Unleashing the Wild: A Thrilling Chat with Joel Dicker
Hello and welcome to The Thriller Zone with Dave Temple. On today's 244th episode you're in for a real treat, as we dive into the wild side as we chat with Joel Dicker, the brilliant mind behind the pulse-pounding thriller, *Wild Animal*.
This episode is all about survival instincts and the dark corners of human nature, and trust me, it’s a ride you won't want to miss! I just wrapped up Joel's book, and let me tell you, it had me on the edge of my seat—I couldn't put it down!
We explore what makes this story tick, from its thrilling twists to the characters that feel like old friends. So grab your favorite snack, settle in, and join us for a chat that’s sure to be as captivating as Joel's writing!
Takeaways:
- In this episode of the Thriller Zone, we dive deep into survival instincts and the darker sides of human nature, revealing insights that make for an unputdownable thriller experience.
- Joel Dicker's book, Wild Animal, blurs the lines between man and beast, civilization and chaos, making it a gripping read that keeps you on the edge of your seat.
- Dave Temple shares his thoughts on the thrill of reading, emphasizing how a good book can feel like a safe space even when it explores dark themes.
- The conversation touches on the creative process of writing, highlighting how authors like Joelle navigate the challenges of storytelling while maintaining reader engagement.
Keywords: thriller podcast, Joel Dicker, Wild Animal book, survival instinct thriller, human nature in literature, character-driven stories, blurring lines between man and beast, chaos and civilization, gripping thriller novels, best books of the year, writing process for thrillers, engaging storytelling techniques, suspense and mystery, authors interviews, literary themes in thrillers, book recommendations, emotional connections in storytelling, creative writing advice, publishing industry insights, reader engagement strategies
00:00 - Untitled
00:08 - Introduction to Thrilling Tales
02:48 - Introduction to Joelle Decker and Her Book
08:59 - The Art of Writing: Finding Your Secret Sauce
15:30 - Exploring Inspiration in Writing
28:04 - Crafting the Timeline of the Story
35:11 - The Impact of Literature Across Generations
38:01 - The State of Publishing Today
Hello and welcome to the Thriller Zone.
Speaker AI'm your host, Dave Temple, and on today's show, we are diving into the wild side, literally.
Speaker AMy guest is Joelle Decker, author of Wild Animal, a raw pulse pounding thriller that blurs the line between man and beast, civilization and chaos.
Speaker AWe're going to talk survival instinct in the dark corners of human nature that make this story impossible to put down.
Speaker AAnd as you will quickly learn, I. I could not put it down.
Speaker AAnyway, folks, stay tuned.
Speaker AThis one's got teeth.
Speaker APlease welcome Joelle Decker on the Thriller Zone.
Speaker ANice to see you.
Speaker BI'm happy to be here.
Speaker BI'm sorry for the background.
Speaker BThat's the best that I can get you because first of all, summer school from Harper Collins told me it will be only the audio.
Speaker BAnd so it's 6pm In Geneva, the kids are home, and so that's the only quiet place I can get.
Speaker BAnd as it was a very late notice, she told me, no, no, it's going to be on video.
Speaker BSo here is my kitchen.
Speaker BI hope it's.
Speaker AIt's lovely.
Speaker AIt's lovely.
Speaker AJoelle.
Speaker BSorry.
Speaker ANo worries whatsoever.
Speaker BWe have a piece of tape because we have to paint this thing and they come tomorrow, so I cannot remove it.
Speaker AWell, actually point the camera so we can.
Speaker AThat'll add a little character to the background.
Speaker AYou're in Switzerland.
Speaker BI am.
Speaker BI'm in.
Speaker BI'm in Geneva.
Speaker AGeneva, okay.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BAnd it's nasty gray.
Speaker BIt's fall in Geneva.
Speaker ALet's see, let's.
Speaker ALet me take a peek outside our window.
Speaker AOh, it's San Diego.
Speaker AIt's sunny.
Speaker AIt's 72.
Speaker AIt's kind of perfect.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BI'm moving in.
Speaker BI'm coming, I'm coming.
Speaker AIt's so funny.
Speaker AOne of my favorite things to do is to sit down face to face with people who, on the show and, and they're like, why don't you come out and see me?
Speaker AI'm like, where do you live?
Speaker AAnd they're like, you know, Toledo, Kentucky.
Speaker AI'm like, why don't you come to paradise where it's kind of fabulous?
Speaker BI. I so agree with you.
Speaker BYou know, more.
Speaker BAnd I used to be this kind of people, convinced that the Four Seasons weather was the best.
Speaker AUhhuh.
Speaker BBut it's not.
Speaker BIt's just.
Speaker BWhy?
Speaker BWhat am I trying to convince myself of?
Speaker BYou know, I know, it just sucks.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AIt's funny.
Speaker AMy wife and I were heading to the gym this morning at about 5:36 o', clock, and it was, you know, it was 64 degrees.
Speaker AAnd I'm like, this is as cold as I ever want it to be.
Speaker AOh my God.
Speaker AWell, while my friends up in the mountains right now, Lake Tahoe, it's snowing like three feet.
Speaker AAnyway, well, welcome to the show.
Speaker BThank you.
Speaker BI'm very happy to be with you.
Speaker AWe're going to be talking about this book, Wild Animal.
Speaker AOh, okay.
Speaker AI have to start with this and it.
Speaker AAnd I'm getting this right, It's Joelle, right?
Speaker BYeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker BOkay.
Speaker ALike Noel, Merry Christmas, Noel.
Speaker BOr Joel if you want to do it.
Speaker BThe American good for you.
Speaker AWhatever.
Speaker AYou can call me Dave, David, dt.
Speaker BIt's all good.
Speaker ABut I wanted to say out of the gate, I got this book probably a week, maybe a week and a half ago, and I just gotten back from vacation, which I'm going to share with you here in a minute.
Speaker AAnd I didn't get a chance to sit down and read it until yesterday morning and I finished it 35 minutes ago.
Speaker AMy wife looked at me, she goes, oh, we've got a good one, don't we?
Speaker AI'm like, I cannot put this friggin thing down.
Speaker BWow, thank you.
Speaker AI'm telling you, it's so, you know, there's a phrase we use hot off the press.
Speaker AAnd this is.
Speaker AAnd I gotta say this, and I'm not saying this because, well, I don't have to blow any smoke because we just met, but this is one of the best books I have read this year.
Speaker BOh, wow, thank you.
Speaker AAnd then I, Yeah, and then I think about it, I'm like, I've been at this show for, we're at four years, four and a half years now, and I'm going to put it in my top 20, 20 favorite books.
Speaker BWell, thank you very much.
Speaker AI'm very honored and I'm going to tell you why.
Speaker AAnd then we're gonna, we're gonna drill down on you and just have some fun, if that's okay with you.
Speaker BBut it's.
Speaker AFirst of all, I remember the very first subtle hint that you drop.
Speaker AAnd I'm not gonna spoil it, I promise.
Speaker ABut.
Speaker AAnd it's, and it's hard to, it's hard to surprise me because I'm reading two books, three books a week for this show.
Speaker ASo I'm clocking about 300 books.
Speaker AI've this show, I guess, something like that.
Speaker AAnd I thought, oh, he, he got me.
Speaker AI didn't see that coming.
Speaker AAnd, and so it's between the, the little hints, the time compressions and the time jumps, the, the way you go forward and backward in time.
Speaker AAt first I thought it was going to be confusing, but you.
Speaker AYou get it right away.
Speaker ABut it all comes together for that perfect read that is full of character driven, luxurious, crafted, elegantly voiced whodunit.
Speaker ALike I have not read in a while.
Speaker BWow.
Speaker BThank, Love.
Speaker AMy wife and I were just in Europe.
Speaker AWe have not had a vacation in forever.
Speaker ASo we went.
Speaker AWe spent a week in London.
Speaker BNice.
Speaker AThen we went to Corsica and then to Sardinia.
Speaker ANow, the reason I bring that up is because as I'm reading this book, I'm seeing little elements of, oh, we were just there, or we weren't far from there, or, oh, my goodness, blank.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker APlus, I'm working on a novel that takes place in Geneva.
Speaker BNo way.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AOf all places.
Speaker AI've been working on this thing for about a year and a half, and it's Switzerland and Geneva and Zermatt and la.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AAnd so I'm reading this book and, like, all these tiny little things I'm getting all geeked out about, which kind of feeds to the whole enthusiasm for it.
Speaker BI love it.
Speaker ASo as I was making notes to myself, I'm like, I can't wait to tell Joel about this, because this is kind of cool.
Speaker AAnyway.
Speaker BAnd the book you're working on is a.
Speaker BIs a thriller.
Speaker AIt is a thrill.
Speaker AIt's a neo noir thriller.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AAnd it's set in.
Speaker AIt takes.
Speaker AIt starts off in.
Speaker AIn the Shadow of the Matterhorn and then it ends up in Vegas.
Speaker ABut this is about you, so I'll come back to that another time.
Speaker AAnother quick thing, too.
Speaker AI'm a. I'm a fanatic for covers.
Speaker AAnd this cover, I don't know what it is.
Speaker AIt's a combination between color and.
Speaker AWhat's the word?
Speaker AVolume and structure.
Speaker AThe way there's this little photographer.
Speaker ALittle photography trick you can call that creates kind of a miniaturization.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AWhich this alludes to because you're like.
Speaker AYour eye goes, is that miniature?
Speaker ANo, it's not miniaturization.
Speaker ABut it.
Speaker AAnyway, it's just so striking.
Speaker BAnd they did a fantastic job because I agree with you.
Speaker BIt's very intriguing.
Speaker BAnd it's.
Speaker BYou know, what is this?
Speaker BAnd it's exactly, I think, the feeling you want to go and you want to.
Speaker BYou want to have to.
Speaker BWhen you start this book is what is going to happen there?
Speaker BWhat is this?
Speaker BAnd you want to look closer.
Speaker BYou know, you want to get a closer look.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BAnd this is exactly the story the way it starts.
Speaker BA guy is watching a Woman is talking.
Speaker BA woman.
Speaker BShe's drinking a coffee.
Speaker BIt's early in the morning, and he's there in the woods.
Speaker BExactly the same position as we are looking at the COVID And we just want to go closer.
Speaker BThat's what he want to do.
Speaker BAnd great, great job.
Speaker BFrom the.
Speaker BFrom the.
Speaker BFrom the publishing house.
Speaker ASo, so good.
Speaker AAnd I mean, and who.
Speaker AWho hasn't stalked their neighbors, right?
Speaker AI mean, anyway, yeah, really fantastic cover.
Speaker AJoelle, there's an interesting thing that happened.
Speaker AI got a copy of one of your books, maybe a.
Speaker AIt could have been your last one.
Speaker AIt could have been two ago.
Speaker AThe word Alaska sticks in my head.
Speaker BYes, the giz.
Speaker BAlaska Sender.
Speaker AAlaska what?
Speaker BAlaska Senders.
Speaker BThat's the title of it.
Speaker BThat's the name of the girl.
Speaker AAnd I remember that being a striking cover.
Speaker AAnd for whatever reason, our schedules didn't work.
Speaker ASo when I.
Speaker AWhen your name came across my desk this time, I'm like, I'll have to speak to him.
Speaker AI have to, because there's so.
Speaker AI mean, sure.
Speaker AYou're a New York Times bestseller.
Speaker ABravo.
Speaker BThank you.
Speaker ABut I mean, golly day.
Speaker AI don't want to sit here and geek out too much, but I'm kind of good at geeking out, so if.
Speaker AIf you'll just bear with me a little bit.
Speaker AThere's a few things I want to.
Speaker AI want to get into.
Speaker AA few things I want to get down to some nitty gritty.
Speaker AAnd.
Speaker AAnd if it seems elementary, just bear with me.
Speaker AIt won't be too painful.
Speaker BGone.
Speaker BGone.
Speaker AIf I say to you, what's your secret sauce?
Speaker AAnd you take a second to think about it, because everybody has a secret sauce, and everybody who has it knows what it is.
Speaker ASo you can't go, well, I don't know what my secret sauce is, Dave, because, you know, and I want to.
Speaker AI want to try to figure out.
Speaker AAnd I know you seem like a pretty humble guy, so you're not a guy who's just going to be, you know, slapping off at the mouth with ego.
Speaker ABut if someone.
Speaker AI'm asking you now, do you know, can you define what that is?
Speaker BYeah, I think as.
Speaker BAnd of course, let's start with this.
Speaker BIf there were a recipe to write the perfect book, all the.
Speaker BAll the writers in the world will be very happy, and all the producing house in the world will be very happy.
Speaker BBut I think, and I like this word of secret source because it means something very personal, and that really belongs to the.
Speaker BTo the art craft of writing a book.
Speaker BI think mine is the Pledge to the readers to take them by the hand and get them through sometimes complicated story.
Speaker BBut it's going to be easy or it's going to seem very easy.
Speaker BAnd I think that's very important, too.
Speaker BIt needs to seem very easy.
Speaker BLike, and I'm not comparing myself, but when you see a great football player or a great basketball player or a great tennis player, you look at them in action like, wow, it seems very easy.
Speaker BMe too.
Speaker BI want to do that.
Speaker BAnd I think that's what the emulation of Michael Jordan or Roger Federer or any great sportsman is.
Speaker BYou want to do what they do because it looks so easy.
Speaker BAnd like, me too, I can do that.
Speaker BIt doesn't seem like when you see Roger Federer playing tennis or Michael Jordan playing the basketball, you just like, oh, my God, it looks so exhausting and tiring.
Speaker BNow you're like, oh, wow, it seems so easy.
Speaker BSo maybe I can do this.
Speaker BWhat I'm trying to say is, like, what is very important for me and my secret sauce?
Speaker BIt's to tell my readers.
Speaker BDon't worry, it's going to be easy and enjoyable, whatever happens.
Speaker BAnd when you feel it's going to be sometimes tricky, or if you feel you're going to get lost, don't worry because I'm right there.
Speaker BI'm going to take you by the hand and it's getting.
Speaker BIt is going to be okay.
Speaker AThat is so perfectly put.
Speaker AI knew you'd.
Speaker AI knew you'd rise to the occasion because it is that.
Speaker AAnd I said.
Speaker AI said in a moment ago, and when you first start out, I want to.
Speaker AI want to do this one thing.
Speaker BSo.
Speaker AYou start off with a prologue, the day of the robbery.
Speaker AThat's not giving anything away.
Speaker ABut then you go into part one, the days before her birthday, and then you give a little timeline.
Speaker AAnd at first I'm like, oh, what is this?
Speaker AAnd is it going to be complicated?
Speaker ABut to your point, I'm like, don't worry about it.
Speaker AI have faith in this guy because this guy knows what he's doing.
Speaker AAnd as I started reading, which is why I read it in two sittings, which I haven't read a book that fast in quite some time, is that you did exactly that.
Speaker AYou delivered exactly what you just said.
Speaker AYou made it easy for me.
Speaker AI didn't worry about it.
Speaker AI didn't get confused.
Speaker AAnd anytime that I thought you took me right back, it's almost like you were sitting there leading the way.
Speaker ASo bravo.
Speaker BThank you.
Speaker BThank you very much.
Speaker AAnd I was trying to think Now, I'm going to say this, and it's going to sound like I'm blowing smoke up your skirt, and I'm not.
Speaker ABut as I finished reading it, I said, I'm going to put that book that I've been working on for the last year and a half, I'm going to put on the shelf.
Speaker AI'm not going to finish this thing.
Speaker AI can't.
Speaker AI can't possibly.
Speaker AThis guy is absolutely magnificent.
Speaker AAnd then I heard that inner dialogue, and we all have this.
Speaker AI don't know what that thing is.
Speaker AGod, I don't know what it is, but it's like, oh, God, he's so good.
Speaker AI can't compete with this.
Speaker AAnd then I thought, hold on a second.
Speaker AIt's like, I'm going to use your tennis thing.
Speaker AOne guy can be great at tennis.
Speaker AHe can have a great overhand, but maybe his backhand sucks.
Speaker AWhereas I'm like, you know what?
Speaker AMy backhand is really good.
Speaker ASo I'm going to have fun with playing with Joel, right?
Speaker ASo I got to get rid of that thing.
Speaker AI think we all have a little bit of that.
Speaker BIt happens to me all.
Speaker BAll the time.
Speaker BAll the time.
Speaker BAnd the thing.
Speaker BThat's the thing that I need to remind myself, first of all, I think that every time we have doubts, it's the best thing that can happen to us.
Speaker BBecause doubts is really what is going to build the story and build a book.
Speaker BBecause if we are, no doubt it's just a bright or it means that we're not wholeheartedly committed to this book, to the book we're writing.
Speaker BSo doubts are very important.
Speaker BFirst of all, this is.
Speaker BThis is the best thing that can ever happen to someone worth writing a book, is to have doubts.
Speaker BAnd the second thing that I tell myself when I have these kind of doubts is I'm trying to go back to the reason I'm writing a book is for my own pleasure.
Speaker BWhat I'm trying to say is, of course.
Speaker BOf course I want this book to be published.
Speaker BOf course I want to have readers, as many readers as I can.
Speaker BOf course I want to.
Speaker BI want to be with you and talk about.
Speaker BThere's many things I want about this book, but those things, the success, the public success of the book is not really in my hands.
Speaker BIt's in the hands of the journalists, of the readers, of the booksellers, of the publicists, of everybody but me.
Speaker BWhat I do have in my hands, and that's, for me, the success of the book, to me, is the pleasure that I'm having or that I had writing this book.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BAnd when I'm getting.
Speaker BWhen I have anxiety about the process, when I feel the book is not good enough, when I'm like, When I read just this fantastic book and I'm like, oh, mine sucks, I need to stop it.
Speaker BI go back to, yeah, wait, wait, wait.
Speaker BI'm writing this book, I'm working on this novel because I'm enjoying it.
Speaker BAnd even sometimes it's difficult.
Speaker BIt's like we go to the gym.
Speaker BWe don't want to, but we go there.
Speaker BI did it.
Speaker BYou know, and there's.
Speaker BAt some point, we enjoy it, but we have to get there.
Speaker BWe have to.
Speaker BWe have to warm up.
Speaker BWe have to finally.
Speaker BWe have to overcome ourselves.
Speaker BIt's a challenge, right?
Speaker BIt is a challenge.
Speaker BAnd pleasure can be a challenge, too.
Speaker ASure, sure.
Speaker AVery well put.
Speaker AAnd as my dad used to say, if you aim at nothing, you're going to hit it every time.
Speaker BThat's a good one.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AAnd I. I also wanted to find out what inspires you.
Speaker AAnd I'm not talking about, hey, Joelle, where do your ideas come from?
Speaker AI'm not talking about that.
Speaker AThat's.
Speaker AThat's a.
Speaker AThat's a boring question.
Speaker AWhat I want to find out is what inspires you?
Speaker ADo you.
Speaker AWhen you start a story and when you come up with an idea, okay, this one is a robbery, do you start off with, I don't want to do robbery, but I want to do robbery differently than anyone else has.
Speaker AAnd it's clear that you are a man of travel, because this book takes place in all different kinds of cities in Europe, and it's quite delicious that way.
Speaker AAnd having just traveled, it was extra delicious for me.
Speaker ABut back to this.
Speaker AExamples of inspiration are there things that feed that as you prepare a story?
Speaker BSo I don't really have a plan when I start a book.
Speaker BThis one, and the authors, I don't really know what is going to happen, but I know a few things that I would say are all the same in my different levels.
Speaker BFirst of all, and that's very personal, I want an atmosphere.
Speaker BWherever it is, it needs to be enjoyable.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BI want the reader, because I want this as a reader, I want to feel safe even though there's a robbery, even though there's a murder.
Speaker BWhatever happens, I want to feel safe.
Speaker BWhy?
Speaker BBecause I feel so unsafe when I'm on my screen, when I am watching the news, when I'm on Instagram, when I watch a movie.
Speaker BThere's nothing worse than for me, reading a book or watching a movie and I'm like, oh, no, I can stop.
Speaker BI can.
Speaker BIt's too.
Speaker BIt's too horrible.
Speaker BIt's too hard.
Speaker BIt's too violent too, because RT became very, I think, very violent.
Speaker BSo what I want is the atmosphere to be enjoyable.
Speaker BLike, I got a Christian.
Speaker BI'm not convinced myself.
Speaker BBut I mean, like back in, you know, it's.
Speaker BIt's a nice place.
Speaker BIt's a.
Speaker BIt's a nice hotel, it's a nice house.
Speaker BIt's nice people.
Speaker BYou want to be with them.
Speaker BBecause the feeling I want my readers to have is when they're going to go back to this book.
Speaker BWherever they're at work, they're on the bus, they're on the subway there.
Speaker BAnd in the living room or in their bed, whatever, it's night or day.
Speaker BOh, yes, I'm going back to this place.
Speaker BI enjoy whatever happens.
Speaker BEven though if it's something difficult or murdered.
Speaker BI said before, it needs to be, ah, I cannot wait to go back there.
Speaker BIt's such a nice place to be.
Speaker BAnd so that's the first thing then the characters, they need to be.
Speaker BThe character need to be like friend or become like friends to you.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BAnd you know what is a friend is someone that we know very well and we like anyways.
Speaker BEven though he has his own struggle and he's the way he is and he has his own fault and whatever.
Speaker BAnd so it needs to be people that you are going to connect with so they're not.
Speaker BThe book just to serve the plot is not just a victim or a cop or whatever they're going to have.
Speaker BYeah, you need to have an interaction with them.
Speaker BI mean, you need to create an interaction between the readers and the characters.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BAnd then finally, because we live in a world where we have these so many ways to entertain us ourselves.
Speaker BAnd there's Netflix, there's all these platforms, there's all this tv, all these screens, all phones, the WI fi.
Speaker BYou need to have a good plot to make sure that whatever it is, when the readers will have the option between putting the boot down to watch a TV show or watch the news or play on their phone saying, ah, no, I want to know what's happened here.
Speaker BI want to go back to this atmosphere and I want to go back to these people.
Speaker BAnd, And I think that's.
Speaker BThat's the mix.
Speaker AYou know what?
Speaker AI couldn't have said it better.
Speaker ACause it's funny.
Speaker ALast night now my wife and I love to watch a lot of Streaming, Apple, Netflix, you name it.
Speaker AAnd so we've been watching a number of different series, and last night it was, you know, we always have dinner, and then it's like, oh, what's our Entertainment Tonight?
Speaker AAnd I asked her, and she said, well, I think I'm going to catch up on that series.
Speaker AAnd I.
Speaker AShe goes, how about you?
Speaker AAnd I said, I'm picking up wild animal.
Speaker AWild animal here?
Speaker AAre you kidding me?
Speaker AI'm going to go back and finish it.
Speaker AAnd as I was just ripping through it last night, and here's an interesting observation, and folks, once again, I'm not going to spoil it for you.
Speaker AYou know that something bad is coming.
Speaker AYou know something bad is going to happen.
Speaker AYou know, there are bad players in the story, however, and, you know, there are moments of tension, however.
Speaker AAnd to your point, Joelle, you don't have moments of like, oh, shit, something really bad is going to happen.
Speaker AI mean, you.
Speaker AYou don't really have that feeling, which is interesting, because I kept thinking, as a wild animal, something's going to really wicked happen.
Speaker AAnd as you're going along, you're like, I feel kind of safe in this story, which is an interesting thought.
Speaker AI'm like, I. I feel like I'm okay.
Speaker AI don't even know where that came from.
Speaker AIt's like, it's safe.
Speaker AAnd so.
Speaker ABut you.
Speaker BYou.
Speaker AYou cannot wait to peel that next layer back, because you.
Speaker AYou reward us as you proceed through this timeline, and you reward us with appeal back.
Speaker AAnd then you give us another peel back, and you're like, okay, I know where this is going.
Speaker AAnd then you peel it again.
Speaker AYou're like, okay, okay, little left turn.
Speaker AAnd it just keeps doing this over and over.
Speaker AAnd I just.
Speaker AI mean, that is mastery.
Speaker ANow go ahead, clap for yourself.
Speaker AHow long did it take you to write this book?
Speaker AI am just dead on curious about that.
Speaker BIt's always a difficult question because I'm not sure exactly when I really started to really commit on writing this book.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BBecause there's always an idea.
Speaker BYou know, there's always ideas that are around, and not a few of them.
Speaker BYou say, oh, yes, but.
Speaker BSo I'd say a year and a half.
Speaker BOkay, A year and a half.
Speaker BIsh.
Speaker AYeah, that.
Speaker AThat would make sense because.
Speaker AAnd, you know, to be able to build.
Speaker ABuild the time back and forth.
Speaker AAnd again, I don't want to belabor this point because I don't want people to.
Speaker AI don't want to ruin anything because I want people to pick it up and go, dave was right.
Speaker ASo I'm just going to leave on that now.
Speaker AI want to jump to a question that I used to ask all the time and I haven't asked it in a while and it's just, it's a writer thing.
Speaker ASo folks, if you're not a writer, bear with me.
Speaker AI like to know where and when and how do you prefer to work?
Speaker ALike do you, do you like to work in the day or at night?
Speaker BSo change because.
Speaker BSo I love to work early in the morning.
Speaker BSo I have an office.
Speaker BFirst of all, where do I like to write?
Speaker BIt's not at home because home is the place where I have my kids, my wife, a lot of good reason not to work and not to write.
Speaker BSo I have an office where I go to.
Speaker BBut what I used to love doing, but it's tough now with the kids, it's to write very early in the morning.
Speaker BSo to wake up three or four in the morning and to have already by eight, you already have like four or five hours of writing.
Speaker BAnd it's really, it's a special time of the day because nobody bothers you.
Speaker BThere is no phone, there is no emails, there is no one.
Speaker BAnd everybody sleeps around you.
Speaker BAnd when I'm riding and I look at the window and I look to the window and I see it's pitch black and everybody sleeps around, there's not one light.
Speaker BAnd I like this feeling.
Speaker BI don't know why, I don't know.
Speaker BI love.
Speaker BIt became difficult for the kids, especially when they realized I was waking up very early in the morning.
Speaker BThey will woke up at four in the morning and go to my bedroom and wake up my wife and say it's time to work with daddy.
Speaker BAnd so I had to risk it all that a bit for now.
Speaker BThey're young, they're four and six, so they're still young.
Speaker BBut I know that later on I'll go back to this kernel because I just love it.
Speaker AYeah, you brought up a good point.
Speaker AI tend to write exactly where I work.
Speaker AThis, this is a stand up desk and I do my, I work for my clients here, but I also write here.
Speaker AAnd I have learned just recently that doesn't really work.
Speaker AAnd here's why.
Speaker AI am too tempted to at any moment because I have two screens here.
Speaker ASo at any moment I'm, you know, oh, there's email, there's a client begging for some attention, but I'm in the middle of a story.
Speaker AOh, but I got to answer that.
Speaker ASo it, I'm with you.
Speaker AIt's far better to go distance yourself.
Speaker AAnd I love that.
Speaker AI love that morning.
Speaker ABecause your brain is also unspoiled.
Speaker AYou don't have, you don't have all that monkey mind bullshit that is hammering at you.
Speaker ADo I need to do this?
Speaker AWho I've got?
Speaker AOh, don't forget that it's usually real quiet and it's just a fertile place for imagination.
Speaker BAnd you feel so fresh.
Speaker BYeah, your brain is fresh.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BAnd then it's fried.
Speaker AThere is something I kept looking for, and it's completely a ridiculous thing.
Speaker AThere is a tattoo in this story of a panther.
Speaker AAnd I kept expecting somewhere, Joelle's going to hide an Easter egg somewhere.
Speaker AAnd somewhere in the makeup or maybe on the book cover, he's going to surprise me.
Speaker AAnd indeed you didn't.
Speaker ABut that's just me.
Speaker BNo, no, but that's a very important point that you raised.
Speaker BDo not or don't even really describe the characters.
Speaker BI give a few informations about them, but I don't really give information, precise information about the way they look, the way they are.
Speaker BAnd I think for me, something very important, because this belongs to the readers.
Speaker BSame thing.
Speaker BThis is why you will never see the face of the character or the way it should be on the COVID Or I will not put like the tattoo on the picture of the tattoo or drawing of the tattoo in the book, because it will be.
Speaker BThis is, this is the job of the reader.
Speaker BThis is up to them.
Speaker BAnd this is the beauty of books is it is yours.
Speaker BYou can see it the way you want to see it.
Speaker BAnd this is so precious because when you read a book, you as a reader, even though you're, I would say, just a reader, you actually, you actually do maybe probably 50% of the work because you're building the story.
Speaker BYou're picturing these people.
Speaker BYou, you see them very accurately.
Speaker BAnd it's very funny because sometimes I have readers coming to me and asking me to validate, like, oh, but this character is like this, or she's like that.
Speaker BNo.
Speaker BOr she looks like this.
Speaker BAnd I always answers, if you saw this person this way, it's the way she is or he is.
Speaker BBecause it's up to you.
Speaker AYou know, it's so funny.
Speaker AYou made me think of something and people are always saying this.
Speaker AYou've heard this your whole life.
Speaker AOh, I read the book.
Speaker AOh, the movie.
Speaker AThe movie was good, but the book was better.
Speaker AAnd I always say, do you know why that book is better?
Speaker ABecause the film spoon fed you, but the book, you were the casting director and the Cinematographer.
Speaker AAnd you made all those choices right here in your mind.
Speaker AThat's why it's so much more vivid and powerful and sustainable in memory.
Speaker BYou're so right.
Speaker BYou're so right.
Speaker BImagine all the.
Speaker BWhen you watch a movie, not only you have the, the image and the, the actors are playing and that you also have the music and the sounds and the effect and everything that makes you angry or sad or afraid or all these feelings come from so many different ways in a movie.
Speaker BWhen you read a book, there's nothing you just created by yourself.
Speaker BAll these feelings.
Speaker BAnd this is so strong.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AThe visceral power of our imagination.
Speaker AAnd it's so funny.
Speaker AI didn't think about that until you just said it.
Speaker AThat you do.
Speaker AThe only description you have is you refer to a man's height, beast, and then you refer to Sophia's beauty, but that's it.
Speaker AAnd it's so funny because I fill in the blank myself.
Speaker AI, I'm, you know, it's a brunette with this kind of curves and he's this kind of height.
Speaker AAnd the cop, Greg, you know, he, he must look this way.
Speaker AAnd it's so funny, as you just said, I'm like, oh, yeah, he didn't describe that at all.
Speaker AI love that.
Speaker AI love that.
Speaker AI'm curious when you were crafting this timeline and this is, folks, when you pick this book up, which you will, trust me on this.
Speaker ADid you write it front to back in, like chronicle chronological and then go back and displace it, or did you write it?
Speaker AAnd I'm jumping ahead here because you said you don't often remember, you don't often decide where you're going to go with the story.
Speaker ASo did.
Speaker AOr did you.
Speaker AOr did you write it in this back and forth way?
Speaker ABecause that's, it's quite masterful how you did it.
Speaker BThank you.
Speaker BNo, I, I wrote the book the way you read it.
Speaker AOh, okay.
Speaker BBut because for me, it's, it's easier to do it this way, I want to say, because every time I go, every time there's a flashback in the story is because myself, as I'm writing the story.
Speaker BOkay, now we need.
Speaker BOr I need, as I'm the author of the book, but also the reader of the story.
Speaker BSure.
Speaker BIt's like, okay, now I need more information about this person.
Speaker BNow I need to know what happened there.
Speaker BOr now I need some feedback.
Speaker BOr now I feel like, you know, that I'm going on with the plot, but I need to know more about the characters come and not I don't really get attached to them.
Speaker BSo I'm, I'm trying to trust my feelings and I'm trying to follow my guts in terms of what I need to do.
Speaker BNow when I write this story.
Speaker AI got, I gotta make a note here, so.
Speaker ABecause there's, I have more thoughts coming at me faster than I can remember them.
Speaker AOne is, has, has this story been optioned yet for either series or.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AFilm.
Speaker BYeah, there's a, there's a TV show, Amazon prime that is going to be on that should be.
Speaker BIt should be aired in 2027.
Speaker BIt's supposed to be shot next summer and it should be aired in 2027.
Speaker AHoly moly.
Speaker AThat's amazing.
Speaker AYeah, it's going to make a stunning film, especially if they shoot it in the real locations or even a proximity.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BYeah, I hope so.
Speaker ANow I'm guessing your agent happened to manage that little deal, right?
Speaker BSo I don't have an agent.
Speaker BI actually have my own tradition house in French.
Speaker BSo I, as you can hear, I'm French speaking.
Speaker AAnd I didn't really.
Speaker AI didn't catch that.
Speaker BAnd the original version of the book is in French and I'm my own publisher in France.
Speaker AOh, wait a minute.
Speaker AOkay.
Speaker ABecause it's, it's Harper Via, which is an imprint of HarperCollins Publishers.
Speaker BSo Harper Collins is the publisher in the United States.
Speaker AGot it.
Speaker BAnd so then I sell the rights myself to different countries or for a TV show or what, whatever.
Speaker ASo you're basically self published in Europe.
Speaker BIn French.
Speaker AIn France.
Speaker AOkay.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BAnd then I'm my own agent and I sell the rights to the foreign countries.
Speaker AThat is a bold move, young man.
Speaker BThank you.
Speaker AThat takes a lot of savvy.
Speaker BWell, the reason and the story behind is I had a fantastic.
Speaker BIn French and he was a fantastic man.
Speaker BHe actually built my success in Europe.
Speaker BHis name was Bernard de Felois.
Speaker BHe was older than me because he was born in 1927.
Speaker BSo he was 60 years old.
Speaker B60 years older than I am.
Speaker BAnd I had a fantastic relationship with him.
Speaker BHe taught me so much about publishing, about dealing with the friend rights, with everything.
Speaker BThen he suddenly passed away in 2018.
Speaker BHe was very old, though, and he's like, wait, what am I going to do now?
Speaker BBecause I cannot go to another publishing house.
Speaker BBecause, and I'm making this story short, but he, he did so much to me that going to another publishing house for me would have been like a Trajan.
Speaker BYou know, I wanted to be loyal to this guy.
Speaker BI wanted to.
Speaker BI wanted Bernard to be my only publisher.
Speaker ASure.
Speaker BAnd I was like, ah, he's been.
Speaker BHe told me so much about the publishing world.
Speaker BI should create my own.
Speaker BMy own publishing house.
Speaker BAnd I did, and it was a bargain, but here I am.
Speaker AWow.
Speaker AWell, good for you.
Speaker AAnd again, bravo, Goliath.
Speaker AThat.
Speaker AThat explains why your website is in French.
Speaker BYeah, but it should be in English, too.
Speaker BNow.
Speaker AWell, here's an interesting thing, and it could be my ignorance, so before anybody jumps down my throat on it, because usually when I open a browser I was using I'm Chrome.
Speaker AIn this particular case, it allows you to click a button that says, would you like to translate it?
Speaker AAnd I always go, yes.
Speaker AThis time it didn't translate.
Speaker ASo I'm sitting here and I.
Speaker ALook, I know.
Speaker AI mean, I don't know.
Speaker AYou know, I mean, these are little.
Speaker ALittle.
Speaker ASo that'll tell you something.
Speaker BWell, I'm.
Speaker AI'm not.
Speaker AI'm missing.
Speaker AWhen.
Speaker AWhen I tell you at the end of the show to come, and you see it in French.
Speaker BIf I'm not mistaken, it's in French, English, Spanish and Italian.
Speaker BOkay, well, I will check this out and I will fix it.
Speaker AIf not, it could be a hitch in my giddy up.
Speaker AThat's all I know.
Speaker AEither way, looked like.
Speaker ANow, again, forgive me if I'm not seeing this right there looked like some books on there that were children's books.
Speaker AIs that.
Speaker AWould that be fair?
Speaker BYes.
Speaker BSo my very last book in French was published.
Speaker BWas published last year, and it's called the Disastrous Visit at the Zoo, is a book that is kind of for kids, but also for adults.
Speaker AOkay.
Speaker BBecause I'm.
Speaker BI'm lucky enough to have such a wide range of readers.
Speaker BI have people who read one book a day and people who read one book a year.
Speaker BAnd I was very.
Speaker BFor the last 10 years that I'm doing this, I was so mesmerized and so happy and so humbled to see this mix of people that probably will never get together in the streets or never get together on the social environment, but here they are all together, queuing together in the bookstore to get their book signed.
Speaker BAnd I think that for me, it's such a strong feeling because I really feel that in a world where we're so divided, books is really what can put us together.
Speaker BNow when we go somewhere, we go to a dinner, there's someone we don't know, and we're like, ah, what should I talk about?
Speaker BMaybe not like the news, not politics.
Speaker BLike, I was like, okay, did you see what is the Last TV show that you saw.
Speaker BAnd what last TV show did you enjoy?
Speaker BWell, if you do that with books, it's even stronger.
Speaker BOh yeah, because you can, you can really debate.
Speaker BYou picture this like this.
Speaker BNo, she's not brunette.
Speaker BShe's blonde.
Speaker BNo, she doesn't like this album.
Speaker BAnd I love this.
Speaker BAnd so all to say that I decided to write a book that you can read as of 7 years old, because my readers, the youngest for the others book, they're, they're like 14, 15ish.
Speaker BI was like, listen, I want a book that you can put people from the age of 7 till the age of 97 and they can read it together at the same time and talk about it the same way.
Speaker BWe have, you know, we used to have this story, we have less this kind of movie, but we used to have in the 90s, these great movies, you know, that we will all watch together.
Speaker BHome Alone, for instance, that we will all sit and watch together.
Speaker BAnd wherever you're at, you're 7, 10, 20, 40, 60, whatever, you're enjoying this moment together and the disastrous visit of the zoo.
Speaker BIt's what I tried to do.
Speaker BAnd it was a fantastic success in Europe and I'm very happy about that.
Speaker BAnd I have now readers as of 7, and I love it.
Speaker BAnd they read this book with their parents, their grandparents.
Speaker BThey read it together.
Speaker BSometimes I receive pictures of the book with two bookmarks in the book, one for the kid and one for the parent.
Speaker BAnd I laugh because I'm like, yes, reading.
Speaker BWe need to remind people that reading is fun.
Speaker BReading is cool.
Speaker BReading is something that is in the air.
Speaker BIt's not something old and boring.
Speaker BIt's something that is so entertaining and we want entertainment.
Speaker BLet's look at all these streaming platforms and then TikTok and Instagram and everything we do with our phones.
Speaker BWe want to be entertained.
Speaker BWell, guess what?
Speaker BThe best possible entertainment in the world are books.
Speaker BBecause mix makes you work as an entertainer, you as a reader.
Speaker BYou're not only a reader, you're entertaining yourself.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AOne of the fears I have for in the world of AI and I won't belabor this too far, is the fact that AI is doing so much of the work for you.
Speaker AAnd what I fear is that we won't take the time to formulate those ideas ourselves.
Speaker AI mean, and I look, we're, we're all guilty of doing this one thing, that whole, you know, you're somewhere and you're just doing this.
Speaker AAnd I, I, I predict that this is going to be the constant deterioration of our attention spans as time goes on.
Speaker AOne thing I want to notice too, when.
Speaker AWhen I was told you that we were in London recently, it was amazing.
Speaker AWe.
Speaker AI have this addiction with bookstores.
Speaker AI gotta stop at every single bookstore I see.
Speaker AWe went in and literally every bookstore was packed full of people, every one of them.
Speaker AAnd they're all cozied off into a corner reading or you know, sharing a story with a friend.
Speaker AAnd I'm like, man, you don't.
Speaker AI don't see that very often in the States because we're.
Speaker AYou'll see 50 people outside the store on the curb scrolling through their phone, but you'll see three inside and it's Converse in other places.
Speaker ABut anyway, not harping on anybody's reading habits for crying out loud.
Speaker AI wanted to go back to.
Speaker ASince we're on the topic of publishing and now that I know you're a self publisher yourself is what do you think of this current state of affairs?
Speaker AAnd I don't.
Speaker AI'm sure it's much different in Geneva than it is in New York.
Speaker AI mean you remember the days, the big seven, then it became the big six and the big five and maybe it's the big three by now, who really knows.
Speaker ABut what is your feeling and your interpretation of the world of publishing in general?
Speaker AIf you have one, listen.
Speaker BWhat I saw from my point of view is a lot of small publishing house, dependent publishing house getting bought by big groups.
Speaker BAnd I know a lot of people are worried about that.
Speaker BAnd I can see that sometimes in France, which is my main market, I'm in Switzerland, but my main market is France where people see this from a very worried eye.
Speaker BWhat I witness is actually really helped those independent vision hours because going with a big group, not then getting the tools for all the back office everything that was for them loss of time and loss of energy because something they were able to delegate and then they were able to focus on what they were doing and the group that acquired them.
Speaker BThe reason why they acquired me was because they were very accurate, great prestigious small publishing apps and this is the thing that they want to touch.
Speaker BSo my experience in this big like merging is.
Speaker BAnd it's really only my little point of view is an increasing of quality because it works easier, it works better and the publishing house are as sharp as the wares.
Speaker BThat's for me something that does not really worry me as long as the groups are not trying to intervene in the politics in the way of the publishing houses work, working.
Speaker BBut for what I Witnessed again from my small point of view.
Speaker BI never really saw that.
Speaker AAnd while we're on publishing.
Speaker ASo if you're self published, you have to handle all your own.
Speaker AYou have to find the book cover designer, the interior designer, the developmental editor, the copy editor, the right.
Speaker AYou have to.
Speaker AOh, you have it.
Speaker AOf course.
Speaker BYeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker BPeople.
Speaker BWe are four people are employees of the publishing house and they're.
Speaker BThat's their job.
Speaker AOkay, got it.
Speaker AWell, and so the gal who.
Speaker ADid you.
Speaker ADid you say it was a gal who did your cover?
Speaker BSo this cover in your hand is the publish the American publishing house.
Speaker BIt's overcolitz.
Speaker AOkay.
Speaker AJust.
Speaker AI'm gonna hunt down the COVID of France.
Speaker AI'd love to see that cover, but I'm just.
Speaker AI'm wild for this one.
Speaker ANote to self here.
Speaker AOh, you.
Speaker AYou mentioned genres.
Speaker ASo you love to write for a wide variety of people.
Speaker ASo you have children's books that are also read by adults.
Speaker AYou have murder mystery, suspense thrillers as you have here with Wild Animal.
Speaker ADo you branch out beyond that?
Speaker ADo you things.
Speaker ADo you do things like hist fiction or romance or dark romance or do you do rom coms?
Speaker AAnything like that?
Speaker AHow do you.
Speaker BNo, no, no.
Speaker BMy very first novel that is not in English is a historical novel set in World War II in the between the UK and France.
Speaker BBut the rest of the books are mainly who donates fan stories who don't it suspense treating.
Speaker BI'm not sure what's the right adjective to use but in the same gender.
Speaker AAnd of course I have to ask because I'm.
Speaker AI'm.
Speaker AThat guy is what's on the horizon next.
Speaker AI mean I know that you wrote this probably a year plus ago, so you're having to come back out and.
Speaker AAnd promote this, but what's.
Speaker AWhat's next for you?
Speaker BI'm now in the middle of a new novel and I'm exactly where we discussed this before.
Speaker BI'm like, this is not good enough.
Speaker BAnd I just read this great book.
Speaker BI'm like, oh, what a good book.
Speaker BMine is worth nothing.
Speaker BI should just throw it away.
Speaker BAnd I'm filled with bouts and anxiety and it's part of the process.
Speaker BYeah, well, you know, it never changed.
Speaker BThe only thing you know, I wrote many, many books before my first success.
Speaker BAnd I realize now that for me and the big, big help of all the groups before is the fact that when the success happened, I'm not sure what I did differently.
Speaker BI'm not sure why this group was a success and not the other So I cannot really explain, but what was appeasing for me in the middle of the second, like, oh, what am I supposed to do?
Speaker BWhat am I supposed to like, okay, I did this six times before, I'm just going to do it again.
Speaker BAnd I realized that it's the same feeling, same anxiety, same doubts, same moment of joy, same amount of excitement where this is such a great book and the devil like, oh, this is such a piece of crap and, and this is the life of, of an author, whatever, whatever, it is going to be a big success or not.
Speaker BIt's always the same kind of feelings.
Speaker AIt's so funny.
Speaker AAnd you just made me think of something.
Speaker AI don't think I have ever had this thought before, but I was listening to you very int.
Speaker AI remember when I was a kid, I was 13, 14, I wanted to be on the radio.
Speaker AI mean, my voice changed really early.
Speaker AI knew I wanted to be in a radio.
Speaker AAnd by the way, for the listeners who have heard this story before, just bear with me.
Speaker AJoel has not heard this.
Speaker AAnd that's all I wanted to do.
Speaker AI didn't worry about how to do it.
Speaker AI just wanted to know that's what I wanted to do.
Speaker ASo I just pushed ahead.
Speaker AWell, because I work so hard at it and I probably just have a natural inclination toward it, I just kept bouncing up in market size.
Speaker AYou know, I would start in little town in Virginia, then it would go, then I went to Detroit and then Chicago and then Los Angeles and then New York.
Speaker AAnd each time I would escalate.
Speaker AI never stopped to think about, oh, how will I do my job differently in this city outside of the fact that you got to be able to pronounce everything in the city the way the locals do.
Speaker AI said, you know, if I'd ever stopped and got really sidetracked on all that, I probably would have scared myself out of it.
Speaker AWhereas I did basically what you just said, Hey, I, I found success at that station doing what I do already.
Speaker ASo all I got to do is go to a new city, learn the streets and the townships and so forth and do the same thing, do the same.
Speaker AAnd I just kept doing that and I just kept doing, getting more and more successful.
Speaker ASo it's a great way, and I say as we start to close, a great way to look at it.
Speaker AIf you love what you do.
Speaker AAnd you said you wrote for yourself.
Speaker ASo if you're writing for yourself and you're getting enjoyment and pleasure from it, you know, intrinsically, viscerally, you are in the sweet spot of where you should be, so just.
Speaker ASo just keep doing it.
Speaker BSensual.
Speaker AYeah, dad gum.
Speaker AWe're smart in our old age, aren't we, Joelle?
Speaker ANumber one podcast for stories that thrill the Thriller Zone.