Table for Two: Bill Interviews Himself

categories: Cocktail Hour / Table For Two: Interviews

4 comments


 

The Nervous Breakdown, a terrific cultural website on writing, books, music, and more, asked me to interview myself, which I dutifully did.  The result is predictably ambivalent.  You can read it there, or read it here and go there for much more.

.

Q:  Bill, thanks for sitting to talk.

A: Thank you, Q.

 

Q:  You’ve got a new book, Life Among Giants, coming from Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill.  Tell us about some of the suffering the publisher has put you through.

A:  Well, they haven’t.  Really, they’re a very impressive and generous and lovely outfit, the best experience I’ve had in publishing!

Q:  That’s terrible, terrible, sorry to hear it.  Misery, awful.  Tell us about the book.  At least you’ve got the book.

A: Well, Q, it’s about a….

 

Q: About a young football star, David “Lizard” Hochmeyer, who lives across the way from a world-class ballerina named Sylphide.  After her husband’s death, he decides he’s going to rescue her, gives up his All-American life to do so, rows across the pond and into the arms of fate.

A:  Or anyway he mows her mega-lawn.

 

Q:  While meanwhile his sister, the gorgeous, dazzling, crazy and brilliant Kate, has been working over there, in this enormous mansion the size of an embassy.  And seems to have some secrets, big secrets.

A: It’s not that she’s crazy, really, but that she’s….

 

Q: Secrets that link the destinies of these two families—the rich and talented ones in the mansion getting richer and more and more successful, and David and his family, modest house, modest means—well, everything on this side of the pond falling apart.  I better not give away that the parents are murdered right in front of Lizard in the first chapter.

A: You just gave it away…

 

Q: Dave’s Dad, oh my god, a loser of epic proportions…

A: Not a loser, exactly, just inept, and in over his head with the financial sharks he works for.

 

Whatever happened to payphones?

Q:  Meanwhile, there’s this girl at school, and Lizard’s just trying to live his life.

A: But life has exploded. Will Emily help with that or only cause more trouble?

 

Q:  And will he finally get laid?

A:  Q, you’re so coarse.  Much more to the point is the violent loss of one’s parents!  That’s not something you’re going to recover from easily.

 

Q: Revenge might help.

A:  But revenge is not Lizard’s style.

 

Q: But his sister eggs him on.

A: She’s obsessed, and it’s not hard to get the fire going in Lizard’s breast.

 

Q: Ask me some questions about me for a change.

A:  I thought you were interviewing me.

 

Q:  Where did these characters come from?  Ask me that!

A:  Yes, where?

 

Q:  I, and you, we worked at restaurants, on a ranch, and playing music.  We know sports people, we love to cook, we once lived in a huge, broken mansion, we dated ballet dancers, developed big crushes, learned all about Bournonville’s ballet La Sylphide, which is about this boy, James, who falls in love with a sylph, this fairy creature from another word.

A: And when he…

 

Q:  When he tries to cross over into her world, disaster.

A:  And what about our huge cast of characters?  And settings?  From the mansion to football fields to the ballet stage to the kitchens of world-class restaurants!

 

Q:  Well, one world-class restaurant.  You and I, we worked at more prosaic places, mostly bartending.  But the kitchens in these places, the humanity!  A cast of characters you couldn’t make up.

A:  Speak for yourself.  I did make them up.

Q:  Etienne, the beautiful, empathic chef.  RuAngela, his dazzling, cross-dressing boyfriend.

 

A:  When do we write?

Q:  I don’t know.  That’s not my department.

 

A:  We write late at night, early in the morning.

Q:  We like to spend my days performing useless tasks and satisfying bureaucratic whims.  Also gardening.

 

A:  So that’s you, all those hours, all those vegetables.

Q:  And you, you’re the napper!

 

A:  The napper, yes.  Twenty minutes every afternoon, no matter what.  But isn’t that when we get our best ideas, in the fog of waking?

Q:  More in the digging, I would say.

 

A:   Okay, here’s one: Who are the giants of our title?

Q:  Well, not Lizard, though he’s almost seven feet tall.

 

A:  The dancer?

Q:  Definitely a giant.  The greatest dancer of her generation, maybe ever, widely agreed.

 

A: And of course her husband, the British rocker Dabney Stryker-Stewart.

Q:  As big as John Lennon, as big as Mick Jagger, maybe more so.  A Titan.

 

A:  Dad’s evil boss, Perdhomme?

Q:  Yep, a giant.  A really bad one, but a giant.  Like that Goya painting, “Saturn Devouring his Son.”

 

A:  Exactly!  He’s biting the poor guy’s head off!

Q: But being giant doesn’t save you.

 

A:  It doesn’t save you from your fate.

Q:  Kate.

 

A:  Kate’s a sister, not a giant.  But she’s a giant presence in Lizard’s life, that’s for sure.

Q:  Jack?

 

Q:  Kate’s professor at Yale.  Pop-philosopher and serious genius, capable of nurture, capable of growth.  Capable of containing Kate’s madness.  Later to become her husband.  Keeps her at his house while she’s at Yale.  He’d get fired for that behavior today!

A:  Well, but this was the 1970s.

 

Q:  We follow them to the present.

A:  Or they precede us, ships borne ceaselessly into the future.

 

Q:  Publisher’s Weekly called Life Among Giants “Gatsbyesque.”

A:  They also called it “a soapy and thrilling indulgence, a tale of opulence, love triangles, and madness, set against a sumptuous landscape of lust and feasts, a sensory abundance that fails to mitigate the sorrows of David’s youth.”

 

Q:  Nice.  But what about the Gatsby thing?

A:  Conscious on our part.  Lizard is a kind of contemporary Nick Carraway, the narrator of Gatsby, just this normal guy who finds his life tangled with the lives of more mythic figures.

 

Q: What’s with the mushroom on the cover?

A:  You’ll have to read the book.

 

Q:  But I wrote the book!

A: No, I wrote it!

 

Q:  You!  You did nothing.  Facebook and phone calls all day.  And your ridiculous power naps.

A:  And yet you don’t know what the mushroom is all about?

 

Q: Oh, I know.  I know all right.  But you’re not going to trick me into saying it, you manipulative left-brained creep.



  1. Debora writes:

    Bildo is in Denver today–at least in the Denver Post (Sunday, Dec 23)!

  2. Debora writes:

    This is hilarious!!! Q and A are marvelous together! Where do you come up with this stuff? Q is so intelligent and cold-edged, he would have broken me down immediately–a weeping willow, Barbara would have answered this for me. Poor Bill, sweating the hot seat the entire way…

    But I’m rather suspicious of this whole arrangement. Are you even allowed to interview yourself?

  3. Tommy writes:

    Loved it! Stephen Colbert used this technique with his book, passing an autographed copy back and forth in what turned out to be a Romney parady – brilliant! As I mentioned in the Michael Nye interview a while back, I sometimes suspect, and am annoyed by, interviews on NPR when it feels like the subjects were given copies of the questions in advance, and arrive with prepared answers. A great interviewer, however, can draw out qualities and information from the interviewee seemlessly, and without facial distortion. Much as Colbert, autographs his book, “For Stephen: You complete me,” Q really brings out the best in A in this interview. Or was that vice versa?

    A question that’s still nagging me didn’t get answered in this interview, and I was hoping one or the other of you could clear it up. As the story heats up, a whiny minor character gets beaten up. Was this just to throw the reader off the scent??!

  4. Janine writes: