Author One-on-One: Dennis Lehane and Laura Lippman
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Dennis LehaneLaura Lippman
Dennis Lehane is the author of ten novels—including the New York Times bestsellers Live by Night and Shutter
Island.
Dennis Lehane: Place is elemental in our books. Talk about Baltimore and how it inspires your stories.
Laura Lippman: Baltimore is like an eccentric relative, that quirky uncle who you think is amazing when you’re a kid,
and you love him so much. Then you grow up and you realize he’s unreliable and a drunk and maybe even a teeny bit racist
– and you still love him so much. He’s your blood, your family. How do you work your head around that? Writing books was
one way to do it..
DL: Who or what inspires your characters in After I'm Gone? Do you have a particular type of character that fascinates
you?
LL: I let my husband give me an idea. Has there ever been truer proof of love? But he thought I was going to write
about the real-life disappearance of Julius Salsbury, maybe even solve it. As the book proves, I was pretty uninterested
in the man who disappeared even after creating my own version of him, Felix Brewer. I was fascinated by the women left
behind. Harlan Coben said once that the stories about the missing are more haunting than the stories about the dead. It
was a good observation. So I stole it.
DL:When it comes to process, I have all the discipline of an over-caffeinated flea in a puppy mill. But you’re quite
regimented. Can you speak about the pros and cons of that approach?
LL: Anything that makes you comfortable is dangerous. And routine has always been my Prozac. Writers like me, we lean
hard on that Flaubert chestnut. “Be regular and orderly in your life so you may be violent and original in your work.”
But if you’re too orderly, too safe, how can you ever do something harder, deeper, stranger? Because there’s the other
Flaubert quote, the one that our friend Sterling Watson taught me: “Human speech is like a cracked kettle on which we
tap crude rhythms for bears to dance to, while we long to make music that will melt the stars.” I want to melt the stars
and that goes beyond discipline. Sometimes, I feel like Veda in Mildred Pierce, when she goes to audition for a new
piano teacher. He closes the lid on the keys, almost on her fingers, and tells her there’s nothing in her fingers, but
there may be something in her head. I hope there’s something in my head to make up for what I don’t have in my fingers.
DL: I stopped writing about Kenzie and Gennaro when they simply stopped talking to me, can’t tell you why, can’t
explain it any better than that. What about you and Tess Monaghan? Was there a moment—or a series of them—that led to
you leaving that series behind?
LL: She had a baby. And I didn’t know what to do what that darn baby. I wrote The Girl in the Green Raincoat in 2008
when I was hoping to become a mom, but it was so theoretical and abstract. Then I became a mom in 2010 and talk about
hardboiled – mud, blood, feces, urine, these endless logic problems. “If a person is traveling alone with a child and
that person needs to go to the bathroom, yet the child has finally fallen a -- ”
But I need to give Tess a proper ending. I’ve gone back to her for my 2015 book, and I’m trying to build to something,
perhaps an arc of 3 books in which I finally let her go. I always feel as if I’m standing between her and a happy life