Mark Rubinstein is the author of the new novel Mad Dog Vengeance, the third in a trilogy that also includes Mad Dog House and Mad Dog Justice. He is a psychiatrist who also has written nonfiction, including Bedlam's Door. He lives in Connecticut.
Q: This is the third and final novel in your Mad Dog
trilogy. At what point did you decide to write it, and did you know it would be
the last one about these characters?
A: I never knew it would be a trilogy. I wrote the first
one, Mad Dog House, as a stand-alone novel. It ended on a note of uncertainty.
I received so many questions—Would there be a follow-up? I felt a certain
degree of pressure, and I guess I had difficulty giving up my first fictional
characters, in a sense my first-born!
I wrote Mad Dog Justice, which also ended on a note of
uncertainty. I figured life is filled with uncertainty. So I left it at that!
There were two, two-and-a-half years between Mad Dog Justice and Mad Dog
Vengeance. I came under such pressure—I was amazed at the emotional investment
people made in [my characters] Roddy Dolan and Danny Burns.
They’re a surgeon and an accountant. They are not detectives
or lawyers, there were not more cases coming down their path. But there were so
many questions, I figured I [would write another]. But this time, I really
wanted it to come to an end.
One of the things I felt challenged by, when you write a
trilogy, many people won’t pick up the third book if they haven’t read the
first two. For new readers, you have to summarize the first two books in the
first pages, yet without boring the reader who has read the first two. You’re
walking on a tightrope. The most difficult part was the first 10 pages.
It was a lot of fun, but I never knew it would be a trilogy.
Now that’s over, I want to move to other things.
Q: How do you think your character Roddy changed over the
course of the three books?
A: He was not a very self-reflective guy in the beginning.
He’s only 44 but he had gone through life not really thinking about how
profoundly his past influenced him. But as the third book goes along, he begins
to appreciate the depth of his love for his wife and children, how much they
mean to him. He also has a deeper appreciation for how precious life is, and
how fleeting it can be.
In one of the last lines in the book, Roddy feels his life
is filled with regrettable moments. We all do. It doesn’t mean you can’t go and
life a [valuable] life.
He matures, he tempers some of his Mad Dog ways. He was a
boxer—he had to live by his wits and his fists. It’s important for a character
to evolve over the course of books, especially a trilogy.
Q: You raise a question in your author’s note about the
issue of whether the choices Roddy and his friend Danny make are moral or not.
Do you have an answer to that?
A: This is a tough question! We all do what we do in the
context of what’s going on in our lives at the moment. Roddy has been at times
forced to do terrible things. He did them out of pure need, or in self-defense.
He managed to rationalize them…he knows he did terrible things, but feels he
did them in a higher cause, protecting the people he lives, and that too is a
rationalization.
He also…regrets what he’s done to Danny, his best friend.
Some of what they did was Roddy’s machinations. He realizes in book three that
the only way to protect Danny is to keep him ignorant. He does his best to be a
moral person. Like the majority of us, he’s imperfect, but I think Roddy does
the best he can.
He finds himself in impossible circumstances, and tries to
make the best of the gauntlet through at his feet. The book is about choices,
morality, loyalty, friendship, redemption. Aside from being a crime thriller,
it has the underlying issue, not specific to crime fiction, that points to a
higher order of thinking.
Q: What has been the reaction to this book from readers?
A: The overriding reaction is they are sorry to see the Mad
Dog books come to an end. You love hearing that! One reviewer said, My only
regret is that the Mad Dog series has come to an end—or has it?
I found myself saying to my wife that maybe I could do
another one, but I don’t know. If I did, it would be another couple of years
from now. If the book sold a zillion copies, I would do another one!
The pitfall some writers fall into is that they do a series
and get lazy. Though I could never get lazy with Roddy. What happened to him,
and to me as a writer, is that he became more complex as a character.
By the third book, he’s much more complex, thinking about
life, about his son, about his daughter, about his wife, about his profession.
He’s not just a physician [in this book] but the father of a patient—he’s on
the other side of the stethoscope. It’s like life—you grow and learn.
Q: So you mentioned moving on to other projects. What are
you working on next?
A: The working title is Downfall. It involves a
physician—he’s having lunch in a diner in Manhattan and he hears sirens, and he
sees, on East 79th Street, a huge crowd of people, police cars. He
sees a tarp covering a body. Someone was shot and killed in front of his office
door.
He ends up going home, he turns on the 6 o’clock news, and Chuck
Scarborough is giving the news. He reports that a young man, Robert Harper, was
killed. He’s a look-alike to the protagonist. He could be a fraternal twin of
the protagonist. The story takes off from there.
Q: Anything more about Mad Dog Vengeance that we should
know?
A: It is what it is. Hopefully people will find it, read it,
and enjoy it!
--Interview with Deborah Kalb. Here's a previous Q&A with Mark Rubinstein.
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