Jon Clinch has been an English teacher, folksinger, typeface designer, copywriter, and more. His first novel, Finn, was named an American Library Association Notable Book and was chosen as one of the year's best books by the Washington Post, The Chicago Tribune, and the Christian Science Monitor. It was also the winner of the Philadelphia Althenaeum Literary award and was shortlisted for the Sargent First Novel Prize. His next novel, Kings of the Earth, was named a Best Book of the Year by the Washington Post. His newest, the Thief of Auschwitz, is already racking up the raves. I'm thrilled to have him here--and read on, because at the end, he delivers a secret. Thanks so much, Jon.
So, tell us about the
Thief of Auschwitz? How did the idea spark? What was the research like?
The idea came together from a number of things: family
history, a couple of years' worth of reading, and one very particular dream.
The family history part is on my wife's side. There are no Auschwitz
survivors—her grandparents on both sides left Europe before the war—but that
doesn't mean that the memories and impressions aren't still there. Wendy recalls watching her grandmother
play cards with friends when she was little, and noticing the serial numbers
tattooed on some those ladies' forearms. So in the novel, when a survivor
ruminates on the popularity of tattooing these days—"I say why disfigure
yourself in advance, when if you wait long enough someone will come along and
do it for you?"—he's speaking for her.
The couple of years worth of reading part is a long period
during which I read, for no reason I can put my finger on and most definitely
without any intent of writing my own book, pretty much every first-person
account of the death camps that there is. Elie Wiesel's Night, Viktor Frankl's Man's
Search for Meaning, Miklos Nyiszli's Auschwitz:
A Doctor's Eyewitness Account, and so forth. I also a good number of
histories, including most notably Laurence Rees' very fine Auschwitz: A New History. I didn't read any fiction on the
subject—never have—with the sole exception of a little-read collection called This Way For The Gas, Ladies and Gentlemen,
by Tadeusz Borowski, himself a survivor of the camps.
The cumulative effect of all this was a realization that
regardless of how hard I tried to look at the facts of the Holocaust, those
very facts seemed bent on repelling my attention. It was all too much. It was
all too big. It was all too awful. I began wondering if other people faced this
same problem, and eventually I decided that the answer might be to quit looking
at it directly for a while, and to try looking at it through the lens of
fiction. I thought I'd work with the tools that fiction makes
available—narrative, character, pacing, poetry—and try building a story that
would keep people's attention on the stuff that's so hard to look at otherwise.
If I succeeded, it would be a kindness to the people who went through the
reality. It would be, for lack of a better word, a mitzvah.
As for the very particular dream, it was this: One morning,
long before I started writing the book or even thinking abou it, I woke up with
the title in my head. The Thief of
Auschwitz. Just like that. And I knew that one day I'd have to write it.
What I love is that
people can get it on their KOBO reader, so they can give back to their
neighborhood even as they buy e-books.
I love it too. And that little mini Kobo reader is just the
coolest thing, isn't it? From the very outset, I didn't want this book to be an
Amazon-only thing. It's very easy for micropublishers to take that route. In
fact, it's more than easy; Amazon offers certain very real benefits for making
your books exclusive to their platform. But I said no, because I wanted it as
widely and traditionally available as possible, not just for its own sake but
for the sake of the independent booksellers who help keep our reading culture
vital. Getting it up on Kobo was an important part of that.
On my website, I maintain a list of links to independent booksellers
who've committed to stocking The Thief of
Auschwitz in paper. The list is bound to be incomplete—I only know about
stores that contact me and let me know they're stocking the book—but I really
like having it there.
You've been featured
in BookRiot as one of the 5 books to watch, and you're getting quite a buzz.
Any advice for other self-published writers? Do you feel the lines are starting
to blur?
The lines are blurring in a lot of places, but they're still
pretty clear in the traditional book media—where a great many newspapers and
magazines simply will not review books that come from someplace other than big
publishing. So quite a few papers that have raved previously about Finn or Kings of the Earth won't even be mentioning The Thief of Auschwitz. So be it. There are some things that I
can't change, and it's no use fretting over them.
The buzz is nice. (In the entire publishing process, the
only thing I hired out was a four-month contract with a publicist, so I'm glad
it's paying off.) But believe me, I'll never forget that the chief reason folks
have been interested in learning about The
Thief of Auschwitz is that they're familiar with my previous books. That's
given me a leg up without which I don't know what might have happened.
Further on the self-publishing front, I should note that I
recovered the rights to Kings of the
Earth a month or so ago, and I've just released it in paperback. Random
House did only a hardcover, so it's been a long time coming. (I also should
mention that an audio version of The
Thief of Auschwitz is on its way from Recorded Books. Which will make Thief, as my daughter says, "the
least self-published self-published book ever.")
What's your writing life like? Anything about being a writer
surprise (or disturb) you?
My writing life has been compromised lately, I can tell you
that. Getting this book out into the world has taken everything I've got.
There's no question, though, that I'll get back to work on a
new project soon. I typically write about five hours a day, and I work very
meticulously. The truth is that I can't leave a single unlovely sentence
behind, so I polish as I go and scrub up after myself before moving on. It's
definitely the opposite of the "get something on the page and clean it up
later" school.
For me, the biggest surprise of the serious writing life was
learning how right Mark Twain was when he said that the tanks would run dry on
a given project now and then, and he'd have to turn his attention to something
else until they filled up. I have at least three partial drafts under way now,
one of them nearly complete, but I'm not sure that the tanks are full enough to
start on any one of them right now.
What's obsessing you now?
Other than my sales numbers, you mean? Nothing. There's no
room for anything else.
What question didn't I ask that I should have?
Try this: How did I feel a few months back when my alter
ego, Sam Winston, got an email out of the blue from a certain Caroline Leavitt,
asking to interview him (me) for Leavitville?
You could have knocked me over. I was happy that folks were
talking about Sam's novel What Came
After, and doubly glad that you thought highly of it, and triply glad that
it was selling nicely without my name attached (which turned out to be one very
good reason I felt I could get away with publishing The Thief of Auschwitz on my own). But I couldn't keep up the
charade, as you remember. So I wrote you back as myself, and confessed that Sam
was my secret identity.
What a world, huh?
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