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‘The Man in the Crooked Hat,’ A Talk with Harry Dolan

November 28, 2017 by Mark Rubinstein Leave a Comment

Harry Dolan graduated from Colgate University where he majored in philosophy and studied fiction writing. He’s the bestselling author of Bad Things Happen, Very Bad Men, and The Last Dead Girl.

The Man in the Crooked Hat features Jack Pellum, a Detroit detective who left the force after his wife was murdered in a random attack. The case has never been solved. Jack is working as a part-time private investigator, while continuing an obsessive hunt for the elusive person he believes murdered his wife: a man wearing a fedora. When a local writer’s cryptic suicide note suggests the man in the fedora actually exists, Jack picks up the thread and begins unraveling twenty years of secrets and unsolved crimes.

In ‘The Man in the Crooked Hat’, you include the killer’s perspective as well as that of Jack Pellum. What are the advantages of this kind of storytelling?

I think having scenes from the killer’s perspective makes for a richer villain because you see him in action. He’s not just doing things off-stage and in the shadows. The reader learns more about his point of view, his thoughts and feelings, it makes for a deeper and richer character in the story. I think the book is more interesting when the reader gets two opposing perspectives rather than just the protagonist’s point of view. In The Man in the Crooked Hat, I was able to include the killer’s background, which makes him more real and makes for a better villain.

Is ‘The Man in the Crooked Hat’ a character driven or plot driven novel?

The characters came first for me. The story is about an ex-cop who quit the force after his wife was murdered and is determined to find her killer. That character—determined to the point of obsession—came first, and of course, in a mystery or thriller, the plot is very important. I would say both Jack Pellum’s character and the plotline are of equal importance.

How would you classify “The Man in the Crooked Hat”—a mystery or thriller? Or both?

I’d characterize the book as a combination of mystery and thriller. There’s the enigma of how will Jack Pellum solve the mystery of who killed his wife and why it happened; and that’s coupled with the danger Pellum faces as he pursues the killer.

There are many plot twists in the novel. How do you divulge enough to keep the reader hooked, yet not spoil the suspense?

It’s a balancing act. I plot my books out in advance, so I know the major plot twists. I withhold certain elements of the plot and release them at just the right time to keep the suspense alive. It also helps to have a good editor, who can advise me what’s plausible and what’s not.

Tell us about your path to being a published author.

I wanted to be a writer since I was a teenager, but I took a convoluted path. I studied philosophy in college, and got a master’s degree in it from the University of North Carolina. I didn’t want to teach, but became an editor of an academic journal. I did that for about eight years. I finally left that job to try my hand at writing a novel. It took me close to three years to write my first book, which was never published. The second book, a mystery, was published ten years after I left my editing job to start writing.

Is there anything about your writing process that might surprise people?

I outline my novels in advance. I write slowly and edit as I go along, so when I get to the end of what might be called a first draft, it’s quite a polished manuscript that doesn’t require a great deal of editing. I’m not someone who can just sit down and start writing without knowing where the story is headed. I need to know, in advance, the arc of the novel.

If you could meet any fictional character in real life, who would it be?

It would be Lisbeth Salander from The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo.

She’s so quirky and complicated, and she’s been through so much. I’d love to be able to have a conversation with her. Of course, I wouldn’t want to get on her bad side. [Laughter].

Will you complete this sentence: Writing novels has taught me___________.

Writing a novel is a long process, from writing the first word until the final draft. I sometimes wonder if I’m going to get to the end of the book. If I keep at it steadily, day-by-day, the pages add up, and I do finally finish it. So, writing novels has taught me perseverance and patience.

What’s coming next from Harry Dolan?

My next book is another standalone novel. It’s about an ex-soldier who’s a veteran of the Iraq War. He’s on the run from some very dangerous people.

Congratulations on writing ‘The Man with the Crooked Hat,’ a multi-layered, suspenseful mystery-thriller with nuanced characters guaranteed to propel the plot and hold any reader’s interest.

Mark Rubinstein’s latest novel is ‘Mad Dog Vengeance.’

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‘Deep Freeze,” A Talk with John Sandford

October 17, 2017 by Mark Rubinstein Leave a Comment

 

We know him as John Sandford, but that’s his nom de plume. As journalist John Camp, he won the 1986 Pulitzer Prize for his

The writer John Sandford (USA) by Beowulf Sheehan, July 9, 2015, New York, New York. Photograph © Beowulf Sheehan

five-part series about an American farm family faced with an agricultural crisis.

John eventually channeled his writing talent to fiction, and by now, has penned ten novels featuring Virgil Flowers; and another series, the Prey novels, involving Lucas Davenport. He’s also written standalone fiction.

Deep Freeze, the tenth Virgil Flowers novel, begins in Trippton, Minnesota, where the body of a locally prominent woman has been dragged out of a nearly frozen river near a sewage treatment plant. All forensic signs indicate she had been dead before her corpse was dumped in the icy currents.

Virgil is called to investigate, and as he begins to dig into the past relationships of Gena Hemming—who was killed after a meeting of her 25th high school reunion committee—Virgil begins uncovering secrets of various townspeople; and those secrets are cause for alarm.

“Deep Freeze” captures so well life in the small town of Trippton. Is life in this small town also emblematic of life in larger cities?

The thing is, in larger cities, if a murder happens, the police don’t necessarily have a tight fix on where it happened. But in a small town like Trippton, things are far more intimate. People living in a large city may not know their neighborhoods, and may not even know the people living next door.

 In “Deep Freeze,” Virgil Flowers receives quite a beating from a group of women. Was it difficult to construct that scene?

I didn’t know I was going to write that scene until I got to it. I enjoy Stephen King’s novels and have read his book On Writing. One of the things he’s said is that sometimes, when you’re writing a novel and things aren’t moving along, an author can plop in an action scene. That’s what happened with Deep Freeze. At that section of the book, Virgil is doing a great deal of detecting and there wasn’t very much action going on. I felt I needed a scene to juice things up a bit.  I really liked the idea of a group of tough women beating up a cop.

 In “Deep Freeze,” the murder occurs at the beginning of the book. The reader knows exactly who committed the crime. Talk to us about the technique of revealing the murderer at the outset rather than the reader not knowing the perpetrator’s identity.

When I decided to write Deep Freeze, I decided it would be a mystery. I make a distinction between mysteries and thrillers. In thrillers, you know who the bad guy is. The question is, will the good guy get to the bad guy before the bad guy gets to him? In a mystery, you don’t know who the bad guy is.

About three-quarters of the way through writing the book, I became dissatisfied with the mystery element of it, so I went back and revised it. There are still elements of a mystery, but the book is a thriller.

Generally, the idea of a thriller is there’s a continuing clash between the bad guy and the good guy. Although Virgil doesn’t know the identity of the perpetrator, the killer goes after him toward the end of the book.

 “Deep Freeze,” like so many of your novels, is filled with forensic and police procedural details. Tell us a bit about your research.

I was a newspaper reporter for twenty-five years and reported on a lot of crimes. I wound up talking to cops very frequently. To tell you the truth, it feels a little bit like I’m losing my grip on the procedural and forensic details. Everything has become so scientific, especially with the development of DNA. I mean, you can always get around things like fingerprints, but now there’s DNA evidence, and it seems like there are surveillance cameras everywhere.

In some cases, you can follow people along a street after they commit a crime. During this horrendous shooting spree in Las Vegas, I was watching videos of the massacre as it was happening. People recorded it on their cell phones. These technological advances make it more difficult for us writers to come up with plausible ideas for mysteries and thrillers. Years ago, cops were mystified about who committed a crime and how it was done. But now, the police can pick up every bit of DNA, and it’s gotten to the point where they need only a few molecules or a bit of hair to solve a crime. So now, the perpetrators have to be very clever to fool the cops. A criminal has to wear an environmental suit to be able to get away with a crime. [Laughter]

 You have many interests. Tell us a bit about all your activities in archeology, painting, photography, fishing, canoeing, skiing, and sailing, to name a few.

I’ve been learning to play the guitar for a few years. I’m now seventy-three, and I’ve gotten away from the mountain climbing and the heavy-duty stuff. I’m playing music, writing books, and playing with my dogs.

What kind of dogs?

I’ve got two sixty-pound Belgian Malinois. They want to run, and run, and run.

 Tell us something about your life that might surprise our readers.

Here’s the thing: I read about a lot of writers who’ve struggled and fought to succeed—people who have had a rough time in their lives. Of all the people I know, I probably had the happiest childhood. I had parents and grandparents who loved me and I loved them. My parents were really good people. I loved my brothers and sisters. We had really interesting lives. I’m very grateful for the life I’ve had.

When I think about trauma in my life, it’s only been there because I’ve looked for it. As a reporter, I covered many traumatic stories that have become part of my writing DNA, but those where things I sought out—crimes, murders, and disasters like plane crashes.

 What’s coming next from John Sandford?

I’m about two-thirds of the way finished with a Lucas Davenport book. I’ve also written the first chapter of the next Virgil Flowers book which is going to be quite interesting. It involves residents of a small town that’s dying, and these people are trying to figure out how to bring commerce back to the town. They device a way that’s very strange.

 

 

Congratulations on writing “Deep Freeze,” another suspenseful Virgil Flowers mystery-thriller with lots of action, forensic and police procedures, plenty of cop-humor, and an unforgettable cast of characters.

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Great Review from the Providence Journal

October 13, 2017 by Mark Rubinstein Leave a Comment

Mark Rubinstein’s mastery of the New York street scene is on keen display in the final installment of his “Mad Dog” trilogy, “Mad Dog Vengeance” (Thunder Lake Press, $12.99, 320 pages). Aptly titled, given that this luridly effective tale starts with a vengeance and never slows up.

Once again, physician (psychiatrist, actually) Rubinstein’s fictional doppelgänger, surgeon Roddy Dolan, finds himself embroiled in dirty dealings that threaten to destroy his career, as well as himself. You know what they say about making a deal with the devil, for which the New York mob proves an able stand-in as ironic counterpoint.

Dolan is forced to become everything he hates to save everything he loves. This must be the month for gritty morality tales, and Rubinstein attacks his with a skill and aplomb that blends a dash of Harlan Coben with a smidge of Linda Fairstein, seasoned with just enough Andrew Vachss. And that makes “Mad Dog Vengeance” a masterful modern-day crime tale, infused with both charm and depth.

— Jon Land (jonlandauthor@aol.com) has published many thrillers and lives in Providence.

 

 

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“Mad Dog Vengeance” What Great Endorsements!

October 8, 2017 by Mark Rubinstein Leave a Comment

“MAD DOG VENGEANCE sets the stakes high, raises them even higher, and surges to a spectacular, operatic finale.  Hard-boiled protagonists don’t get much better than Dr. Roddy Dolan, who can save your life—or blow you away.–Joseph Finder, New York Times bestselling author of The Switch

“MAD DOG VENGEANCE is Mark Rubinstein’s best thriller yet—a powerful tale that pulls the reader in, faster and deeper than swirling water in the roughest rapids. If you haven’t met Dr. Roddy Dolan before now, don’t dare to miss this pulse-pounding book—it’s a real winner.”–Linda Fairstein, New York Times bestselling author of the Alex Cooper series

“In MAD DOG VENGEANCE, Mark Rubinstein once again displays the skills and creativity that make him one of the thriller genre’s best writers. The story is a tension-filled adventure that exposes the reader to an array of emotions that shock, amaze, and frighten. What will a man do to protect those he loves, regardless of the price he might pay? Yes, it’s about vengeance, but it’s also about love, friendship, loyalty, morality, courage, and redemption.”–Joseph Badal, Amazon #1 bestselling Author of Dark Angel

“MAD DOG VENGEANCE is a master work of impossible choices and life-changing decisions. A scintillating pop culture mix of Good Fellas and Breaking Bad, Mark Rubinstein’s concluding chapter in his MAD DOG trilogy both talks the talk and walks the walk. Rubinstein never stops challenging his characters in a fashion akin to Harlan Coben and Lisa Gardner.”  –Jon Land, USA Today bestselling author of the Caitlin Strong series of thrillers

“MAD DOG VENGEANCE, the final installment in Mark Rubinstein’s Dr. Roddy “Mad Dog” Dolan’s trilogy, is a thriller in the truest sense of the genre. Expertly drawn characters drive a plot that will keep you up late. Plan on losing some sleep and emerge yourself into a novel written by a true pro. I loved it.” –Scott Pratt, Wall Street Journal bestselling author of the Joe Dillard series

“In his latest throat-gripping thriller, MAD DOG VENGEANCE, Mark Rubinstein proves his versatility at bringing to life a conflicted character at the cusp of an impossible choice. In scene after scene of action and suspense that draws to a razor sharpness by the end, the story reveals the true depths of the bonds that bind us all together…and what one man will do—and risk—both for vengeance and redemption. Simply a masterpiece of storytelling.” —James Rollins, New York Times bestselling author of The Seventh Plague  

“Don’t tell Dr. Roddy Dolan, the world’s most unlikely hitman, that there’s no such thing as an impossible choice. Rubinstein’s MAD DOG VENGEANCE is an excellent set-up matched only by its execution.”–Reed Farrel Coleman, New York Times bestselling author of What You Break

“Fans of The Sopranos will love this fast-paced thriller of Italian mafia versus Albanian gangsters versus an everyday guy who just wants to protect his family. Loved the explosive end!”–Lisa Gardner, New York Times bestselling author of Right Behind You and the D.D. Warren series

“MAD DOG VENGEANCE blasts out of the gate and never lets up. Yes, it’s an absolute thriller of a novel. But it’s also smart and humane with a great sense of place.”–C.J. Box, #1 New York Times bestselling author of Paradise Valley and Vicious Circle.

 “Mark Rubinstein is one of my favorite writers. Period.”–Simon Toyne – internationally bestselling author of The Sanctus Trilogy and Solomon Creed series. Host of the CBS crime show ‘Written in Blood’

 “Stuck in the middle between warring thugs, Army vet turned doctor, Roddy Dolan, is the perfect guide to the highs and lows of New York City. A moody, atmospheric tale about how buried secrets never stay buried long. And how a Faustian deal can lead a good man to do some very bad things. Think of a Sopranos crossover episode with Trapper John, MD. Great fun and exciting.”–Ace Atkins, New York Times bestselling author of The Fallen and Robert B. Parker’s Little White Lies.

“Mark Rubinstein is a superb storyteller. His novels tap into the deepest of human emotions.”–Raymond Khoury, bestselling author of the Sean Reilly series

 

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‘Don’t Let Go,’ A Conversation with Harlan Coben

September 26, 2017 by Mark Rubinstein Leave a Comment

Harlan Coben is known to millions of readers around the world. His first novel was published when he was twenty-six, and after two stand-alone thrillers, Play Dead in 1990 and Miracle Cure in 1991, he began writing the popular Myron Bolitar series. His 2001 standalone novel, Tell No One, was hugely popular. In 2006, Film director Guillaume Canet made the book into the French thriller, Ne le dis a personne. The movie was the top box office foreign-language film of the year in the U.S.; won the Lumiere (French Golden Globe) for best picture; and was nominated for nine Cesars (French Oscar), winning four awards.

Harlan Coben has gone on to write many more standalone novels. His books regularly appear on the New York Times bestseller list, and more than 70 million have been sold internationally. He was the first writer to receive the Edgar, Shamus, and Anthony Awards.

Don’t Let Go is told through the eyes of New Jersey Detective, Napoleon (Nap) Dumas, who has been mourning the death of his brother, Leo. His brother, along with Leo’s girlfriend, Diana, was killed years earlier by an oncoming train. At the same time, Maura, the love of Nap’s life, broke up with him and disappeared with no explanation. For fifteen years, Nap has been searching for Maura and the real reason for his brother’s death. As so often happen in Harlan Coben’s novels, events coalesce and an ominous scenario begins to unfold—one more sinister than Nap could ever have imagined.

 In an Author’s Note at the start of “Don’t Let Go,” you talk about a legend that circulated in your home town and inspired this novel. Tell us about it.

When I was a kid, there was a wooded area behind an elementary school where a lot of people went, and where teenagers went and did more than just play. There were barbed-wire fences and KEEP OUT signs. Rumor was that it was a Nike missile base with nuclear capabilities. I didn’t really buy into that rumor, but when I was older, I learned it was true. They eventually closed down the base, and I used that as part of the plotline in Don’t Let Go.

 Although Nap Dumas couldn’t be described as an “anti-hero,” he has some qualities that are a bit different from many of your protagonists. Will you talk about that?

Most of my protagonists are pretty happy, sociable people, trying to achieve the American dream. They’re usually married with a couple of kids. Nap is a darker character. I didn’t want him to be too dark or an anti-hero, but he’s much more of a loner. Usually, my guys are well-adjusted, but Nap is not. He’s haunted by some of the ghosts of his past, which he’s trying to exorcise in this book.

 And he’s not above doing something a bit illegal, is he?

[Laughter]. No, he’s not.

 I’ve read many of your books and can’t recall any you wrote in the first person, present tense as in the case of “Don’t Let Go.” Tell us about the different points of view in your storytelling.

I’ve done first person, third person…whatever tells the story best. There’s something about first person, present tense that makes it seem as though Nap is telling this story to a ghost—the ghost of his brother, Leo. It just worked. It felt ridiculously natural. Everyone seems to react enthusiastically to that voice and viewpoint. This is just the way Nap channeled through me. I let him tell his story, and it feels as though the reader is his dead brother, Leo. Also, I think the present tense lends an immediacy to the narrative.

 Many of your books have been characterized as “domestic thrillers.” What about this subgenre makes it so appealing?

The domestic element ensures that readers can identify with the story and the characters. People say, “Write what you know” which I don’t necessarily agree with, but the suburban, domestic situation is what I know very well. It may have something to do with the drive toward the American dream—the wish to have a house, two cars, two kids—and an idyllic life. I have a sort of romantic yet skewed vision of all that.

 The past plays a prominent role in “Don’t Let Go.” In fact, it’s integral to the story. Will you talk about characters’ backstories in your novels?

It’s the iceberg effect. I know a ton of stuff about a character that I don’t reveal. The hard part when I’m writing, is not to give too much backstory at one time. I drop backstory in on a need-to-know basis, a little bit at a time. First-time fiction writers sometimes write a compelling opening paragraph and then proceed to give page after page of backstory. The novel’s pacing is ruined.  Often, less is more. I feel I can do a great deal with dialogue—describing how a person talks, reacts, or feels, rather than writing pages of backstory.

 Is there anything about your writing process that might surprise our readers?

I don’t know if it’s a surprise, but I write much faster toward the end of a novel than at the beginning of the book. The last forty pages of Don’t Let Go were written in one sitting, and were barely rewritten. It’s because I knew how the book was going to end from the first day I began writing it. I get so excited toward the end, I end up writing in a frenzy.

 What do you read when you’re writing a novel?

At the beginning of my career, I might have been more careful. Now, I read anything because my writing voice is distinct, so whatever I read doesn’t interfere with what I’m doing. I’m not one of those writers who can’t read fiction while writing because frankly, I’m writing all the time. [Laughter].

 I understand Netflix subscribers will be able to tune in to something you’ve written.

Yes. Netflix is featuring something called Harlan Coben’s The Five. It was a series that originally aired in Britain, and Netflix is bringing it over for the American and Canadian audiences.

Also, a TV show called Safe is being filmed. It stars Michael C. Hall of Dexter fame and Amanda Abbington from Sherlock.

Another show on Netflix is No Second Chance, a six-part thriller based on my novel.

 What’s coming next from Harlan Coben?

I’m working on a new book, but I never talk about a work in progress. Even though I’m dying to tell people about it, I hold back because the only way I get satisfaction is by writing the book. It’s one of the pieces of writing advice I give to people: Don’t talk about your book until it’s done.

Congratulations on penning “Don’t Let Go,” a beautifully-crafted, multi-layered and powerful tale driven by grief, love, guilt, responsibility, searing emotions and everyday truths to which all readers can relate.

 

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A Good Story is Disturbing

June 6, 2017 by Mark Rubinstein Leave a Comment

As David Mamet once said to me, “If Hamlet comes home from school, and his dad asks him how school was, and Hamlet says, ‘It was fine, Dad,’ it’s boring.”

Whether you’re writing a literary novel, a psychological, medical, legal or spy thriller, or even a cozy mystery, for a novel to be engaging, it must center on human conflict and disturbance.

Without chaos, there’s very little story to tell.

If you think you’ve got a story worth telling, before you start to write, reflect upon what you’ve enjoyed when reading fiction, and also remember those books you just couldn’t plow through. Where did those writers go wrong?

The scintillating stories you favored most likely brimmed with conflict. An engaging novel is disturbing. It presents chaos and upheaval—either within the characters’ minds or in their lives. These clashing interactions and relationships between people are at its core.

As readers, we crave disturbance and uncertainty. We live vicariously through the anguish, turmoil, and trouble the characters must endure in an attempt to reorder the chaos propelling the story.

This dynamic holds true no matter the genre.

And, it’s as old as storytelling itself: consider The Iliad and The Odyssey.

Within their pages we find incest, murder, kidnapping, wars, and nearly every other conceivable horror that can beset human beings.

When writing my own novels, I keep conflict center stage. And, with surgical precision, I use my expertise as a forensic psychiatrist to bolster that chaos.

For example, in The Lovers’ Tango, Bill Shaw, the protagonist, is not only on trial, accused of murdering his wife, but the reader is kept off-balance experiencing all that led up to the courtroom, and ultimately that which follows the jury’s verdict.

Despite my years working as a forensic psychiatrist testifying in many trials, I avoided making the courtroom scenes an exposition of arcane language and legal concepts. Instead, I kept the focus on conflict, and did so through dialogue, the engine driving this and many other novels. I employed my knowledge of the courtroom and psychiatry in the service of heightening the tension, but didn’t allow my professional fund of knowledge to drown out the chaos and turmoil.

As for using any writer’s knowledge in a specific field or endeavor, be it medical, legal, military, financial or otherwise, a balance must be struck so the expertise doesn’t burden the all-important role of pacing. It’s fine to employ that which you know well, but it must play only a supporting role to the tension and conflict driving the novel.

Presumed Innocent by Scott Turow perfectly illustrates this maxim. Turow skillfully imbued his novel with legal expertise, but the tension in the story derived from the chaos of the characters’ lives. His legal knowledge added color, authenticity and depth.

Jonathan Kellerman’s latest novel, Heartbreak Hotel, achieves this same goal, integrating his knowledge of psychology into a riveting tale about the death of an old, mysterious woman.

We read novels to experience vicariously something far different from our daily lives. We want to be titillated, frightened, angered, overjoyed, heartbroken or moved in some kinetic way as we turn the pages.

If we want to immerse ourselves in a field of study, there are many non-fiction books available to provide such information.

When you’re ready to write, keep in mind those novels which kept you turning the pages as opposed to those you put down after a chapter or two.

“Write what you know” isn’t always the best advice.

Write to tell a story that captures the imagination and makes a human connection with the reader.

And one final but essential piece of advice: remember, dialogue isn’t just what characters say to each other, it’s what they do to each other with words.

Make your dialogue count. It should be thrusting the tension and hence the storyline forward.

Most of all, aim to make the reader regret when the book is coming to its end.

No matter what your primary field of study had been, when you write a novel, your basic aim is to tell a good story.

Don’t get lost in the weeds of expertise.

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Book Review of “Beyond Bedlam’s Door”

May 12, 2017 by Mark Rubinstein Leave a Comment

Review: Beyond Bedlam’s Door : True Tales from the Couch and Courtroom by Mark Rubinstein

Posted by: Tim Gebhart 19 hours ago in Book Reviews, Books, Memoir, Non-Fiction 0 Comments

 

Case studies are a longstanding teaching and continuing education vehicle. In the last two decades, they’ve emerged from the halls of medical, business and other schools to bookstore popular nonfiction sections and best selling lists. The popularity of books by neurologist Oliver Sacks contributed to an avalanche of such books, the problem being that few matched his skills. Mark Rubinstein deftly avoids the many pitfalls of the genre in Beyond Bedlam’s Door: True Tales from the Couch and Courtroom, his second book of vignettes from his four decades as a psychiatrist.

It follows the same format as his first such book, last year’s Bedlam’s Door:True Tales of Madness and Hope. Both tell the stories of a variety of patients, each followed by an “Afterword” addressing the particular issues or conditions at play. In this way Rubinstein seeks to not only make each patient’s story personal and relatable but to explain psychiatric conditions and their ramifications for the individual, their family and society.

Bedlam’s Door, a term used when an emergency room becomes “a revolving carousel of psychosis,” portrays patients Rubinstein encountered at various medical facilities. Beyond Bedlam’s Door is just what its title and subtitle suggest: accounts of his work outside the institutional setting, whether treating someone in private practice or as a forensic psychiatrist.

Rubinstein uses an almost parable-like approach in the 21 stories in Beyond Bedlam’s Door to illustrate the diversity of psychiatric issues and what psychiatrists do. Among the topics he explores are professional malpractice, the difficulty of treating adolescents, the importance of doctor-patient boundaries, and the difference between crossing those boundaries and violating them.

His method of recounting patient histories in the form of reconstructed conversations provides a foundation by which Beyond Bedlam’s Door intelligibly explains and demystifies a variety of mental health issues, from panic attacks to depression to post-traumatic stress disorder. More important, Rubinstein shows that the stories of his patients really weave “a tapestry of human thinking, feeling, and behavior” in which “we see reflections of ourselves.”

Rubinstein’s background as a forensic psychiatrist — a psychiatrist who works with attorneys, courts, or other parties involved in actual or potential litigation — also allows him to provide an inside view of the interplay between law and psychiatry. He furnishes easy to understand explanations of various psychiatric issues in the law.

For example, Beyond Bedlam’s Door concisely and coherently spells out the recurring question in workers’ compensation cases of “physical-mental” and “mental-mental” injuries. Likewise, he describes the job of an expert witness, the so-called “gunslinger” expert and how forensic evaluations differ from evaluating a patient for treatment.

Beyond Bedlam’s Door sporadically repeats information from Rubinstein’s prior book, at times verbatim. To be fair, that likely is simply the nature of the beast when it comes to describing and explaining mental health conditions. Some may also be put off by the fact that while the reconstructed dialogue makes the book more literary, it can also feel artificial. That said, Beyond Bedlam’s Door is a top-notch look at the reality and relevance of psychiatry in today’s America.

 

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A Review That Makes Me Glad I Wrote The Book

May 4, 2017 by Mark Rubinstein Leave a Comment

Book Review: Beyond Bedlam’s Door by Mark Rubinstein, MD

MAY 3, 2017ELISE RONAN

A continuation of the discussion about mental health begun in the book, Bedlam’s Door, Mark Rubinstein, MD, brings insight into another 21 stories revolving around  issues that pervade the lives of so many people. Beyond Bedlam’s Door, is a compassionate look into the trials and tribulations of those who suffer from mental illness.

616smiom12l-_sx331_bo1204203200_Dr. Rubinstein shows, once again, the humanity of the people who live with a variety of mental health illnesses. He shows their vulnerability to those wholack the compassion of “do not harm.”  He reminds us that respect is a major aspect of how to support and help these patients. By recounting these 21 stories, the author shows us that:

People across a wide spectrum of experience share many commonalities: fear, courage, guilt, perseverance, duplicity, integrity, guile, honesty, strength, weakness, and so many other features, which are part of what makes us human.

The statistics say that 1 in 5 people in the United States suffer from a mental illness. Yet the stigma around psychiatric illnesses abounds. It is only with books like this one, that teach society that people with mental health illness are merely human beings in need of help. Dr. Rubinstein shows us that the populace needs to be more open, honest, and accepting of those dealing with, and managing,  psychiatric issues. It is only with the negating of the stigma associated with mental illness, that those that suffer from the variety of these illnesses will be able, without shame, to get the support and medical help that they need.

***** Five well-deserved stars!

MAY is Mental Health Awareness Month

Find more information HERE

If you, or anyone you know, are in need of mental health support, you can also begin by going to NAMI.org.

 

This book is available May 15.

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Write What You Know: Why It May Not Be the Best Way To Go

April 17, 2017 by Mark Rubinstein Leave a Comment

We’ve all heard the old dictum: “Write what you know.”

It’s generic advice often given to authors, especially those who are writing a first novel of even a work of non-fiction.

While there’s an element of truth in such advice, there’s much more to writing books than sticking with those areas with which you are familiar by virtue of training or education.

As a physician, forensic psychiatrist and novelist, it would be easy for me to write about medicine, psychiatry and courtrooms—all of which have been, and are still, part of my life and experiences. For the most part, I don’t have to do much research since I’ve been involved with the field of human behavior for many years.

Yes, I’ve written about psychiatry—both in non-fiction and in some of my novels—but if I limited myself only to those areas—familiar as they may be—my novels would be one-dimensional and repetitive.

When I wrote Beyond Bedlam’s Door: True Tales from the Couch and Courtroom, I tapped into a vast wealth of patients’ thoughts, feelings, and experiences—be they people I saw in the hospital, a nursing home, or in my private office. Each told a compelling story—a narrative of conflict and struggle—sometimes with no resolution in sight.

Their stories were about profound and at times, life-altering experiences. Though I was writing about psychiatric issues—something I “knew”— it struck me that each these patients knew a great deal—and I was the beneficiary of each one’s reservoir of knowledge.

So, the logical question is, “If you are going to write about what you know, what exactly does any writer know?”

We all know far more than we think we do. After all, we’ve all had experiences of many kinds. As did the patients about whom I wrote.

Haven’t we all felt lust, envy, love, anger, fear, anxiety or sadness? Haven’t we all experienced loss, or a sense of triumph, large or small? Haven’t we all quested for something—no matter how great or inconsequential—and haven’t we all been frightened, disappointed, or felt unsettled, worried, or exhilarated about something?

Hasn’t each of us encountered people of every stripe imaginable—those who are kind, gentle, caring, or those who are mendacious, manipulative, or even evil? Some people are naïve and childish while others are braggadocios or overbearing. And still others can sadden us or fill us with a sense of comfort and well-being.

We’ve all been to school, to social gatherings, movies, concerts, business or professional meetings. Every one of us has walked through a city or woodland, or played a sport or been carried away by a movie, play, novel, or television program.

We’ve all had experiences as kids, teens, and as young adults—and we’ve all had first loves or felt overwhelmed by circumstances that seemed beyond our control or understanding. We’ve each encountered illness, threats, and feelings of helplessness, hopelessness, guilt or shame—whether warranted or not.

And at some point in our lives, we all deal with growing older, with the loss of friends, the death of a loved one, with marital problems, loneliness, despair, and eventually, we must come to the realization that we ourselves are mortal and just passing through this world.

In other words, we all live life.

And that’s what we know.

So, if you write about what you know, you are writing about a universal experience: life.

 

 

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‘Vicious Circle,’ A Conversation with C.J. Box

March 22, 2017 by Mark Rubinstein Leave a Comment

C.J. Box, the New York Times bestselling author of sixteen Joe Pickett novels, has millions of fans. In addition to the Joe Pickett series, he’s written five standalones, and a short story collection, Shots Fired. He’s won multiple awards for his fiction. His books have been translated into twenty-seven languages. He lives in Wyoming.

Vicious Circle, the 17th novel featuring Wyoming game warden Joe Pickett, returns to the storyline begun two novels ago in Endangered. Joe and his family must deal with a vindictive ex-con killer, Dallas Cates, who returns to town seeking revenge against Joe and his family. Though Joe and his family are at grave risk, Joe is hamstrung by the law and there’s isn’t anything he can do without proof Dallas Cates is out to satisfy his bloodlust.

Joe Pickett is unlike many contemporary thriller protagonists. He’s happily married; is a good father; doesn’t have a dark past; works hard; and is very honest. What do you feel makes him such a beloved fictional character?

I think it’s because he’s real and he’s also flawed. Therefore, the reader has empathy for him. The reader knows he can screw things up and something bad can happen to him and his family. I hope it draws the reader in more because it’s easy to see one’s self in his situation. A reader can easily identify with Joe.

Nate Romanowski appears in Vicious Circle. He’s a fascinating character. Will you tell us a little about him?

Nate was introduced in the third Joe Pickett novel, Winter Kill. He’s a master falconer with a Special Forces background. He has a complicated past and present. His relationship with Joe has gone from one end to the other. Nate has been around through most of the books. He has a code of his own and has gotten in big trouble at various times. Recently, all federal charges against him were dropped. He’s trying to go straight. He’s really at his best when he has an enemy against whom he can take action.

Vicious Circle has various thematic elements, one of them being revenge for perceived wrongs. Will you talk about this as a classic western theme?

I think revenge is one of the three or four classic western themes. The bad guy comes back to town and the good guy must stand up to him. I think it’s more nuanced than that in this book. Joe has some empathy toward Dallas Cates, the bad guy who’s coming back. Joe feels that as a law enforcement officer, he participated in over-charging the man and feels he did it in a way that wasn’t completely ethical. Joe is willing to drop the feud if Dallas will just stop in his quest.

How would you characterize the Joe Pickett novels? Are they thrillers, westerns, or both?

I think they’re both. I like to think of them as contemporary westerns. There are mystery elements, thriller elements, but mainly they’re adventurous tales. I don’t sit down and wonder if I’m going to write a mystery or a thriller. Almost all the books are westerns to some degree. I recall talking to George Pelecanos, whose books are mostly set in the mean streets of Baltimore. He considers his books to be westerns.

 

The prose in Vicious Circle is elegant, yet straightforward and easily readable. How would you describe your writing style?

I try not to show off. I want to simply communicate as effectively as I can to tell a story. I think that comes from my background as a journalist and from what I enjoy reading. I pare things back. If I write a purple prose paragraph describing scenery, I’ll go back and try to cut it down to its essence so the reader gets a good sense of what it looks and smells like, but doesn’t go on and on.

Speaking of what you enjoy reading, who are your literary influences?

My favorite author of all times is Thomas McGuane. I also enjoy reading books by Jim Harrison. I’m a big fan of Cormac McCarthy. They all write contemporary westerns in a straightforward style. And they all have a great sense of place.

Other than Joe himself, which character in Vicious Circle was most compelling to write?

Some of the secondary characters were a lot of fun to write. Randall Luthi, an ex-con recruited to help Dallas go after the Pickett family was complicated and interesting. I also found Wanda Stacy to be complicated, especially since she gets caught up in the action through no fault of her own. Another fun character to write was Dave Farkus.

Is there anything about your writing process that might surprise our readers?

I do a lot of research. It’s sometimes my favorite part of the writing process. I then construct an outline based on the research. Then, I try to pull the reader through the research in a page-turning way.

Do you have a strategy for overcoming writer’s block?

I can’t say I’ve ever had it. I’ve had periods where I’m so busy doing things that I can’t find large blocks of time in which to write. When I feel a little stymied, I don’t have a problem. I write an outline and know where the story is going. Even on days when I don’t necessarily feel like writing, I still put words down on the page and can go back and fill it in later.

What’s coming next from C.J. Box?

Every other year I write a standalone. This year, Paradise Valley will come out. It’s the conclusion of what’s being called the Highway Quartet, the others being The Highway, Back of Beyond, and Badlands. That’s coming out in July.

Congratulations on writing Vicious Circle, another in the Joe Pickett series which Publishers Weekly described as “the most suspenseful in this world-class series, setting a new standard for C.J. Box.” I found it suspenseful and could easily relate to all the characters in the novel.

Mark Rubinstein’s latest book is Bedlam’s Door: True Tales of Madness and Hope, a medical/psychiatric memoir.

 

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