Money to Burn by James Grippando

money-to-burn.JPGRecently I saw down with James Grippando to discuss his latest novel. Money to Burn's pub date is February 23.

For those of us who can't wait, would you give us a sneak preview?

In March 2008, a group of powerful hedge fund managers gathered for a champagne breakfast at a Manhattan restaurant.  They specialized in short-trading--essentially betting that the value of a company's stock will go down.  They were rumored to have been celebrating the fall of Bear Stearns, the first major investment bank to go the way of the T-Rex and the Dodo bird.  Hearing of it, I immediately hatched the plot for Money to Burn
 It's the story of Michael Cantella, a rising star at Wall Street investment bank Saxton Silvers when the love of his life, Ivy Layton, vanishes on their honeymoon in the Bahamas. Seven years later, on the eve of his 35th birthday, Michael has a successful career, a beautiful new wife, and piles of money. But when he logs into his investment accounts, he makes a horrifying discovery. Someone has wiped him out. His only clue is a new email message: "Just as Planned. xo xo." All of this coincides with the impending collapse of his firm, which has chilling (and not coincidental) parallels to the real-life disasters on Wall Street that we have all watched unfold over the past two years.  Broke and facing divorce, Michael's got undercover FBI agents afoot, spyware on his computer, and mysterious emails from a "JBU." Embroiled in corporate espionage, he's desperate to clear his name. The signs point to his first wife. Could she be back from the dead to destroy him?  Or is a larger evil operating behind the scenes--people who will stop at nothing to save their the fortunes they've built on a house of cards?

The main character of Money to Burn is Michael Cantella.  That almost sounds like a pseudonym for James Grippando.  Just how similar is Michael to you?

"Cantella" is the maiden name of one of my ancestors from Villa Rosa, Sicily, so I didn't choose that name lightly.  The relationship between Michael and his grandfather--"Papa"--is especially personal for me.  I wrote most of the outline for Money to Burn while at my father's bedside in a skilled nursing facility, and after his passing, the book almost seemed to write itself.  It was in the later stages of his illness, while reading early pages aloud to him, that I realized how much the crumbling financial world (and an investment hotshot like Michael Cantella) could have learned from a D-Day survivor whose idea of the American Dream was not just to buy a home, but to actually pay off the mortgage.  In my seventeen published novels, no character has spoken to me more clearly than the voice of "Papa."

The subtitle of Money to Burn is "A Novel of Suspense."  I thought it was a thriller.  What's the difference between a novel of suspense and a thriller?

Money to Burn is most definitely a thriller.  The distinction between thrillers and novels of suspense must mean something to marketing people, because I don't see it as a writer.  I suppose you could say that mysteries and thrillers are a subgenre of "suspense," but you could probably say that about every novel ever written.  Don't we always want to know what happens next?

How much research into the financial world did you have to do for Money to Burn?

Tons.  I love research, especially when the subject matter is timely--and Money to Burn was so timely that I conducted most of my research by watching Wall Street implode in real time.  Many of those startling events play a central role in the plot.  Short-sellers trading investment banks into oblivion.  Financial media fanning the flames by carelessly spreading dangerous rumors planted by unscrupulous traders.  Mortgage-backed securities and credit default swaps landing insurance giants on life support.  Fortunes lost overnight in Madoff-sized Ponzi schemes.   It was fascinating research with so many unexpected surprises that there is plenty left over for another financial thriller.  Someday.

These days how does a novel compete with the spate of nonfiction books recounting what's been going on in the world of finance?

Most of the nonfiction books on Wall Street are old news before they are published.  Think about the books on the collapse of Bear Stearns that were written before Lehman Brothers came down--and that was just a span of seven months!  Money to Burn gives readers an insider's look into what happened on Wall Street, which is fascinating background.  But because it's fiction, the characters and story are timeless.  I'm not at all comparing myself to Upton Sinclair, but go back and read his fictional account of the Wall Street collapse of 1907 in The Money Changers.  Then read some of the nonfiction works published around the same time.  Which do you think you'll have more fun with?  And which do you think will give you more insight into the greed, dishonesty, and other human failures that caused history to repeat itself a century later?

Money to Burn is a standalone.  So was your previous novel, Intent to Kill.  Do you think Jack Swyteck, the hero of your series, is feeling miffed or neglected?

Nah.  Jack's a cool guy.  I wrote the first Swyteck novel in 1994 (The Pardon), never intending it to be a series.  Not until years later, when he started calling out to me for another run, did I write Swyteck #2, Beyond Suspicion (2002).  Even with a few stand alones sprinkled in along the way, it's been a pretty steady run for Jack:  Last Call (2003); Hear No Evil (2004); Got the Look (2006); When Darkness Falls (2007); Last Call (2008) and Born to Run (2009).   I'm now putting the finishing touches on the 9th thriller in the Swyteck series, which will be released in 2011.  Jack will be around for a long time.  I promise.

Joseph Finder, Christopher Reich, and Brad Meltzer all give Money to Burn terrific blurbs.  Have they influenced you as a writer?  How?  What others writers have been an influence?

grippando-james.jpgI've always said that you have to be a reader to be a writer, so I can't help but be influenced by three writers who have given me so many hours of enjoyment.  Joe Finder's Paranoia is still one of my all time favorite thrillers.  Numbered Account by Chris Reich set the bar for financial thrillers.  And the ring of authenticity that runs through every single one of Brad's novels--he is a research machine--is an inspiration.  As for other writers who've influenced me, there's none greater than my mom. Some of my earliest childhood memories are of my father coming home from work on Saturday afternoon from the printing factory and my mother giving us a bath (there were five of us children) before she headed off in her starched white nursing uniform to work the Saturday night late shift at the hospital. Somehow she managed to raise five kids, work, and take courses on the side to get a doctorate degree in education. Her dissertation was later published and became one of the top textbooks in the country for nursing students.  It lasted through six editions for over twenty-five years.  I hope I can have a run like that.

Is February a good publication date for a book?

I don't think I've ever had a February release in hardcover, so I guess we'll find out.  But for years it was good enough for John Grisham, and it's pretty hard to argue with that kind of success.

Are things so laid-back in Florida that there's nothing to do but think of nefarious crimes, kinky villains, and twisty plots?  Are mosquitoes passing around some disease that you, Elmore Leonard, Carl Hiaasen, James Hall, Tim Dorsey, Jonathon King, Christine Kling, the late great Stuart Kaminsky, Vicki Hendricks, and Jim Born have all come down with?

You often hear it said that truth is stranger than fiction, and nowhere is that more true than in south Florida.  Where else could the United States Attorney lose his job after losing a big case, getting drunk, and biting a stripper?  Over beers at Thrillerfest I'm sure we could expand your list with the names of at least twenty other talented writers who have jumped on the wealth of material that seems to wash ashore down here (sometimes literally).  But I like to stretch myself as a writer, which means getting out of my comfort zone every now and then--especially with the stand alone thrillers.  That's one of the reasons I'm so proud of Money to Burn.  Not a single scene set in Florida, scarcely a lawyer in the book.

Money to Burn is your sixteenth novel?  Holy mackerel!  Just how disciplined are you?

Seventeenth, if you count my young adult novel.  But I've always loved to write.  At age eleven I wrote a comedy western and put my friends in it so they would sit and listen to me read it to them.  In high school and college I was the weirdo who actually looked for courses that required you to write a paper.  As a lawyer I published in more academic journals than most tenured law professors.  I keep an "idea file" in my closet, and I'll never live long enough to write all the stories I want to write.  It blows my mind that I actually get paid to do this.  Truly. 

I live in south Florida, so I write in my backyard.  My outdoor office has these essentials:  a patio table and chair, a big shade umbrella, a laptop computer, a hammock, a hot tub, and a swimming pool.  The cell phone is optional.  For me a "normal" workday means putting on my oldest pair of shorts and favorite T-shirt, visiting the refrigerator every half hour, and explaining to my pre-school daughter that she can't bang on the keyboard while daddy is trying to write a book.  Early in my career, I often woke in the middle of the night to write.  I try not to do that so much anymore, but you never know when inspiration is going to strike. For the most part, morning is my most productive writing time, and I try to finish every afternoon in time to coach my son's basketball team.

I have people approach me all the time telling me they have a great idea for a novel...all I have to do is write it.  But as your question implies, it's mostly about the discipline of sitting down and doing it.


keith-raffel-small.jpg

Keith Raffel has held a top secret clearance to watch over CIA activities and has founded an award-winning Internet software company.  Steve Berry called Keith's latest book, Smasher: A Silicon Valley Thriller, "taut, tight, and suspenseful" and said it "skillfully carries the reader triumphantly from one climax to the next." 

Home

International Thriller Writers Inc represents professional authors from around the world. Here you can learn more about them, their work, and the sources from which they draw their inspiration.


Join ITW

Are you interested in becoming a member of the International Thriller Writers? ITW offers Active and Associate memberships.
Click here for details.

Subscription

Are you receiving the BIG THRILL email each month? Get news and information on the latest thrillers being published that month along with in-depth stories and interviews. Plus get a chance to win first edition signed thrillers by your favorite authors.

Email Address:
*
First Name:

Last Name:

* = required field

ThrillerFest

ITW's annual celebration of the thriller world is the largest event of its kind, a meeting place for authors, readers, budding writers, and publishing industry professionals.

For 2011, we’ll be back in the heart of New York in July with the ThrillerFest conference including CraftFest and AgentFest.

Grand Hyatt NYC

ThrillerFest VI will be held at the Grand Hyatt Hotel in New York City.

The dates will be July 6-9, 2011.

More information to follow.

Calendar

Use our calendar system to see where ITW authors are appearing around the world, check publication dates, and browse international book events. You can submit your own public events too.

Coming events

About ITW

ITW welcomes new author and associate members. Here you can find out about our organization, its history and its background.

You can read about membership qualification and how to apply. And current members can learn how to maintain their account on our new online system.

Creative Commons License
This weblog is licensed under a Creative Commons License.

Support Independent Bookstores

IndieBound

The Big Thrill

In this month's webzine you can read about the latest books from upcoming and established authors.

Sign up to our monthly newsletter telling you about the latest titles and you could win your own set of thriller first editions, signed by the authors. Get your name on the list today!

Community

Discover who belongs to ITW. Find out about the Debut Author program. Browse our online events calendar which is open for submissions from everyone.

Patrons (Actives)
Clive Cussler*
Dirk Cussler*
Faye and Jonathan Kellerman*
John Lescroart*
Karin Slaughter


Sponsors (Actives)
Kathleen Antrim*
David Baldacci*
Steve Berry*
Gary Braver*
Sandra Brown*
Dale Brown*
John Case*
Lee Child*
Glenn Cooper
Richard Curtis*
Jack F. Du Brul*
David Dun*
Joseph Finder*
Brian Garfield*
Tess Gerritsen*
Leslie Glass*
Vicki Hinze*

Lisa Jackson
Alex Kava*
Raymond Khoury
Deborah LeBlanc
Eric Van Lustbader*
D.P. Lyle, M.D.*
Gayle Lynds*
Steve Martini
Brad Meltzer
David Morrell*
Katherine Neville*
Michael Palmer*
James Patterson*
Andrew Peterson
Douglas Preston*
Christopher Reich*
James Rollins*
M.J. Rose*
JoAnn Ross
Hank Phillippi Ryan
John Saul*
Susan Arnout Smith
R.L. Stine*
Brad Thor*

Supporters (Actives)
Steve Alten*
Ted Bell*
Emily Benedek
Janet Berliner-Gluckman*
Allison Brennan
Jan Burke*
Lorenzo Carcaterra
Lincoln Child*
Stephen Coonts*
Brian DAmato
Nelson DeMille
Eileen Dreyer*
Linda Fairstein*
Vince Flynn*
Chris Fox
Joel Goldman*
Heather Graham*
Thomas Greanias
Gary Grossman
Humphrey Hawksley


*original member joined
by June 4, 2005

Bonnie Hearn Hill*
Alan Jacobson
Judith Kelman*
Harley Jane Kozak
Jon Land*
Dennis Lynds*
Michael McMenamin
Francine Mathews*
Kyle Mills*
Twist Phelan
Christopher Rice*
James Siegel*
Taylor Smith*
Carl T. Smith*
Mariah Stewart*
Peter Straub*
M. Diane Vogt*
Stuart Woods*

Patrons (Associates)
Tucker Andersen

Sponsors (Associates)
Maria Carvainis
Leisure Books*
Ed Mitchell*
Henry Morrison*
Adrian Muller*
Bill Sewell
Tor/Forge Books*

Supporters (Associates)
Linda Adams*
Brilliance Audio*
Emory Hackman*
Inkwell Management, LLC*
Mario Mastro
L.A. Starks
The Mystery Bookstore