Michael Barson recently had a conversation with Jane Stanton Hitchcock, author of Bluff. Hitchcock appeared at The Poisoned Pen on book tour, and signed copies of her latest book. You can still order signed copies of Bluff through the Web Store. https://bit.ly/2YnF49C
Before the conversation, you might want to read the summary of Bluff.
“An irresistible social noir.” —New York Times bestselling author Linda Fairstein
There has never been a better time for revenge
One-time socialite Maud Warner polishes up the rags of her once glittering existence and bluffs her way into a signature New York restaurant on a sunny October day. When she walks out again, a man will have been shot.
Maud has grown accustomed to being underestimated and invisible, and she uses her ability to fly under the radar as she pursues celebrity accountant Burt Sklar, the man she believes stole her mother’s fortune and left her family in ruins. Her fervent passion for poker has taught Maud that she can turn weakness into strength to take advantage of people who think they are taking advantage of her, and now she has dealt the first card in her high-stakes plan for revenge.
One unexpected twist after another follows as Maud plays the most important poker hand of her life. The stakes? To take down her enemies and get justice for their victims. Her success depends on her continuing ability to bluff—and on who will fold.
Can she win?
A tale of deceit, seduction and revenge, perfect for fans of Mary Kubica and Jeffery Deaver!
Additional Praise for Bluff:
“This delicious novel of sweet revenge reveals, with wit and stylish vigor, a world ““ New York high society ““ that the author clearly knows intimately.”—Publishers Weekly, STARRED Review
“A smartly plotted upper-crust caper.”—Booklist
*****
Thanks to Michael Barson for sharing the conversation.
1) BLUFF grew out of your own mastery of poker. In what ways did that iconic game inspire this crafty novel?
First of
all, I would never say I had “mastered” poker. If anything, the game is
my master. It’s taught me a lot about life and how to deal with adversity
““ namely, there’s no point in dwelling on bad luck or one’s mistakes.
Hard as it is, you sometimes have to say “Next Hand” and get on with it.
I also realized that at the poker table I was being underestimated just as I
had been in life. Players never expect an older woman to play anything
but Old Lady Poker—just as the guy who swindled my mother out of millions of
dollars never expected me to find out about his larceny and ultimately help put
him in jail.
When I
made this connection I found a way into the book: Combine being
underestimated in life as well as in poker and then write a twisty tale of
murder, revenge, and bluffing. Hopefully the reader will be intrigued by
the characters and swept up in the twists and turns of the story. The
book is one long poker hand with a Flop, a Turn, and the River. As
readers play the hand with me, I want them to be thinking: “How the
hell does she get out of this?” Only one way: Bluff!
2) “Mad Maud” Warner is a complex character ““ and a timely one, given the fervor of feminism and the #MeToo movement. Do you see Maud as an everywoman of sorts?
As I say
in the book, “Older women are invisible and we don’t even have to
disappear.” Power derived from supposed weakness is the primary theme of
BLUFF. In the very first scene, Maud is able to escape because no one can
fathom that a woman like her ““ an older, well-dressed socialite ““ could have
had the balls to commit such a shocking crime in a posh and crowded
restaurant.
The book
is told in two voices: Maud’s own, as she recounts what lead her to
commit murder; and the third person, which details the crime and its aftermath
on all the people involved. My hope is that the reader will be rooting
for Maud as she explains what has led her to such violence and why she thinks
she can possibly get away with it if she literally plays her cards right!
I guess she’s a #MeToo murderer!
3) You also satirize high society in BLUFF. Do you view humor as a tool for enlightenment?
I like
what Abba Eban said: “The upper crust is a bunch of crumbs held together
by dough.” I grew up in so-called “High Society” and, as I say in the
book “money is a matter of luck and class is a matter of character.” Maud
knows she can trust some of her dicey poker playing pals much more than the
“social” friends she’s known her entire life. I also say: “Money
exaggerates who people are. If you’re good you’ll be better, if you’re
bad you’ll jump right down on the devil’s trampoline.” A lot of people
think having money makes them better than other people. I like to aim my
pen at such pretension and there’s no better way to do it than with
humor.
I’d have
to be Dostoevsky to write my own family’s story without humor. As the
book shows, money doesn’t save anyone from addiction, swindling, and
death. In fact, money often makes things worse. But there’s nothing
more exasperating than self-pity. So telling my family’s story was a
challenge. It took me nineteen drafts! But the poker theme
eventually helped me harness the humor in all the darkness.
4) In addition to being a novelist, you are also a playwright and screenwriter. In what ways do these disciplines inform one another?
Movies are really a directors’ medium so a writer is blessed if
he/she has a good director. Enough said. Playwriting taught me
about creating scenes and developing characters through dialogue. In the
theatre time on the stage grows more expensive with each minute. You have
to engage the audience. Therefore, you always have to ask yourself:
What’s at stake? Why should people care about these characters, this
situation? You have a captive audience sitting there waiting for things
to develop in a finite amount of time. The novel has no such
constraints. But I confess, I love a good, twisty plot. I like every
scene to further the story but I also think it’s important for the reader not
to be one jump ahead of me. It’s when surprise meets inevitability that I
feel I’ve done my job. I want my readers to say: Wow I didn’t see
that coming, but now it all makes sense!
I try to
give the reader a sense of place without overloading the description.
Action is character and I really like writing dialogue, putting myself into all
the characters ““ the good, the bad, and the ugly. It’s fun to create a
good villain and more fun to see the villain get his/her comeuppance. But
in my books, there is usually an anti-heroine who is, herself, operating in an
amoral sphere. In Bluff, I want my audience to be complicit in Maud’s
revenge and root for her to earn it.
5) Who were the crime authors whose books had most influenced you at the time you decided to enter the field yourself?
To be
honest, I didn’t know I was entering the field when I wrote Trick of the Eye.
I thought of the book as literally a trompe l’oeil canvas for the readers
who are led to believe they are looking at a simple whodunit when, in fact, the
real picture is about a dark acquisition. I was thrilled when mystery
lovers liked it and it was nominated for both the Edgar and the Hammett Prize.
I think those fans made me realize I had a mind for murder!
The
writers who most influenced me at that time were Patricia Highsmith, Ruth
Rendell, Edgar Allan Poe, and Daphne du Maurier.
The
Talented Mr. Ripley has
been a favorite book of mine since I first read it and got pulled down into
Highsmith’s amoral rabbit hole from the very first page.
Ruth
Rendell’s, A Judgement in Stone is a brilliant book.
Again, dealing in the amoral and the power of ignorance.
I’ve
always worshiped Poe, even though I’m claustrophobic! Poe is quite simply
a genius who brilliantly concretized all the darkest fears of the human
heart. He writes about the soul of a murder. His stories are
fresher than ever today. Sometimes I think we are all living a version of
“The Mask of Red Death.”
6) Having now returned to the world of crime fiction after a nine-year hiatus, did you notice any change in your writing approach versus your technique from years back?
A writer never really stops
writing. During this nine-year hiatus, I was working on three three books
while trying to sort out a difficult family situation. As a writer, I was
always used to being an observer of social life. Writing took me away
from my problems.
However,
with Bluff, I’m not only an observer but a real participant in the story, which
is what made it so difficult for me to write. It was painful to look back
on the ruins of our family. So I would work on it, then put it away
and work on the other books. I knew if I ever published Bluff I’d have to
get the tone just right because I hate self-pity.
In
writing Bluff, I came to realize how blessed I’ve been. I remembered the
words of my stepfather who always said: “Anything you can buy with money is
cheap.” That lightened things up for me and made me think:
Okay—humor and murder is the only way to go!
I often wish I did have a
“technique” because then I might have a road map of some sort. As it is,
I write until my characters take over the story. Of the three books I was
working on, Maud in Bluff took over the story in a singular way. It took
me nineteen drafts to get her story just right. I just hope I succeeded.