Chris Hauty is the author of the new political thriller Deep State. A screenwriter, he lives in Venice, California.
Q:
Did you need to do any research to write Deep State, and if so, did you learn
anything surprising?
A:
Not too terribly much. The White House and the goings on in the West Wing are
such a huge part of popular culture in the U.S.
I
read a couple books by West Wing insiders, one of which was by a former intern.
That was very helpful.
Otherwise,
I was researching on-the-fly as I wrote, collecting small, seemingly
insignificant detail with which I could “salt” the narrative with just enough
detail to create an illusion of verisimilitude.
Q:
You've worked as a screenwriter--how different was it to write a novel as
opposed to a screenplay?
A:
There is soooooooo much more freedom writing novels.
Screenplays
are about accommodating other people’s visions into the script, whether
producer, star, studio exec or director. The form is extremely standardized and
the rules ironclad.
From
the first day of work on my first novel, I realized I was embarking on a much
more liberating creative journey. Fantastic!
Q:
Did you know how the novel would end before you started writing it, or did you
make many changes along the way?
A:
I’m a furious outliner. I brood on a narrative for weeks, tweaking and folding
more ideas into the plot as I work. Characters take shape.
In
this process, there is an almost symbiotic push and pull between character and
plot, each driving the other to deeper and deeper understanding and
development.
With
Deep State, I had pretty much the entire story set down in outline form before
I started writing the manuscript. However, with the follow-up, I did come up with
a massive twist for the ending well after the time that the first draft was
completed.
Q:
What are you working on now?
A:
I'm finishing a final edit of the above-mentioned follow-up to Deep State. The
story picks up pretty much where the first book leaves off. I've also been
contracted to write the pilot for a TV adaptation of the book.
Q:
Anything else we should know?
A:
I have two different colored eyes.
--Interview with Deborah Kalb
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