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An Interview With John Manhold About His New Book El
Tigre
El Tigre is John Manhold's first immersion into the world of
novels, but it his not his first book, he has something like 6
textbooks and a lexicon in four languages under his belt. I
really enjoyed El Tigre. I don't usually get very excited about
Historical Fiction, or the 'Wild West,' El Tigre has an allure
to it though. I love history, and this book is steeped in it,
John Manhold artfully melds fact with fiction. One way of
looking at it is, if you buy this book you get a great work of
fiction, and you will walk away afterwards understanding some
very complex historical issues.
Maybe you could tell us a little about yourself, a quick bout
on Google shows that you have a pretty interesting resume?
I've always been restless and would think maybe attention
deficit, except I can zero in on something I enjoy and take it
to a conclusion. However, activity in any one area for too long
a period does bore me. I grew up in Rochester, N. Y., when it
had only a couple hundred thousand people, and enjoyed many
hours of hunting small game and fishing the Genesee River. My
father was quite a hunter and fisherman and we would go after
deer and bear in the southern tier of Pennsylvania, Northern
Maine and Canada. We used to tramp the pot holes for duck in
the old Montezuma Swamp Area back in the days when your limit
of duck was more than you could carry. High School, college and
graduate schools were routine, although even here, I bounced
around.
Majored in Elizabethan and 17th Century Poets, progressed
to study dentistry and then medical pathology and finally
picked up an advanced degree in psychology. Taught pathology at
three different schools, but became interested in Psychosomatic
Medicine. Did some unusual research that got me an invitation
to Russia in the days before glasnost. Elected president of the
Academy of Psychosomatic Medicine and between this discipline
and my research in both dental and medical fields bounced
around giving lectures in many places in the
world.
For recreation, I played soccer, wrestled, played golf, and
did some fencing. Later, played club golf and some
international. Became interested in boating, earned U.S.C.G.
Captain's and Master's papers, finally bought a 48-foot Marine
Trader trawler which my wife (who became a graduate diesel
mechanic for the trip) and I took on a 6000 mile trip from
Florida up the east coast to the Great Lakes, down the
Mississippi to the Tennessee, the Tombigbee and back home
across the Gulf. Went out to the islands a couple of times
also. Got interested in sculpture, studied with a couple of
famous people and received some prizes and commissions.
I Served in WWII and the Korean Action where, among other
things, taught knife fighting to recruits after being
indoctrinated by an old fencing opponent who needed help and
convinced the CO I would be the person.
I have also published 6 textbooks and a lexicon in 4 languages
and served as a scientific editor for J. B. Lippincott for 12
years.
What made you move into the world of historical fiction?
I did a great deal of research for several pharmaceutical
houses while at the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New
Jersey and continued after retiring. They would send me data
that I would analyze and return. A couple of years ago, I
assume the powers-that-be began to worry about how much longer
I would be available and the request for my services began to
decline. Being somewhat of a workaholic, I began to grouse and
my wife said "why don't you go write a novel?" I was amused but
the idea began to take hold, so I did it.
El Tigre is very well put together, fictional characters
against a historical background, but not just one set of
events, which is the standard fare, but several events spanning
countries and continents. The amount of research needed to do
this boggles my mind. How long did it take to research and
write El Tigre?
The actual time to research and write El T. took 9 months.
However, I had a great head start. My lectures and
consultations for years have taken me to many places in the
world; my whole life has been in research; the web saves huge
amounts of travel time and I had a grandfather who was a
graduate of the Prussian Kriegsakademie and was awarded medals
in the Franco-Prussian War. I also had a couple of uncles who
were gunfighters in the Nebraska Territory.
The idea of my characters participating in more than one
series of events stems from the fact that every conference or
meeting one attends, where 'westerns' or 'historical fiction'
are discussed, stresses the necessity for 'something different'
if the genres are to survive. No one does anything about it. I
decided to do something.
Where did you get the idea for El Tigre from?
I am a member of the Single Action Shooting Society (SASS)
where every member is required to select an alias that is
registered as specific to him or her. I always have been
interested in old Mexico and have spent some time in it back in
the days when it was pleasant and laid back and the girls would
stroll in the parks with their duenas and the boys in their
groups while a lousy band played in the retreata. I took the
name of El Tigre Viejo (the Tiger, but an old one, because of
my age) because I could dress for our formal dinner, which
always ends a competition, as an old Spanish Don ? one of the
types of suits may be seen on my web page.
As I understand it, and the picture on the back flap of the
dustcover seems to prove it, you have a real interest in early
guns, can you tell us a little about that?
I had my first single shot .22 rifle when I was about 8
years old. My father taught me, as the marines stressed later
in life, that there is no accident with a gun. Anything that
happens is carelessness and is not to be tolerated. In the
marines, an 'accident' produces jail time. Anyway, I would get
on the streetcar with my rifle and ammunition, ride to the end
of the line, walk a short way to an embankment, do my shooting
and get back on the streetcar to come back home. Can you image
today?
Following this, my father bought me a lever action Marlin
.22, and a single shot 20 gauge shotgun, both of which I still
have, and a Winchester 30-30 for deer and we began hunting.
Through the years the interest continued and I moved into skeet
shooting and other competitive shooting sports.
Novels work a lot different from text books. With a text book,
you have pretty much a captive audience. With a novel, it is up
to the whim of the would be reader. A novel is a risky
business, shelf space in the book store is at a premium, and
for the most part the traditional book store only stocks what
it knows will sell (Tom Clancy, Steven King, and the rest of
the grossly over edited, and in my mind over rated authors),
how are you finding the battlefield for space?
Actually you have hit upon one of the big problems facing
authors today. The big publishers won't even look at something
that does not come through an agent, and the agents are, for
the most part, not particularly interested in a new author. For
this reason, the new author more frequently ends up with a
small publisher and the brick and mortar houses are not
particularly interested in either. The big boys can offer too
many incentives, put more money into advertising and provide
the 'name' authors. So, to get to the personal level, as an
unknown author, published by a small publisher and writing in a
genre that occupies a very small piece of the pie, it is tough.
Since El Tigre garnered two awards in the 2008 National Indie
Excellence Awards, and has received so many kind words from so
many nice people, Barnes & Noble have decided to give it
another look, as to stocking ? it is distributed by Baker &
Taylor and thus listed in B&N for order, but not stocked at
the stores.
I am probably not like the average reader. I have picked up
some very bad habits. It is only as a result of the fact that I
read so many books. I hated English Lit in school, I hated, and
still do hate, picking a book apart. While I don't look for
deeper meaning, I do look for execution. El Tigre is very well
put together. You must have had some damn fine proof readers
and editors, either that, or you are the most gifted author I
have ever met.
I sincerely thank you for such a compliment, and am most
pleased to hear the manner in which you look at a book. I, too,
read voraciously and believe a book is to be enjoyed. The text
must flow and if I mix tenses occasionally, or pull some other
bonehead grammatical mistake, as long as it does not interfere
with the flow, I let it go, and have received criticism from
editors for it. But, if I don't think it will detract from the
story, I leave it alone. I had an editor with El T who was a
good editor. However, most of her changes I rewrote. El T was a
Prussian Junker, an aristocrat who I would not allow to become
another 'cowboy.' His actions were different as was his speech.
He was a man who, because of his prowess, could fit into any
masculine situation. However, he still could enjoy the life of
Spanish Nobility and had the sentimentality to understand the
trauma suffered by Lolita and her need for
understanding.
There are two schools of thought about historical fiction, one
says it's easy, the plot is already there, just slot your
characters in, and you have a book. The other schools says it
is very hard, the historical aspect is set in stone, you must
weave your story into an intractable situation. What is your
view?
I believe that, to be well done, a historical novel must
weave its way through the facts. Your time line must be
accurate, your geography must be the geography of the period,
and the mores of each society treated must be proper to the
time and place. I enjoy history and I respect it, and, as weird
as it may sound, I can project myself back into the time and
almost feel the reactions of the people. I remember visiting
Masada in Israel several years ago and standing in the remains
of the old fortress city where the thousand defenders committed
suicide rather than surrender and just being almost overwhelmed
by 'rejecting myself' to the action. Crazy, I know, but you've
got to be to write, I think.
What can we expect next from John Manhold?
I have two books pretty much ready to go, before finishing
El Tigre II which is half done in the first draft.
The Elymais Coin is a modern mystery/adventure that involves a
search for a 3000-year-old-coin that becomes involved with
several murders, a clash with forces of al-Qaida and a
subversive plot to undermine the United States from its very
core.
The second is LOBO, the story of a young Ohio farm boy who
survives a massacre, Indian captivity, rescue and travel to
England with education at Eton and life with the aristocracy
before being forced to flee to the States to find a beautiful
Creole paramour in New Orleans, be caught up in the Civil War,
the Reconstruction Era and beyond.
by Simon Barrett - 20th July 2008
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Simon Barrett is an adult educator in Calgary, Alberta. With
the 11 months a year of winter, he reads a lot of books! He is
also a contributing editor for http://www.bloggernews.net and maintains
a personal blog at http://zzsimonb.blogspot.com.
Article Source: http://www.creativewriter.me.uk
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