I have been waiting for Patti
Abbott to write a western to review here at BITS, and her new novel, Home
Invasion, gives me something to talk about
until she does. I have marveled often at Abbott’s way of telling a
story, and Home Invasion is blissfully
both a novel and a short story collection.
There are continuing characters
that connect these stories, which extend over a period of time from 1961 to
2005. They are mostly about members of the same family and the people whose
lives happen to intersect with them. The way characters find and connect with
each other gives the stories their particular twist. They are drawn together by
a kind of magnetic pull that matches up their weaknesses rather than strengths.
A woman with a domineering
mother locates a hopelessly damaged father, who leaves her in the company of a
sleazy storefront preacher. She runs off with a grifter and drifts into
alcoholism. Her son teams up with a dubious friend who breaks into houses. One
of his girlfriends is cravenly wanton and unfaithful. Another kidnaps a baby to
justify the child support he’s been paying while he’s doing time. And so on.
There’s a bit of Raymond Carver
in these stories, though I did not think of him while reading them. Abbott
brings her own wry perspective that examines the lives of marginal people but
sidesteps Carver’s pathos. You are more likely to groan than sigh at the ends
of chapters as characters extricate themselves from one awkward situation only
to create another. Carver’s people make mistakes and don’t get what they
deserve. Abbott’s do.
At the shore |
The situations they get
themselves into typically involve the telling of lies or half-truths or keeping
the truth from someone else. The “home invasion” of the title is a good
metaphor for all this. Given the chance, they will transgress boundaries,
steal, blame others, and take advantage of other people’s trust.
So when a kidnapped baby does
not fool the man who’s been told by his girlfriend he’s the father, she simply
skips out on both of them. In another episode, his partner in crime sets up a
practical joke that has him believing an elderly woman has been killed.
The dysfunction in Abbott’s
families would be painful if it wasn’t also grimly humorous. Probably my
favorite sequence in the book (originally a stand-alone story) describes a
family’s day at the shore. Two small brothers are left to fend for themselves
as their mother finds a bar to get drunk and their father is up to no good,
while continually complaining about how much the day is costing him. The final
words of that story elicit one of the well-deserved groans I mentioned earlier.
What I enjoy about a Patti
Abbott story is the economy of the storytelling and the finely polished prose.
Her dialogue is sharp and darkly funny. Nearly everything that happens is
unexpected, and while endings are often surprises, they are also inevitable.
Her characters are so nicely complex that you want to hear more about them, and
this novel does just that.
Home Invasion is currently available for kindle.
Patti Abbott |
Interview
Patti Abbott has generously
agreed to spend some time here today talking about writing and her novel. I
happily turn the rest of this page over to her.
How did the idea for Home
Invasion suggest itself to you?
I have been writing about this
family, the Slack, Wist, Batch family, for as long as I’ve been writing. The
first story I wrote—and it was before 2000—was the one about the burglary. I
was still in a writing class then and my teacher, Chris Leland, suggested I
submit it the annual short story contest that the International Auto show ran.
It got awarded runner-up prize (a free pass to the show!!), which was
surprising since it featured no cars.
After that I moved backward rather
than forward with this family. It was easier for me to write short stories when
I knew the characters. Or at least knew where they came from. The characters
themselves mostly popped up although Billie is largely based on a friend, who
spent her childhood trying to locate her father. Her mother was essentially
Kay, and her grandmother, Adele.
But after the first story, nothing
else was based on her actual life. She never found her father despite all those
hours looking for him in telephone directories, but had a pretty flamboyant
life herself. She did fashion wigs, and in her booth in Gimbels two men nearly
had a shoot-out over her. Don’t know why I didn’t put that part in.
Is the published version similar to how you first conceived it or somewhat different?
Is the published version similar to how you first conceived it or somewhat different?
This novel in stories almost had
an agent a few years back. But he decided an unknown writer could not sell a
book laid out like this. When he looked at it, it had two additional stories.
One took place before any of the ones in this collection and concerned Kay,
Adele and Billie and a possible pedophile. I thought there was enough dark
stuff in this book without beginning there.
The other story was about
Charlie’s attempt to have a relationship with a mobster’s daughter and Ron’s
interference. I think I allude to this woman slightly in here. It felt too
long, and those were the stories most easily excised. Although Adele got to
really show her stripes in that first one, and I may find a place to publish it
yet.
Talk a bit about editing and revising. After completing a first draft, did it go through any key changes?
Talk a bit about editing and revising. After completing a first draft, did it go through any key changes?
I had pretty much edited this
collection to death before Snubnose got
it because of the near miss with the agent, so SP had only one major suggestion,
and it was a terrific one. It’s in the final chapter and concerns the fate of
Melissa. I had intended for her to take the deal and disappear but Brian
suggested something else. He wanted the novel to end bigger and he was right.
A day at the shore |
I remember once reading the story of the day at the shore, and I recall it differently. Is it my faulty memory or is the novel’s version actually different?
It was very similar. I think this
one was a bit quicker. If left to me, I will pare every story down to 2400
words. At one point, I had a much longer argument about the best way to get to
AC from Philly, but who cares other than people from Philly. These characters
have been with me so long that I can hear the entire conversation they would
have in my head, and it’s hard to know what you can leave behind and what
furthers the plot and the characters.
Was there anything about the novel that surprised you in the writing of it?
I have actually written two more
traditional novels. In Home Invasion,
the crutch of having written so many short stories helped. When you write a
traditional novel, you have to move the story along without big moments at
least some of the time. In this book, every story has a distinct and slightly
different setting and features some sort of crime. I was able to center each
story around that change of place and crime.
What parts of the novel gave you the most pleasure to write?
What parts of the novel gave you the most pleasure to write?
Whenever I can sneak humor in, it
gives me great pleasure. I loved the character of Kay, the most narcissistic
woman in the world, and yet she’s funny. I liked the ending—when the most
unlikely family finally forms. And the outing to the seashore, though painful,
was fun to write. Someone said kids see everything more clearly than adults and
yet interpret it incorrectly. I think that is true of Charlie in this story.
Were there any story ideas that didn’t make the cut?
Were there any story ideas that didn’t make the cut?
Besides the two I mentioned, I
have since written stories about Billie several times. I call her Christine,
but she is an amalgamation of Kay and Billie.
Were you thinking of any other writers while writing this one?
Were you thinking of any other writers while writing this one?
I think I do drift into copying
styles of other writers if I am not careful. And since these stories were
written over a decade, I can see traces of writers who have influenced me.
How did you go about deciding on the novel’s title?
How did you go about deciding on the novel’s title?
The story of Charlie and Ron’s
burglaries was originally called “Home Invasion.” And when I thought of it
later that’s what the book was really about—how our homes are invaded by
unstable parents, predators, con-men, war, rapists, blackmailers, etc. We may
think there is safety inside our home, but things impinge on it with great and
horrible regularity.
What were the creative decisions that went into the novel’s cover?
What were the creative decisions that went into the novel’s cover?
The cover is pure Eric Beetner. He
wanted to show how dreary their world was, more like the hotel in Barton
Fink than any regular house. But he also
used a map beneath it since stories take place in several states. My eye isn’t
great so I left it to him.
What have been the most interesting reactions to the novel?
What have been the most interesting reactions to the novel?
A good friend asked me how did I
know about people like this? How had I hid this secret life beneath the façade
of a professor’s wife. What secrets have I been hiding? It is always hard to
convince people that the story is not about me. I know people from this milieu,
but it is essentially an imagined group of people in an imagined world.
For readers who like your work, which other writers would you recommend to them?
For readers who like your work, which other writers would you recommend to them?
I love so many writers it’s hard
to know where to start. Alice Munro, Raymond Carver, Patricia Highsmith,
Charles Willeford, Stewart O’Nan, Ian McEwan, Megan Abbott, Tana French, Ken
Bruen, Lorrie Moore, Mary Lavin, Sandra Scoppettone, Laura Lippman, Larry
Watson, Philip Roth, Richard Ford, Charles Portis. Ask me tomorrow and the list
will be entirely different.
What are you reading now?
What are you reading now?
I just finished A Faithful
Place by Tana French and am reading Schroder by Amity Gaige, about a father who kidnaps his six-year
old daughter when his double life threatens his ability to share custody.
What can readers expect from you next?
What can readers expect from you next?
I probably will try to get the
second of those two novels out there in some fashion. The first, I have
concluded, is just too dark. When a friend who likes and reads all my stories
said the protagonist was just too unlikable to center a book around, I had to
conclude she was right.
When, if ever, do you think we might get a western?
When, if ever, do you think we might get a western?
I would love to do a western. I
wrote one short story called Pox, which
I think I could work into a book. But the research involved scares me. You
western-lovers could smell out a fake from a mile away. Just doing Pox took me months of research about that era in Wisconsin,
the history of small pox, German immigrants to the area, life on the prairies
and so on.
Anything we didn’t cover you’d like to comment on?
Anything we didn’t cover you’d like to comment on?
For beginning writers who have the
hope of writing a novel, I would like to offer the advice to not begin with
short stories. Or if you do, get loose of it quickly. Just dive right into a
novel so that is the format that’s comfortable to you. The two forms are very
different and you begin to see the world in 3000 word tales.
Thanks, Patti. Great having you
here. Every success.
Photo credits: Wikimedia Commons
Coming up: John Reese, The Land Baron (1974)
Thanks again, Ron. I put a link up a noon. Again, can't thank you enough.
ReplyDeleteCon mucho gusto.
DeleteGreat interview! Enjoyed this.
ReplyDeleteFantastic.
ReplyDeleteGreat interview! It was nice to hear some of the story behind HOME INVASION.
ReplyDeleteThis is a terrific interview! Thanks, Ron, for hosting one of my favourite blogger/writers :-)
ReplyDeleteSuperb review, Ron. Patti is a good friend of mine and I love to see her go from one strength to another as a writer. Did you know she put BEAT to a PULP on the map? Yes, she did.
ReplyDeletePatti makes story writing seem so effortless. I have read only a few of her stories and have enjoyed every one of them and I'm looking foward to reading as many as I can. I hope she comes out with "Pox" soon. Ron, thanks very much for a very fine review of "Home Invasion" and the interview with Patti.
ReplyDelete