Meet Dennis Palumbo author of From Crime to Crime: Mind-Boggling Tales of Mystery and Murder, Writing From the Inside Out and soon to be published Mirror Image
Norm Goldman, Publisher & Editor of Bookpleasures.com Interviews Dennis Palumbo author of From
Crime to Crime: Mind-Boggling Tales of Mystery and Murder, Writing
From the Inside Out and soon to be published Mirror Image.
Dennis was formerly a Hollywood screenwriter (My Favorite Year;
Welcome Back, Kotter; etc.), and is now a licensed psychotherapist in
private practice in Los Angeles. He specializes in helping new and
established screenwriters, directors, and novelists address creative
issues, as well as those involving mid-life and career transition.
Today, Norm Goldman Publisher & Editor of Bookpleasures.com
is pleased to have as our guest Dennis Palumbo, author of
From
Crime to Crime: Mind-Boggling Tales of Mystery and Murder, Writing
From the Inside Out and soon to be published Mirror Image.
Dennis was formerly a Hollywood screenwriter (My Favorite Year;
Welcome Back, Kotter; etc.), and is now a licensed psychotherapist in
private practice in Los Angeles. He specializes in helping new and
established screenwriters, directors, and novelists address creative
issues, as well as those involving mid-life and career transition.
Good day Dennis and thanks for participating in our interview
Norm:
How did you get started in writing? What
inspired you to write your first book? What keeps you going?
Dennis:
I wrote a lot in college, for the
school newspaper. Then, after graduation, I worked in advertising,
writing copy. It wasn’t until I moved from the east coast to LA
that I began writing commercially. I tried my hand at
everything---spec TV scripts, short stories, whatever---and,
strangely enough, when I finally started to sell things, it all
happened at once. The same year I started work on the ABC-TV series
Welcome Back, Kotter, I also sold my first mystery short story to
Ellery Queen’s Mystery Magazine, and my first novel (City Wars,
a sci-fi thriller) to Bantam. So I think that early success was just
a combination of hard work and pure, dumb luck.
The inspiration for my first book,
City Wars, came, believe it or not, from watching football.
Since the competing teams represented different cities, the announcer
would say, for example, “It’s Pittsburgh versus Cleveland,” and
I thought, “What if cities actually warred against each other?”
So I worked up the idea of a distant future when the country was made
up of city-states, like Sparta and Athens, and fought against each
other. In City Wars, Chicago and New York are at war.
What keeps me going, after all these
years? I just love writing. Actually sitting there, putting words
down, seeing where the characters and situations are going. I’m
sort of curious to see what my imagination will come up with.
Norm:
Do you write from your own experiences?
Where do you get your information or ideas for your books?
Dennis:
I write a great deal from my own experience. For
example, in From Crime to Crime, my collection of mystery
short stories, most of the stories feature a group of guys---what I
like to think of as “Desperate Husbands”---who meet every Sunday
afternoon to eat deli, discuss politics and, through a strange set of
circumstances, find themselves caught up in solving crimes. The guys
call themselves “The Smart Guys Marching Society.” Well, I was
actually part of a group of guys who did in fact meet every Sunday
for many years, and called ourselves by that name. Of course, the
only mystery we ever tried to solve involved a missing tub of
artichoke dip, but I used the basic reality of our friendship and
those weekly meetings as the foundation for my whodunnits.
As you might suspect, I also use my
experiences over the past 20 years as a licensed psychotherapist to
inform and inspire story ideas. My upcoming novel, Mirror
Image, has a therapist narrator, which
allows me to use many of these experiences to enrich the story. It
also takes place in Pittsburgh, where I was born and raised, so I get
to re-visit some of my favorite haunts from when I was a kid, and
then later a student at the University of Pittsburgh.
Norm:
What's the most difficult thing for you about
being a writer?
Dennis:
Two things, I guess. The first is
just finding the time. I have a full-time private therapy practice,
as well as a family, so finding the time to write is difficult. It
was much easier in my former career, when I was a screenwriter. All I
had to do all day was write. The other difficult thing, which has
remained constant over the years, is the demands I put on myself to
grow in craft and relevance as a writer, to push myself to try
different things. Since I was a kid, I was admonished to “live up
to my potential,” whatever the hell that means…and I’m always
struggling in terms of whether I’m actually doing that or not.
Norm:
What do you see as the influences on your writing? Is there
anything you find particularly challenging in your writing?
Dennis:
Since most of my fiction-writing is
in the mystery genre, I have many wonderful influences, from Michael
Connelly and James Lee Burke to Elmore Leonard and Richard Price. I
was a college student when I first read Chandler and Hammett, and
still regard them with a kind of awe. I also liked Ross MacDonald’s
Lew Archer novels.
For me, the most challenging aspect
of crime or mystery writing is the plotting. Making sure there are
enough twists and turns. I so enjoy creating characters, and writing
their dialogue---probably a left-over from my TV and film-writing
days---that it never feels like work. Plotting, on the other hand,
always feels like work to me.
In terms of my nonfiction
writing---for newspaper Op-Eds, the Huffington Post, book reviews in
The Lancet, etc.---my influences range all over the map, from Adam
Gopnik and Lewis Menand to David Foster Wallace and Annie Dillard.
Too many to name, really.
Norm:
Do you feel that writers, regardless of genre owe
something to readers, if not, why not, if so, why and what would that
be?
Dennis:
I feel that writers, first of all,
have a responsibility to their own talent. A duty to hone their
craft, to grow and explore and try things. And, yes, I do think that,
regardless of genre, writers owe their readers something: to do their
best, to write with integrity and sincerity, to never talk down to
the reader or write “beneath their gifts,” as an old writing
teacher of mine once said.
Norm:
Can you share a little of your current work with us?
Dennis:
I’m very excited about my upcoming
novel, Mirror Image. It’s the first in a proposed series
featuring Dr. Daniel Rinaldi, a psychologist who consults with the
Pittsburgh Police. He specializes in treating the victims of violent
crime---those who’ve survived the armed robbery or kidnapping, but
are left traumatized. When one of his own patients is brutally
murdered, and it soon appears that he himself, not his patient, was
the intended victim, Rinaldi becomes involved in the case. At the
same time, he begins a stormy relationship with a beautiful Assistant
DA, while possible suspects from both his personal and professional
life continue to emerge. Until a second, completely unexpected murder
throws the search for the killer into an entirely different
direction…
What made the writing of the novel so
engaging for me was that I was able to weave together aspects of my
clinical training at a psychiatric facility, my current experience in
private practice, and the police procedural details of a mystery
thriller. I also enjoyed setting the story in Pittsburgh, my home
town. It’s an amazing place, an amalgam of old and new, a
shot-and-a-beer town that’s collided with the Information Age. The
steel mills I used to work at in the summers between college
semesters are all gone; in their place are sleek, modern buildings
where software designers and MBA’s work. Blue collar turned to
white collar---but with the vestiges of the old Pittsburgh I grew up
in still felt around the edges, still apparent in the venerable
turn-of-the-century buildings, the ethnic neighborhoods, the
immigrant values and loyalties. It’s a fascinating place, and a
great environment for a murder mystery.
Norm:
In fiction as well as in non-fiction, writers very
often take liberties with their material to tell a good story or make
a point. But how much is too much?
Dennis:
I think every astute reader can feel
in his or her bones when a story or situation has so strayed from the
possible or likely that the narrative suffers. As writers, we need to
find that balance between reality and the demands of our
imaginations, so that there’s always verisimilitude. For example,
in Mirror Image, the clinical material I present conforms with
our current understanding of psychological theory and practice,
including how and when patients are institutionalized, or how
medications can be used or abused. At the same time, I take advantage
of the usual mystery convention---which is a huge liberty in terms of
actual police work---which assumes that the two investigating
officers working with Rinaldi only have this one case to solve!
The real police detectives I’ve met often have to negotiate a dozen
ongoing investigations.
Norm:
Could you tell us a little as to how you help established
screenwriters, directors, and novelists address creative issues? What
exactly is this all about?
Dennis:
That question is too big to answer
briefly…so naturally, I’ll try. As a therapist with years of
experience as a working writer, I think I bring a unique perspective
to the issues my patients struggle with. And, on the whole, it’s
become clear to me that most problems that writers deal with are
inextricably bound up in their personal issues. A writer dealing with
procrastination, for example, might in fact be using procrastination
as a way to ward off fears of shameful self-exposure…fears which
may likely be the result of early childhood experiences.
Or take writers’ block: being
blocked creatively is a common occurrence among many writers, yet if
you give the fact that you’re blocked a self-incriminating meaning,
you make the pain and frustration even worse. You see the block not
just as a fact in itself, but as a shaming comment on you, your
abilities, your ambitions. Though, funnily enough, I actually believe
that writers’ block is good news for a writer: it usually means the
writer is about to undergo a growth spurt, to increase his or her
skill level in craft and personal relevancy. In fact, I see blocks as
positive and inevitable developmental steps in the maturation of a
writer. Just as a toddler must struggle to master the developmental
step of walking, so a writer must master the developmental step of
working through a block. Maybe the writer’s blocked because he or
she is changing genres, or writing something more autobiographical
for the first time. Regardless of what’s blocking the writer, his
or her growth as an artist depends upon navigating the block. I think
the proof of this is simple: I’ve rarely met a writer who---having
worked through a block---hasn’t considered him- or herself a better
writer on the other side.
Lastly, in terms of my work with
creative patients, there’s still a great deal of “regular”
therapy involved. Artists of all stripes have to deal with anxiety,
depression, relationship difficulties, career dilemmas. Often
substance abuse as well. And as I mentioned, these personal issues
are always bound up in whatever “creative” problems the patient
is struggling with. My job as their therapist is to help them
identify the underlying causes of these problems, and hopefully
develop with them some tools with which to address them.
Gee, it still turned out to be a long
answer!
Norm:
Does your writing career ever conflict with your
career as a psychotherapist?
Dennis:
No, I think the two careers benefit
each other. My own issues with writing help me relate to my patients,
for one thing. Also, since most of my patients are in the
entertainment industry---TV and film writers, directors, composers
and actors---and I now write only prose, our respective fields of
endeavor rarely intersect. With my novelist and journalist patients,
I believe the occasional similarities between our writing worlds
actually helps reinforce our therapeutic bond.
Moreover, since my therapy practice
is my “day job,” I get to write only what---and when---I like. So
rather than presenting a conflict, my writing life is a nice adjunct
to my career as a therapist.
Norm:
Where can our readers find out more about you and your books?
Dennis:
They can go to my website,
www.dennispalumbo.com. I also invite them to check out my
regular blogs on The Huffington Post, where I comment frequently
about media, writing and psychotherapy.
Norm:
Is there anything else you wish to add that we have not covered?
Dennis:
Nothing I can think of at the moment.
I just hope your readers found this interesting and informative. And
I want to thank you for asking such informed, thoughtful questions.
This was a real pleasure.
Norm:
Thanks once again and good luck with all of your future
endeavors.