It was research help from my friend Christine that finally
clicked everything into place. The find turned out to be a discussion of the
war on drugs from the perspective of Latin American political leaders – a plot
thread that's tiny compared with the full story, but a missing link can come
from absolutely anywhere.
Okay, so I have to ask. This Stephen Leather guy who
initiated the sock puppet scandal by bragging about writing fake reviews of his
own work – he claims that all writers do it. He's wrong, right? I mean, am I
naively in the dark, or did this guy do a line of blow before the panel where
he said that? Have you ever written a review under a fake name? Is it really
common practice, do you think?
Hilary: I refuse to believe this is a common practice. Of
course, people who do it are going to want to hide behind the "everyone's
doing it!" fig leaf, but it takes a particularly pathetic, shameless ego
to go down that road. I've never written a review under a fake name. There are
some things that would make you lose self-respect, and that's one of them.
Though, I have to add, I can forgive authors who have written fake reviews to
praise their own work. What I can't forgive are authors who used sock-puppet
accounts to trash other writers' books. What R.J. Ellory did is so hateful, it
defies description. Finding out that a writer anonymously trashed their
competition guarantees that I will never pick up that writer's books.
It's disappointing, because the crime-fiction community
overall is such a happy, supportive place. I remember the first conference I
went to — that was Boucheron in San Francisco in 2010 — and how astonishingly
kind people were. Have you felt that, too?
Robin: Yeah. I was petrified of that conference. My first
book had been out for two weeks and I knew no one. But about five minutes in, I
was already comfortable. People talk to you everywhere. Readers and bloggers
love talking to writers, writers love dishing with other writers. There's no
dead room, no loser table – just a bunch of awesome connections waiting to
happen.
I attribute that awesome community to two things. First,
crime writers can afford to be supportive. Because so many readers love
mysteries and suspense novels, the sales pie is big enough that there's a slice
for everyone who figures out the magic formula – i.e., how to connect with an
audience. Second – and you may have heard me say this before – we take our rage
out on the page. All our negative emotions have an outlet, since we're writing
about dark things. In real life, that leaves us pretty chill.
I also have to credit social media for keeping writerly
relationships alive. I met you for two minutes MAX, and I was totally
intimidated by you because you just seemed so polished on and top of the scene
(and as you left the room, some hot young guy was asking for your number). But
then you Tweeted about seeing my book in a Barnes & Noble in Union Square,
and I love Union Square and that made me feel like I was there with you. So I
read your book and saw so much warmth inside you that I wanted to know you
more. And I mean, from there, there was no stopping us – from wasting time
online to being completely inappropriate at dinner parties, you're one of my
very favorite friends in this crime writing community.
Hilary: That feeling is completely mutual, Robin. The great
surprise about crime writing, for me, is that it’s brought so many wonderful
people into my life.
5 comments:
Welcome, ladies!!
Hilary, it's always a delight to have you here, and thank you for bringing along a friend this time. Robin, nice to meet you.
I have enjoyed reading your chat and learning more about each of you. The connection you made appears to have been immediate for both of you and a lovely one.
Hilary - I cannot WAIT to read "Evil in All its Disguises." oh boy oh boy.
Robin - I was not familiar with your work until now, but fully intend to change that!
Hugs to you both!
Kaye
Thanks, Kaye, for hosting us. I've been crawling your site and I LOVE your photos. So much variety and quirky slices of life.
Kaye, thanks so much for hosting us today! You know I'm a big fan of your blog, so it's a thrill to be here. (And I know you'll love Robin's books — she's a terrific writer.)
Cheers, ladies! *clinks wineglass in virtual hot tub*
Thanks, Kaye, for having such talented and lovely ladies as guests on Meanderings and Muses. I enjoyed reading their chat. The June gathering sounded like a ton of fun!
I'm fortunate to be a member of the NY/Tristate Sisters in Crime, so every once in a while I have the privilege of seeing Hilary at a meeting, a book signing, and of course, Bouchercon. I'm looking forward to Cleveland ~ it's right around the corner! I hope I get a chance to meet Robin during the conference ~ and of course, see Hilary, too!
Hi to you both, Great chat - I felt like I was having coffee with you. Writing is such a personal process but writers seem to have so many commonalities. Spending so much time inside your head, then having to emerge into the real world. and what you said about walking into traffic when you're writing the first draft. That's such a fun part of the process.
Thanks Kaye for hosting this chat. I'm learning to love social media.
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