Terry Shames here, fresh from Left Coast Crime.
Our topic this week is complicated: Regarding AJ Finn (Dan
Mallory) and his blatant lies, how important is an author’s personal ethics in
your regard for his or her work? Knowing about Mallory’s lies, would you still
read his book?
For me, the question of personal ethics/entertainment
started with The White Hotel, by D.M.
Thomas, a book I loved. A year after its publication, I was shocked to read the
controversy over whether Thomas had lifted whole sections of the book from Anatoli Kuznetsov’s Baba Yar. The question: Did he plagiarize
from the book or was it “merely” an artistic inspiration. For me, regardless of
the answer, the book felt tainted.
In the years since then, I have read numerous books that
seemed closely parallel to others, and even seen passages that were highly
suggestive of others’ work. But rarely does it rise to the level of plagiarism.
Does plagiarism have to be intentional to be plagiarism? Does a careless
incorporation of a seed from someone else’s book sink to that level? Does
having a 6’5” ex-military protagonist who roams around the country righting
wrongs mean you have plagiarized Lee Child? Probably not, but there is an odd
flinching that happens when it comes too close. The “flinch” is probably a
little different for every reader.
Then there was Woody Allen. When he divorced his wife in
order to marry his daughter, I was appalled, ashamed that I had enjoyed his
work so much, and shy of continuing to support him as an entertainer. He made
no bones about being narcissistic, snarky, and selfish. He boldly declared his
right to be exactly who he was. No apologies. I have never really reconciled
this conundrum. Although I have gone to Allen’s movies since then, I never have
gotten away from a certain squeamish sense when I think about him and his work.
So plagiarism is not the only ethical blunder that can bring
me up short in deciding whether to enjoy an artist’s work. Knowing that someone
is a blatant racist, sexist, or is known for cruelty, is among some of the
things that make me cringe away from a book. I have personal knowledge of a
widely-acclaimed poet’s cruelty toward his son. His poetry is stunning, and yet
when I read it, I have a desire to shy away from it. Where does that boundary
lie? There are plenty of examples of male authors who have violated women, and
it’s hard for me to get past that. A popular mystery writer once said something
so appalling to me that I had to walk away. Since then, I’ve never been able to
read one of her books. It’s personal. I suppose there are some writers I admire
who may have private lives that wouldn’t stand up to scrutiny. And maybe I
don’t want to know!
Which brings me to Dan Mallory. Once I can get past my
teeth-gnashing fury that he got a $2 Million contract for what is essentially
rumored to be a boiler-plate novel (I have not read the book), I can’t help
having a bit of conflict about him. All the evidence points to him being a
pathological liar, and if that’s true, it’s a mental illness, and I’m not sure
how much responsibility he shoulders. But what if his lies were a brilliant
tactic to get ahead? I admire that, the same way I admire some of the more
nasty tactics of a Mafia don. “Admire” is the wrong word, perhaps. I’m not sure
what the right word is, because the word would have to contain my utter disdain
for the lack of ethics, the disregard for rules of conduct in a civil society,
and the lack of humanity in addition to my awe at their inspired criminality. Mallory
seems like the kind of man who would go out of his way to kick someone who was
down.
Mallory’s ability to make millions off of a ho-hum books
leads back to his being employed in the very industry that boosted him. The
industry that all of us are engaged in as writers and as readers. The
publishers he worked for were careless at best, and colluded at worst, in allowing this man to perpetrate his lies. Bottom line?
What they were interested in was…the bottom line. This goes so much deeper than
simply the moral turpitude of a single writer. It lifts the lid off a pot of
publishing stew that includes questionable business behavior. I have no
illusion that today’s emphasis on salability is a new phenomenon. But I do
think there used to be a healthy mix of love of books that steered the
publishers. With rare exceptions, this is now the norm, and the callous
attitude that led to Mallory’s success.
So if the publishing world is partly to blame for Mallory’s
success in getting away with his scam, where does that leave readers? Do we
have to give up reading books by
traditional publishers for fear that we’ll be feeding that trickery? Do we
ignore the personal behavior of authors and simply judge books on their own
merits? Do we, as writers, turn down an offer from a suspect publisher? I think
the least we can do is try to be ethical in our own behavior and hope for the
best in the books we read. Beyond that, it’s a stew.
3 comments:
A very interesting post, Terry. And it was good to see you at LCC.
Thank you Dieter, Wish we had had a chance to do more than ships passing in the night. Great conference! Canadians know how to put on a con!
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