After hearing last year about Boris Johnson’s thriller, then about Saddam Hussein’s romance novels, I got thinking about why people from all sorts of backgrounds are drawn to writing fiction. Reading them, I’m struck by two thoughts, firstly by how easy lots of professional writers make writing fiction look, and secondly by how much you can come to understand a person by the way they write.
Are there any novels you know of from unexpected authors? Have you found any that are decent as books apart from their creators? What is it about novels that draws non-writers that’s missing from, say, pottery or interpretive dance?
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar has co-written three novels about Mycroft Holmes (Sherlock’s older brother.) Apparently he was a Sherlock Holmes fan as a kid.
He’s also written a bunch of nonfiction and was one of the writers in the Veronica Mars revival.
I saw one of his Mycroft Holmes novels on the new release shelf at Barnes & Noble years ago.
I saw one of his Mycroft Holmes novels on the new release shelf at Barnes & Noble years ago.
Yeah, he’s a super smart dude and capable of writing anything really.
Yeah, he’s a super smart dude and capable of writing anything really.
What a joy it is to discover that a titan from your childhood shares a deep love of the same books you enjoy, and loses himself in Victorian-era detective stories.
I’ve read one of them and really enjoyed it
I’ve read one of them and really enjoyed it
You mean Captain Roger Murdock?
What a joy it is to discover that a titan from your childhood shares a deep love of the same books you enjoy, and loses himself in Victorian-era detective stories.
You mean Captain Roger Murdock?