Showing posts with label Ann Hyman. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ann Hyman. Show all posts

"Off the Shelf" Interview With William Diehl


William Diehl Credits Library for His Success
By Ann Hyman


Times-Union book editor, May 11, 1998

Most people who grow up to be writers began life as readers and probably hung out in their local library, toting satchels of books back and forth, looking for their literary groove, guided, it is to be hoped, by a helping librarian.

That's what happened to novelist William Diehl.

He had the perfect audience for his recollections when he spoke Thursday to The Library Guild at its annual meeting.

''The library is where I started to read,'' he said.

He kept it up through grade school and middle school. But, in high school, he skipped the library and hung out with his pals, went to the movies, listened to the radio.

He was still a kid - 17 years old - when he joined the Army Air Corps and flew dozens of combat missions over Europe during World War II. That's when he took up reading again, bundled against the deadly cold of high altitude, jammed into his ball turret with a machine gun on each side of his head and a government-issue book to pass the time during the flight from England to Germany.

The first novel he read on one of those flights was F. Scott Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby.
He returned to reading with the zeal and jubilation of a lost sinner returning to the fold.
Gatsby changed his life.

''I've written eight novels. In every one of them, there's some reference, some tribute to The Great Gatsby,'' Diehl said.

School had turned Diehl off Dickens, but Dickens as a companion on bombing runs turned him on again.

''Charles Dickens is my favorite author, to this day,'' he said. ''I can open one of Dickens' books to any page and just start reading.''

How Diehl was enlisted in the readers' - and eventually the writers' - column by hanging out at the library was an especially appropriate direction for his talk.

The Thrill Of It All: Interview With Bill Diehl

For best-selling novelist Bill Diehl, promoting each new thriller is almost as rewarding as writing it



By Ann Hyman


Times-Union staff writer, October 17, 1997


There are authors who consider the business of selling books once they are in print to be not their job, to be vaguely demeaning.

Bill Diehl is not one of those authors.

The best-selling writer of Sharky's Machine, Chameleon, Primal Fear and a handful of other thrillers for the thinking thriller reader, loves selling his books, sees it as part of the job.

And Diehl likes meeting his readers.

''They're always kind. They're not going to be there if they don't like your work,'' he said.

Diehl was in Jacksonville last week as part of a promotion tour for Reign in Hell (Ballantine, $25), out just two weeks ago and already climbing on The New York Times, the Publishers Weekly and The Wall Street Journal best-sellers lists.

Intense promotion of Reign in Hell began at a publication party at Beachview Books in St. Simons, Ga., the author's home since 1983, and continues until Thanksgiving.

'Tis the season for book promotions. More books are sold in September, October and November than any other time of the year. Publishers and libraries and booksellers sponsor book events across the country. There are fairs, festivals, read-ins, author tours, signings, lectures, luncheons.

''I'm doing the Rocky Mountain Book Fair in Denver around the first of November and the Miami Book Fair two weeks later,'' he said last Friday.

Getting there is not half the fun for the author.

''I don't like to travel at all,'' he admitted. ''Part of it is I don't like to fly and I particularly don't like to fly those little two-engine airplanes.''

The fun begins for Diehl once he is face-to-face with his readers.

Nancy Thomason is owner of Beachview Books in St. Simons.

She talked about Diehl and his readers at the publication party that launched Reign in Hell.

''He stayed an extra hour and a half because of the line. He took time to talk to everyone,'' Thomason said. ''He is an incredibly generous person with his time.''

But, aren't all authors glad to stick around and sign books as long as readers are lined up to buy?

''Absolutely not,'' she said with a wry twist.

Thomason has lived in St. Simons for more than 20 years, so she's watched Diehl's popularity balloon.

''But he's just very down to earth, a basic type person. He's never let his fame go to his head,'' she said.

Diehl, 73, wrote his first novel, Sharky's Machine, when he was 50.

Giving up his profession of journalist and photographer at 50 was a big gamble, but it paid off. Sharky was a big book, a big movie, and life has not been the same for Diehl since.

Reign in Hell is Diehl's eighth novel.

Chicago lawyer Martin Vain, the hero of Primal Fear and Show of Evil, is back in Reign, battling terrorists, armed-to-the-teeth right-wing militia and a snake-handling preacher with a dark vision of America and a dangerous way with words.

Diehl said researching the book took a long time.

''All of my books are fairly topical,'' he said. ''I don't want to just write thrillers, I want to write books that have some kind of significance, books that have something to say. I began tracking the militia groups three or four years ago, on the Internet, through newspapers.''

He described an anonymous meeting with a militia informant at a picnic table in a park in Brunswick, Ga. The man sat with his back to him. Diehl said, ''I never saw him. All I know is that he was white, had dark hair, was about my size.''

Their conversation, almost word for word, became a chapter in Reign in Hell.

Diehl also read scores of hate pamphlets published by various militia and white supremacy groups. He watched hours of surveillance tapes shown to him by a friend who is a former agent of the Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms bureau. He saw militia members making hand grenades, chopping off shotguns.

He found a congregation of snake handlers in Enigma, Ga., to get an authentic view of that intense, seldom-seen religious expression.

He is confident that Reign in Hell treats snake handlers and the militia fairly and tells the truth of the militia agenda.

''The Oklahoma City bombing is what really triggered the book,'' Diehl said. ''It is what made it viable. Prior to that event, people would not have accepted it. I think now, probably, what I'm predicting is an apocalypse of some kind and I think that's possible.''

The Oklahoma City bombing proved what zealots will do in pursuit of their cause.

''And I'm always afraid of zealots,'' the author said.

Reign in Hell is Diehl's favorite of his novels.

''It says a lot about things I feel strongly about, not only about the militia movement, but about developers and polluters and so forth,'' he said.

When his schedule of events promoting the new book wind up, around Thanksgiving, he will take the rest of the year off.

''I'll start a new book in January,'' he said.

He doesn't know yet the subject.

But, Nazi money in Swiss banks interests him. So, maybe Zurich is next stop for Bill Diehl.

''Maybe,'' he said. ''Maybe not.''