Doing the Dead – In Full

Now, for the first time, you can read K. C. Wilson‘s powerful new novella completely for free, presented by Faraway.  By Florida-based author K. C. Wilson, Doing the Dead – 1983 is a superb piece of writing about a man turning thirty and recognizing the entanglements that made him who he is.  Along the way an unforgettable cast of characters deals with murder, betrayal, love, friendship, music, and loss.

Click here to download the novella in its entirety.

For interviews with the author and more, click here.

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Tomorrow: Doing the Dead in Full

In December, we serialized K. C. Wilson’s novella Doing the Dead – 1983.  To start off the new year, we are going to bring you that novella, in full, for the first time.  Come back tomorrow to download the full novella by this outstanding writer!

Chapter VII. Daybreak on the Land

And now for the final chapter of K. C. Wilson’s novella Doing the Dead – 1983, presented by Faraway!

Click here to purchase a copy of Doing the Dead – 1983, or click here for complete coverage of the publication of this new novella.

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            Kate came by early in the Cougar. Ingrid got up to see me off. Lyle was leaving to go to work. Susan slept. Russell sat on his couch on the porch, drinking beer and watching early morning TV on the portable black and white. The house was peaceful, calm. Ingrid waved a tender goodbye from the door­way. All I had to do was get in the car and go.

            The moment of going provided a focus on the receding house. Inside the Cougar, reality and time were linked to no houses. The moment of go­ing extended outward into a prolonged transition, like one of those endlessly changing Dead jams that segue in a hundred different directions before the full surging power of the band converges on a single resonating chord that an­nounces the end of the song they were playing as it fades into the beginning of the next song, the next new song in the sequence. The music never stops.

Chapter VI. Dawn of the Dead

Click here to download the sixth chapter of K. C. Wilson’s novella Doing the Dead – 1983, presented by Faraway!

Click here to purchase a copy of Doing the Dead – 1983, or click here for complete coverage of the publication of this new novella.

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            My younger sister, Kate, often came by the house and parked in front when she went to the beach. She was dating a doctor who was also a Grateful Deadhead with an extensive library of live recordings, which I had been bor­rowing a few at a time for several months. Kate was excited about the upcom­ing tour. Through her doctor friend, Doc, she was connected to a vast network of other Deadheads. She herself was “a Dead virgin,” and looking forward with great anticipation to her first Dead concert.

            She had extra tickets for me if I wanted to go. Two shows, at Hamp­ton, Virginia and Morgantown, West Virginia.

            “It’s pretty much worked out,” she said. “We get to Charlotte and park the car. Pick up another ride there.”

            “That’s it?”

            “That’s it,” she said. “How do you feel about driving Gloria to Char­lotte? Think she’ll make it?”

            “If it doesn’t rain,” I said.

            “My car’s too small. So is Doc’s.”

            “It would be better if we had windshield wipers,” I said.

            “You’re kidding, right?” said Kate.

Be sure to return tomorrow for the final chapter of Doing the Dead – 1983, Daybreak on the Land.

 

 

An Interview with K. C. Wilson, Part 3

Recently, writer K. C. Wilson, whose novella Doing the Dead – 1983 is being published this month by Faraway, took some time to answer some questions about his work, his writing process, and his experience in publishing.  Part 2 of the interview is below.  (Click here to read the first part of the interview, and here to read the second part.)
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Part 3

Writing

Describe your writing process.  Where and when do you write best?  How often do you write, and how much do you write at a time?

 

I write best in the mornings.  I’m a morning person, generally, but late at night, also.  It all depends.  Lately, I’m a weekend writer.  When I’m working on something nowadays, I have to be adaptable.  At any moment, my daughter might want me to watch her stand on her head or something.  I try to comply.  I do more rewriting than writing these days, but when I’m working on something, I’ll stay with it for hours, as long as I can.

 

Who are some of your favorite writers?  Or who are some writers who have influenced your work?  In The Route especially I’ve detected plot elements that I might call “Adult Kerouac”: the sort of vagabond existence that Kerouac writes about, except in your work it’s tied to characters who still feel strongly about being involved in society, who still feel strong emotions for their families, who still feel like they want to accomplish something other than being a vagabond, exemplified by Pete in The Route.  How do you feel about this characterization?

 

I never think of Kerouac in relation to The Route.  Although he was an early influence, as he was on most of my generation, I soon found that I couldn’t write that way: the free-flowing, headlong rush into the midnight of a thousand crazy dreams kind of a thing.  Not for long, anyway.  Although what you call “Adult Kerouac” might well be a reflection of the aftermath of the beat/hipster lifestyle.  After the glory of youth’s debauch the piper must be paid.

 

I read the Beats in college and had every intention of following the same tracks, riding the rails, hitching, hoboing, writing my own vainglorious novel.  I did that and it’s safely tucked away in drawer where it belongs.  Along the way, I found a lot of writers I admired, but I found that I couldn’t write like most of them, either.

 

For The Route, I used, as a model for tone, Steinbeck’s Tortilla Flat.  That little novel, to me, is perfect.  I’ve reread it a bunch of times. 

 

First person narratives always attracted me, particularly what I call the “desperate narrative,” like James M. Cain’s Past All Dishonor, for example, in which a Confederate spy holed up in a cave hastily writes his story while the Union army closes in on him.  In these stories desperation rules.  The rock is rolling downhill throughout.  A man will do anything for love, even murder.  James M. Cain owned that genre. 

 

I went though all the hard boiled crime novelists.  I wanted to write those cheap paperbacks with bad men and sexy women on the covers.  I was determined to master the first person narrative but as time went by, I did a lot more reading than writing.  What I did write tended towards the personal.

 

The first writer who was my truest teacher of style was Andre Gide.  His novels, his notebooks, everything he wrote spoke to me of a narrative ideal: a personal, intimate tone that quickly establishes a confidential bond with the reader.   What he wrote about never mattered as much as the way he wrote.  But I was too young then to rely on style alone.  I needed a story to tell and I didn’t have one.

 

Current writers I greatly admire are Nick Tosches, whose In The Hand of Dante is the novel of a lifetime, James Ellroy, whose output seems to have slowed down of late, and Cormac McCarthy, whose work towers over most modern literature.

 

You have mentioned to me that The Route was based largely on actual events.  Why is it that you have relied on autobiographical events in your writing, and how has this differed from any writing you’ve done that was entirely fictional?

 

Louis Ferdinand Celine bowled me over with Death on the Installment Plan and soon after, Henry Miller swept me away on the sea of his stories.  I had tried to write pure fiction, but the writers I loved most were raconteurs, storytellers, personalities so strong they couldn’t be separated from their stories.  In college, a friend turned me on to Diary of the Seducer by Kierkegaard, a self-contained fragment all but hidden inside the tome, Either/Or, seventy stunning pages of wickedly honest narration.  I wanted to do that, write something so true you could not put it down.

 

I’d made up a few imaginary tales, but the stories and anecdotes I heard people tell, stories of real people’s lives were always the better stories, to me.  I came to the realization that I was not the kind of writer who was inclined to conjure up stories out of nothing.  Unless they were grounded in some kind of truth or reality, the stories I made up didn’t matter much to me.  Once I accumulated a few interesting experiences of my own, I tried to tell them the best I could.  By the time I had mentally filtered the experience, edited the dialog, changed the names, elaborated, exaggerated and introduced a point to an often pointless scenario, I felt pretty secure about calling it fiction rather than fact.  I never set out to write factual stories.  My view of fiction is: change the names and leave out the boring parts.

 

Along the way, I involved other people.  The Route was based in reality, no question.  The narrator, Peter Foster, was based on the actor and writer, Bruce Kerr.   I could never have written from Bruce Kerr’s perspective and called my narrator Bruce Kerr.  I’m not Bruce and Peter Foster is not Bruce either.  Peter Foster is a pale shadow of the Bruce Kerr I knew, a fictional approximation of a great friend.

 

Have you had any subsequent troubles due to including reflections of real people in your stories?

 

Not yet.  Time will tell.  Many characters in my stories and novels were drawn from real people.  Most of them, in fact.  Maybe they value their anonymity so much that they’ll point out to people, “Hey, that’s me in that book.”  No one’s ever likely to know who any of these characters are, or were based on, originally.  A lot of them are already dead, and eventually, they’ll all be dead.   I’m the only one who remembers them in my own particular way.  It seems doubtful to me that anyone is likely to sue me over mis-characterization.  Anyway, it’s a chance I’ve chosen to take.

    

Is there any advice you would give to young writers about the craft of writing?

 

Young writers are generally leery of advice, with good reason.  When I was a young writer, I heard some advice from a drunk that I disregarded at the time, but I remembered it.  He said, “Be aware of harder core characters than yourself.”  I don’t know what that has to do with writing.  Everything and nothing, but it was good advice for life.  To me, it came to mean more than all the writerly dictums combined, like, “Write what you know,” “Find your own voice,” “Watch out for adverbs,” and of course, the old thorn, “Show, don’t tell.”  All advice is nonsense until you think it’s not.  You can go a long way thinking you know what you’re doing.  Eventually, it dawns on you that the story you love so much is kind of boring to other people.  That can be a shock.  That’s when you begin to get outside yourself.  Eventually, the things that really matter to you are the only things you keep.

 

Be sure to come back tomorrow to read the sixth and penultimate chapter of Doing the Dead – 1983, “Dawn of the Dead.”

An Interview with K. C. Wilson, Part 1

            Recently, writer K. C. Wilson, whose novella Doing the Dead – 1983 is being published this month by Faraway, took some time to answer some questions about his work, his writing process, and his experience in publishing.  Part 1 of the interview is below.  (Click here to read a review of Wilson’s novel The Route, and here to read about the upcoming publication of Doing the Dead – 1983.)  Doing the Dead – 1983 is now on sale!  Click below to buy it now.

 
Support independent publishing: buy this book on Lulu.


 

Part 1

 

About the Author

 

K. C. Wilson is fifty-five, and has been married six years.   He has a five year old daughter and lives in North Florida in the beach town where he grew up.  He lived at various times as an adult in California, Hawaii, Louisiana and Georgia, but eventually settled with his family in Florida.  He graduated from FIU in Miami in 1976, and studied poetry under James W. Hall, before he became a famous novelist.

            Wilson’s publication history is varied.  He wrote an article on hydrogen energy in 1978 for a local business journal.  He was very forward thinking then and more idealistic than now.  He also wrote a magazine article about historic preservation, some book and entertainment reviews in another local magazine, then in 1989, his first fiction story appeared in Cavalier under a pseudonym.  According to Wilson, it was trash.  “Funny, but nothing I could show my mom.  It’s not like I wasn’t also sending out what I considered my ‘good stuff.’  I had a couple of novels and some better stories going around, but nothing else hit.  At that point, though, I was convinced I’d turned the corner.”

            Wilson has a story due to appear this year in the December issue of Delivered.  He also is an editor for the journal Conclave.

 

The Route and Doing the Dead

Describe for our readers what The Route is about, and your process for writing that novel.

 

The Route is about a man who is a failure in the eyes of the world and in the eyes of his family but in the eyes of his friends he is heroic.  I wrote that novel because I knew a man who was immensely gifted and tragically flawed.  He was a great friend to me and I admired his determination, especially when he knew it was futile.  I loved him.  And I knew his story would never be told unless I told it.

 

A man passes among us through the neighborhood, wearing old clothes with a dignified, oddly aristocratic bearing.  Who is he?  Why is he homeless?  Why is he sleeping on my floor?  To answer these questions, I started writing from his point of view.  He supplied the anecdotes, the string of eccentric characters, the theme.  I was just a scribe.

 

In the rewriting process I used a cassette recorder.  I’d read a chapter out loud and play it back and edit it until it sounded mellifluous to me.  That process really helped me smooth out the flow.

 

Describe Doing the Dead, and your process for writing it.

 

Doing the Dead came out in one sitting, in a flood, actually, the rough draft did, on a long car ride to a Grateful Dead show in Virginia.  My intent was to write about the Dead concerts in Hampton and Morgantown, but I had to get all this preliminary stuff off my chest before I could even begin to think about the shows.  It started out as a journal entry and just kept going and going.  Eventually, I did write about the Dead shows, but that was all Part 2, and had very little to do with Part 1.

 

Over the years it’s been edited and polished but essentially, the story’s the same as it was.  I call it fiction because I changed the names.  It’s a slice of my life that turned kind of golden brown around the edges over time.

 

I’ve noticed that many of the same names, if not necessarily the same characters, appear in both The Route and Doing the Dead.  Can you explain how the two works are connected?

 

Doing the Dead – 1983 is part of a collection of related stories called Best Man Complex.  I grouped these stories together because there is a running theme throughout that links them.  Certain characters in some of the stories also appear in The Route.  Certain characters also appear in my other novels, Goat Island and A Decent Marker.  By linking these stories and novels through certain characters I’ve drawn a larger picture on a larger canvas than I could have if they were all unrelated.  A lot of it is William Faulkner’s influence that caused me to model my fictional little North Florida town of Shadville Beach after Yoknapatawpha County.  I peopled it with some familiar characters who show different sides of themselves in different stories.  I like to think they all fit into the big picture without conflict.

 

The Route and Doing the Dead both take place in Florida, quite different from typical modern settings like Los Angeles or New York City.  Can you describe Florida as a setting, how it differs from other places, and why it has been important for you to make that the setting of your work?

 

John D. McDonald provided all Floridians with the definitive fading memory of Florida as it was in forties, fifties and sixties.  Every Florida writer wants to pick up a piece of his legacy and carry it a step or two onward.  In the eighties and nineties, South Florida was the hottest new literary landscape in the world.  It seemed like every other crime novel was set in the Keys or Miami.  Charles Willeford, James W. Hall, Carl Hiassen, Elmore Leonard and later, lots of others, were all over the lower half of the state, redefining the Florida crime novel.  It was rich territory.  But North Florida remained the hinterland.  Nobody had a clue what went on up there and if they did, they didn’t care.  I figured the region was mine for the taking.

 

Pete Dexter and Clifford Irving both wrote novels set in North Florida but neither of them were locals.  Harry Crews, a Florida writer from Gainesville, wrote a novel set in Jacksonville, but surely, he wasn’t going to be the last one.

 

I had a story that defined North Florida in the early eighties, a tale of counterculture misfits running hard and fast toward epic tragedy.  It was a story, again, based on real events, a story that fell in my lap that I couldn’t ignore if I wanted to, a story no one would write if I didn’t.  I may have overestimated my ability to make the story work.  At the time I blamed it on the publishing world’s lack of interest in North Florida.  Goat Island turned out to not be my breakthrough novel, but I wasn’t about to relinquish my claim on North Florida.  It was only a matter of time and rewrites.

 

The Route came along between rewrites.  I had a unique friend, Bruce Kerr, a character who was the king of procrastination.  Bruce was like Scheherazade, telling stories to stay alive one more day, only in his case, it was to keep living in my house.  Through him I came to see into the microcosm of the neighborhood.  Behind every door was another world, complete unto itself.  He would enter those worlds and pass through them in a slow walk and bring their stories back to me.  I had attempted to write about him before, but when I started trying to see through his eyes and to write from his perspective, I knew I was onto something.  It freed me from my own voice, which was a victim of too many other voices.  In the ethereal egoic realms of my “voice,” stentorian echoes of Faulkner and Nabokov wrestled for supremacy with the jocular flourishes of Henry Miller, the clipped cadences of James M. Cain and the lurid Southern nastiness of Erskine Caldwell.  I was all over the place, voice-wise. My voice changed with every book I read.  And I didn’t really feel particularly obligated to be consistent.  I wanted to keep my options open.  And so, I made about every mistake there was to make, some of them chronically.  But then I found a different voice, the voice of a narrator who was definitely not me, and I was able to settle into it.  From the very beginning, the tone of voice in The Route felt right to me.

 

 

Be sure to come back December 19 and 26 for parts 2 and 3 of the interview.  And visit tomorrow for the first chapter of Wilson’s Doing the Dead – 1983.