K- Thank you so
much for joining us, Bud. I absolutely
loved ‘The Lost Tourist Franchise’ and I can’t wait to read your other books!
The book was very
intriguing. (read my review here) With so much detail on the
Washington DC area, I wondered if any of this was based on real life
experience. How did you research for
this book, and was there any personal inspiration for this story?
B: My wife and I lived in the D.C. area for many
years, so I had plenty of time to absorb the detail. I spent much of my working life selling –
ideas as well as tangible things. Living
where we did, I often encountered street hustlers, and I came to realize that
they, too, were selling. I’m not talking
about the dysfunctional folks; I feel sorry for them. I’m talking about the ones who worked hard
for their handouts, and I think that they realized that they had a valuable
commodity to offer in exchange for the contributions they received. Sometimes they offered information or items
of nominal value, but more often, they offered the contributor the opportunity
to feel good for having helped someone less fortunate.
K: The story
could be perceived in a couple of different ways. I guess it all depends on whether you are a
“glass half full” or “glass half empty” type.
Where do you find yourself?
B: I’m the one that drank the top half of the
glass, most likely. I’m definitely a glass
half-full type.
K: (Laughing) That’s a good way to be, Bud.
You lead a life
that most people only dream of, sailing the world. I am just fascinated; I think about books
that I have read about life on the sea, like Moby Dick, Treasure Island &
Robinson Crusoe. I wish you would set up
a webcam!
Can you describe
your writing style? What is a typical
day in the life of Bud Dougherty… starting with the time you wake up, meals,
beverages, everything in between & bedtime.
B: There’s a YouTube trailer for some of my books
here
– not quite a webcam, but you can spend two minutes in the islands, if you’d
like.
Living
on the boat, we’re fairly close to nature; I get up with the sun and enjoy
coffee out on deck. Our meals are
dependent on where we are; different things are better on different islands,
but local fruits and vegetables are prominent in our diet as is fish – either
fresh or salt-cured. Chickens are
always under foot in the islands; we joke that all the chicken is free-range
chicken where we live. Both of us like
street food. In the islands that takes
the place of fast food. It may be
healthier, too, but it’s often not attractive to the squeamish palate.
I
write for several hours a day, most days.
We spend most of our time at anchor in various places; when we’re
actively sailing from one place to another, I don’t have much time for writing,
but that’s only about 15 percent of the time.
Maintaining
and sailing a cruising sailboat is time consuming; a boat like ours requires more
time to maintain than a house. The
difference is that when we tire of the neighborhood, we just sail away.
Things
that seem ordinary to shore-bound people (dirt dwellers, they’re called, in our
circle) can take us an inordinate amount of time. Grocery shopping in the islands takes at
least a day a week – we’re doing it on foot or by minibus, and there are few
supermarkets, so we spend a lot of time going from one small shop to another,
looking for things that would be found in a few minutes at a typical American
supermarket. Most islands have
interesting open air markets, as well.
I
wrote a nonfiction book, Dungda de
Islan’ (patois for ‘Down in the Islands’) about our voyage to the Caribbean
and the first year or so in the islands.
We also keep a sailing blog that describes our life afloat.
K: Funny you
should mention it, I just started reading Dungda
de Islan’ and it’s hard to put down. I’m mesmerized and will definitely be
writing about it. I saw the YouTube trailer and it makes me want to leave for
the Caribbean- right now!
If ‘The Lost
Tourist Franchise’ was made into a movie, who would you like to see cast in the
roles?
B: I’m
at a disadvantage here, because we don’t see television and only rarely watch
movies, but recalling actors from my previous life, I can’t think of any that
fit. I would see this film as an
opportunity for someone to hit the streets of Washington with a video camera and
find cast members from real life.
K: That’s a great
idea- get the real flavor.
I like to engage
my guests in a little game I the “writing exercise” I give you a scene and you
rewrite it in your own fabulous style.
Are up for it?
B: Sure.
It’s what I do.
K: Okay, here is
your scene:
Anil sat quietly in the dark room,
staring down into the amber liquid in the glass he held in his hand. He quickly
swallowed the whiskey, in one gulp. Then he screamed out filthy obscenities,
while he hurled the glass to the floor. He grimaced as a large glass shard
bounced up and lodged in his bare ankle. He reached down and grabbed the glass
shard, and pushed it deeply in to his skin, and then pulled the shard through his
leg, all the way up to his knee.
"Arrrrrrrrrrrrrr!"
He screamed out in pain and then
grabbed the glass shard and threw it back on the floor. He didn't notice the
blood gushing down his leg and pooling on the floor. He felt a little better
now. He had discovered that cutting himself seemed to calm him down. Sometimes
he became so irate and agitated it took more than just a few cuts. It was
starting to escalate. Like a drug, he needed more and more. The month before he
was not able to soothe himself until he had sliced off his pinky finger
B: Anil’s anger filled the room; his fury was nearly all-consuming. Nearly, but not quite – there was a small corner of his being given over to frustration. The object of his anger was beyond his reach; he couldn’t strike at the one who had provoked him. He could feel the throbbing in his temple, palpable evidence that he was losing control. Stymied, he turned inward to that corner of frustration and began to pick at it, the way he had picked at the scabs on his childhood scrapes.
He could never react
quickly enough when he was provoked; he backed down from every
confrontation. Only later, in his
painful solitude, did he contemplate the things that he should have done to his
antagonist, the things that he imagined a real man would have done. But he was always too late. For a long time, the target for his
retribution had been his own self-worth.
At this stage, though, his psyche was so sheathed in protective scar
tissue that his only relief was physical; he could still feel physical
pain. Cutting validated his existence;
the absence of the pinky on his left hand reminded him that he could still
feel.
He looked up at the
mirror, disgusted with what he saw.
Smashing the glass with his maimed hand, he picked through the glittering
shards, looking for a suitable one, one that would grant him relief from his
suffering.
K: That was
incredible! Your descriptive prose was
so deep; it’s the first glimpse of the “real” Anil.
Thank you so
much. It was great having you here. . I hope you’ll come back and chat about Dungda de Islan’ and please ask your
lovely wife, Leslie if she’d like to join us.
I’ll make sure I serve pain
au chocolat : ))
Can you please
tell us what’s coming up and where we can find you on the web?
B: I just released Bluewater Voodoo, the third book in my Bluewater Thriller series, and I’m
working on ideas for the next book. I
think I’ll leave the Bluewater Thrillers
for a while; after three books in a row with the same characters, I want to
develop some new ones. I’ll definitely
go back to the series; I’ve enjoyed it. But I don’t want to get stale. I’d like to come back to those characters
with a fresh look.
You can find me on the web at www.clrdougherty.com. My writer’s blog is there, as well as information
about my books. I mentioned the sailing
blog – that’s at Voyage of the Play
Actor. I have an author’s
page on Facebook here,
and I’m on Twitter @clrdougherty. Email
is welcome at clrd@clrdougherty.com. Thanks for having me here – it was a
pleasure to visit.
1 comment:
Charles is truly one of my favorite authors. His words will transport you to wherever he is writing about. In addition to being a fine writer, his is supportive and kind to newcomers.
Post a Comment