|
Jordan Castillo Price Alex Draven
recently interviewed Jordan Castillo Price:
AD: Vic's voice in this story is absolutely
delicious, and you pull off that noir-ish first
person style so well : are you a big fan of noir
stories? Do you have a favorite fictional
detective, outside of the PsyCop world?
JCP: I'd say my biggest fannish influence is
horror. I'm crazy about zombie flicks, ghost
stories, and, of course, vampires. What I like
about Among the Living is that all of these
horror elements are described through the eyes
of a cop. The noir voice works really well with
paranormal/horror because it's so
matter-of-fact. There's a wonderful realism to
it that makes the fantastic aspects of horror
jump off the page more boldly than it would
otherwise. Cops are
factual people, and when they start trying to
categorize and process these mystical things
with their plain language and pragmatic world
views, the paranormal aspect feels that much
creepier.
I do have a couple of favorite detectives,
though they're nothing at all like Vic! Sherlock
Holmes is such a classic icon that he might
almost seem old-hat at times, but when I watched
the Grenada Television Sherlock Holmes
productions from the 80's-90's I was totally
bowled over by Jeremy Brett's portrayal of
Holmes. There were a couple of different Watsons
in that series. The earlier Watson, David Burke,
is serious eye candy. There was a scene in which
Burke's Watson lit a cigarette for Holmes and I
nearly swooned watching it!
My latest favorite sleuth is about as far from
Vic as you can get. I'm a major Stephanie Plum
fan! I was tickled by the idea that Janet
Evanovich could start her whole series off with
a description of the way a neighbor boy lured
Stephanie into a garage to play "choo-choo
train" when she was six and he was eight. I
mean, all kinds of people are reading this
series and loving it, and it's so risqué!
Stephanie doesn't usually know what she's doing
but she's got a lot of heart--maybe that could
describe Vic in certain circumstances, too. They
both find themselves in over their heads most of
the time, which makes the story exciting. Maybe
they're more alike than I thought! Don't tell
Vic I said that, he'd freak.
AD: Have you ever had a paranormal experience?
Do you, in fact, believe in ghosts?
JCP: I would love to have a big-time paranormal
experience, though I suspect that having one
would make it that much more difficult to do
things like shopping for groceries or taking out
the trash. It must be hard to shift from the
metaphysical to the mundane on a daily basis.
And yet without the contrast of the mundane, the
metaphysical would become dull.
Even though I was raised hyper-Catholic, there
was a superstitious sort of magical thinking
that was prevalent in my upbringing. My mother
claims to have had an out-of-the-body experience
after I was born, and my grandmother thought she
could cure a relative's cancer if only she said
enough rosaries. When I was ten years old
or so, I got a fortune-telling kit as a gift. It
probably looked pretty harmless, like a box of
magician's tricks, but there was some hardcore
stuff in there: tarot cards, I Ching coins,
palmistry maps, tea leaf guides and in-depth
astrology charts. In retrospect, I'm pretty
amazed that my family let me fool around with
this stuff.
And there were many hours of fun to be had with
the Oujia board! (This was best done with
younger cousins on the floor of a closet with
the door shut.)
I'm not sure if I believe in ghosts in the
traditional sense, since reincarnation makes
more sense to me. But I think it's possible that
a violent death could leave a psychic signature
behind, even if that person's soul has moved on.
And possibly there are beings on other
planes who might be able to communicate with us
who aren't ghosts in a technical sense. I'm open
to all kinds of explanations.
AD: If you were part of a PI unit, would you
prefer to be a Psych or a Stiff? and if you were
Psych, what would your talent be?
JCP: Oooh, I would HATE to be the Stiff! Some
people, like Maurice, would rather be the Stiff.
But others, like Jacob, are like kids with their
noses pressed against the candy store window,
unable to get in. Every time I write Jacob I
feel bad for him because he's practically
handicapped. He's lacking this magical sense
that everyone else seems to have but him, so
he's got to overcompensate by being the
smartest, sexiest, slickest one there. If I was
a Stiff, I'd
probably be a Psych-groupie like Jacob.
On the other hand, I think that the talents
themselves are often hindrances. I would hate to
be Carolyn and always know if someone's lying or
not. "Hi, your hair looks great, did you do
something new?" and in your gut you know your
friend hates your hair. It must become
demoralizing after a while!
I could never deal with seeing dead people all
over the place. Eep! I could be some sort of
psychic healer, but that sounds really boring,
plus you'd have to deal with all kinds of needy
whiners day in and day out. I guess I'd pick
some kind of non-precognitive clairvoyance
so I could reconstruct bizarre crime scenes. My
specialty would be scenes without dead bodies,
because of course they'd just call in the
mediums to handle those!
AD: Do you prefer to ask questions or listen to
stories? Drive or be driven?
JCP: I was about to say I liked both to ask and
to listen, but if I'm honest I'd say that's not
really true. Most people don't tell a very good
story! Maybe dead people would tell better
stories,
although most of the dead people Vic meets
certainly don't. When I do find a good
storyteller I can listen for hours.
I'm embarrassed to say I am better at being
driven. I attempted to drive somewhere this
weekend and we ended up about 45 minutes out of
our way. This 4-lane highway became 2 lanes, and
then a narrow country road that started twisting
and turning, until I said, "Hm,
we've never been this way before, have we?" I
guess that's my way of admitting I'm lost.
I'm a kick-ass navigator, though. Give me a map
and I can get the driver anywhere.
I'm also a very nice passenger. I hardly ever
criticize the driver.
AD: What's the next project you're working on?
JCP: Like most writers, I get more plot bunnies
than I could ever possibly develop. A pirate
story's been niggling at me, though the dilemma
is whether I want it to be high fantasy or
gritty and realistic. I'm also pondering whether
I need to find a way to take a sailboat ride
before I can write about the sensation of being
on the water, since the largest craft I've
ridden is a small motorboat. Where I live I'm
fairly landlocked, but where there's a will,
there's a way. Then again, I have a very vivid
imagination and would probably be able to wing
it, so that could just be my way of stalling.
Maybe I'll just take my raft out on a lake and
use my imagination.
I'm in the midst of the next PsyCop story, in
which the Fifth Precinct is still trying to find
an appropriate Stiff for Vic. His talent is in
overdrive and the doctors are telling him he has
to stop taking the medication that suppresses
his psychic sensitivity. I'm excited to be
working on more PsyCop because I began missing
the characters from Among the Living even as it
was being finished up!
Thanks so much for this opportunity to talk
about Psychs and Stiffs, and things that go bump
in the night! (Oh, wait, that's just the
bedframe rattling against the floorboards!)
|