David O. Stewart is the author most recently of the novel The Lincoln Deception. He also has written three nonfiction books: The Summer of 1787, Impeached, and American Emperor. A former attorney, he is the president of the Washington Independent Review of Books. He lives in Maryland.
Q: How did you come up with the idea for The Lincoln
Deception, and how much research did you need to do as you worked on the book?
A: The episode that begins the book is drawn from an account
of the life of John Bingham, who was the lead courtroom prosecutor at the 1865
trial of eight of John Wilkes Booth’s co-conspirators
On his deathbed 35 years later, Bingham said that Mrs. Mary
Surratt, one of the defendants, had told him an explosive secret. Because
that secret could “destroy the republic,” Bingham added that he would take the
secret to his grave.
I was hooked. I kept trying to figure out what the
secret was. I researched many accounts of the Lincoln assassination, with
special attention to the current dominant theory that Booth thought up the
assassination all by himself.
I also examined theories that Jefferson Davis was behind the
assassination (which was Bingham’s theory as prosecutor), or that it was Vice
President Andrew Johnson, or Pope Pius IX, or Secretary of War Edwin
Stanton.
I also read the trial transcript for Mrs. Surratt’s case and
examined the difficult political issues the nation faced at the end of the
Civil War.
Once I felt in command of the facts that are known about the
assassination and those that aren’t known, I was able to turn to developing the
story.
Q: Your novel includes a range of real and fictional
characters. How did you decide on the right blend of the real and the
fictional?
A: I didn’t want to change any of the facts we know about the
assassination, but I knew I would have to think up Mrs. Surratt’s secret about
who was behind the assassination: after all, Bingham never disclosed the
secret.
The action of the book takes place in 1900, when Bingham’s
physician and his unlikely co-investigator (a black former baseball player) set
out to investigate the case anew.
So their re-investigation process was entirely fictional,
but I could have them encounter members of Booth’s family, the Surratt family,
and other figures in the Lincoln assassination who were still alive in
1900.
Q: In an interview at the back of your book, you mention
Josephine Tey's The Daughter of Time as being a longtime favorite of yours, and
perhaps a model in the sense that an investigator is looking into a long-past
crime. Are there any other books that inspired you?
A: None others as directly as The Daughter of Time. I
have always enjoyed mystery fiction, and have read many of the classics:
the Nero Wolfe books, Raymond Chandler, Ross MacDonald, Sherlock, and so
on.
When it comes to historical novels, I always admired Gore Vidal’s version’s of America’s past, though I thought he pushed matters a bit
too far when he presented Warren Harding as very smart.
Q: Did you plot out the entire book before you began writing, or did it take various twists and turns?
A: When I write a nonfiction book, I always know what the
end of a story is, and I found that important for The Lincoln Deception. I
slavishly followed the advice of a very prolific thriller writer (Jeffery Deaver), who starts by writing a very detailed outline for a novel. My
outline was 80 pages long, about a third the length of the final manuscript.
Once I started writing, I departed from the outline at
times; sometimes I realized that I had overlooked some necessary story
development. On the whole, though, I am a convert to the Deaver outline
system.
Q: I know you've had plans to continue writing both fiction and nonfiction. What are you working on now?
A: I have just completed a nonfiction manuscript about James
Madison, which should be published about this time next year. I examined
his amazing career in the context of his five major partnerships – with
Hamilton, Washington, Jefferson, Monroe, and (of course) Dolley.
Madison’s contribution to the founding of the nation is
often underappreciated, probably because he was short and quiet, and because he
worked so well with partners who were often taller and more charismatic.
And I’m starting the outline (of course!) for the sequel to The
Lincoln Deception, in which Jamie Fraser and Speed Cook will have fresh
adventures and (probably) still not get along too well.
Q: Anything else we should know?
A: I hope your readers will check out the Washington Independent Review of Books, an online book review site that a bunch of us have kept flourishing for three
years now.
For example, just in the last few days we’ve posted an
appreciation of the brilliant journalist A.J. Liebling, a review of the Carville/Matalin book, and an amazing review of a book that examined the
junk/recycling business worldwide.
And they should check out the Independent’s annual “Books
Alive!” conference, which will be on Saturday, March 29. We have
commitments from 17 literary agents to hear book pitches from our attendees,
and will have some great speakers and panelists, including Chris Matthews,
Laura Lippman, Evan Thomas, Phyllis Naylor, and David Maraniss. It should
be a great day in Bethesda!
--Interview with Deborah Kalb. For a previous interview with David O. Stewart, click here.
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