RHYS BOWEN:
I heard an interesting piece on the radio when I was driving home this week. It was about former US presidents and their favorite movies.
The ones that stood out to me were:
Nixon liked Patton
JF
K chose the Bond movies
Ronald Reagan picked It's a Wonderful Life
and
Donald Trump selected Citizen Kane.
What was interesting to me is that each of these men chose a movie that mirrored themselves, or at least as they saw themselves.
Nixon liked Patton, stern leader of men.
JFK saw himself as the playboy daring undercover agent
Ronald Reagan as the humble everyman, wanting to help everybody
and
Trump identified with the ruthless empire builder. (I wonder if he ever murmurs Rosebud?)
Which got to thinking about my own favorite movies:
The ones that came instantly to mind are
Out of Africa
Casablanca
The Dead Poet's Society
Quartet
Roman Holiday
Enchanted April
Then I wondered if these mirror who I am? I'd like to be Meryl Streep, having her hair washed by Robert Redford.
Or Maggie Smith, performing the quartet from Rigoletto
One thing they do all have in common is that they are hopelessly romantic. Am I a hopeless romantic? Maybe, but with a touch of cynicism.
Then I wondered which was my favorite. If I could take only one movie with me to a desert island, of course assuming that there was a DVD player with solar battery charger!
I couldn't decide on one until it hit me: THE SOUND OF MUSIC.
That would be my perfect movie for a desert island. I could sing along to the songs. I could dream about those Austrian Alps. I could cry a little.
Okay, yes, so I am a hopeless romantic!
How about you? Do you have a favorite movie? Would it say who you are?
7 smart and sassy crime fiction writers dish on writing and life. It's The View. With bodies.
Showing posts with label JFK. Show all posts
Showing posts with label JFK. Show all posts
Sunday, January 15, 2017
Friday, August 14, 2015
James Benn, Billy Boyle, JFK, and THE WHITE GHOST
SUSAN ELIA MACNEAL: Reds and lovely readers, I'm delighted to introduce James R. Benn — Jim — author of the Billy Boyle series, set during World War II. I loved this series from the debut and eagerly await each new novel. In number ten, THE WHITE GHOST, the series moves to the Pacific Theater and pairs Boston Irish cop Billy Boyle with another Boston Irish boy — maybe you've heard of him? — John F. Kennedy.
Susan Elia MacNeal: Jim, your tenth book in the Billy Boyle series
leaves the familiar ground of Europe in World War II for the Pacific Theater.
What brings Billy to the South Pacific?
James R. Benn: It’s been a reader request for some
time. I struggled with how to approach the notion, and finally came up with the
idea of pairing two Boston Irish boys: Billy and John F. Kennedy. But when I
started looking into how their timelines could intersect, I found that by May
1944, the date of the last book, JFK was already back in the States and
discharged from the navy. I thought that idea was a no-go until I happened to
notice a gap between the third and fourth books, several unexplained months
which accorded nicely with the aftermath of the sinking of PT-109. Here’s how
it’s explained in the forward to The White Ghost:
Astute readers may have noted Billy’s absence
between the invasion of Sicily (Blood
Alone), which occurred in July, 1943, and his appearance in Jerusalem in
November 1943, before being sent on assignment to Northern Ireland, as
recounted in Evil For Evil.
He was not idle during those months.
With the governmental veil of secrecy
lifted, the events of 1943 immediately following Billy’s Sicilian assignment
are chronicled here for the first time.
SEM: So Billy and Jack are both from Boston, both
Irish boys. Are they good friends?
JRB: They once were; but one thing I
learned about the Kennedy family is that friends were often viewed in light of
what they could do for the Kennedys. Quite often, it was a one-way street. Jack
Kennedy often treated his life-long friend Lem Billings terribly, and their
interactions provided the backstory for Billy’s relationship with Jack. Billy’s
family is working class Boston Irish; the Kennedys were what was called “lace
curtain” Irish, meaning that they were working their way up the social ladder,
leaving the shanty Irish behind.
SEM: There have been many stories about
JFK’s father Joseph Kennedy Senior. For instance, that he was a rum-runner
during Prohibition, and openly dated movie stars while married to his wife
Rosemary. Did you find any of that to be true?
JRB: Whatever you’ve heard about Joe Senior – the truth is worse than that. The one thing that was never proven was
that he made money smuggling alcohol into the US during Prohibition. He did own
distilleries in Canada, and I can’t imagine a man like him passing up that sort
of money-making opportunity. One thing is for certain; when his Harvard class
reunion was held during the 1930s, he was tapped to provide the booze. He had
his daughter Rosemary lobotomized, basically in an effort to control her unruly
behavior. He did so without consulting his wife or discussing it with the
family. This was in 1941, when the operation was still new and untested. Dr. James
Watts and Dr. Walter Freeman performed the lobotomy. Watts used an instrument
that looked like a butter knife, cutting brain tissue through a frontal
incision. As Watts cut, Freeman put questions to Rosemary, asking her to recite
the Lord’s Prayer or God Bless America. When she began to become incoherent,
they stopped. She spent the rest of her life in a nursing home. Her mother did
not visit her for twenty years. Her father never did, and never spoke of her
again. That was the kind of environment in which Jack Kennedy grew up.
SEM: Are there other historical characters in this
book? It seems like the Kennedys might well take center stage.
JRB: There were too many interesting characters in the
Solomon Islands for that to happen. One was Merle Farland, a nursing sister who
worked at a Methodist mission on Vella Lavella in the Solomons. When the
Japanese invaded, most nurses were evacuated. She stayed on, working with
Coastwatchers to give advance notice of Japanese raids. She was finally brought
out with a B-17 crew she’d rescued, along with a group of Japanese prisoners.
When she arrived at Tulagi, across the strait from Guadalcanal, her presence
sparked a rumor that Amelia Earhart had been found. Having taken some fictional
liberties with her story, the character’s name is Deanna Pendleton, for a young
woman who won a character naming at a charity event.
SEM: I’m
curious if the experience of researching and delving into the Kennedy family
history has soured you at all on the Kennedy “mystique”?
JRB: I grew up with JFK on television, and felt the
promise of all he had to offer. I think I do understand the character of John
F. Kennedy better, and how in the crucible of war he found something deep and
meaningful. It was a sobering and widening experience for this man of youthful
privilege, and he did take what he learned to heart. I think I am more cynical
about the entire family history, and see it as the political machine it always
was. But JFK seemed to rise above much of that, and perhaps it was that wartime
experience that brought out what could have been greatness.
Oddly enough, I did recently have an encounter with the Kennedy mystique. I
was testifying at a Connecticut General Assembly hearing about public library
funding, when a State Senator came to the podium to speak. It was Ted Kennedy
Junior, who is currently serving in the state senate. He’s tall, good-looking,
with that shock of Kennedy hair, and he spoke with passion.He had me at “My name is Ted Kennedy Junior.”
SUSAN ELIA MACNEAL: Jim, thank you so much for joining us to talk about Billy Boyle, the publication of THE WHITE GHOST, and JFK. Reds and lovely readers, what are your thoughts on history and fiction intersecting in novels? What questions do you have for Jim about the Kennedys and their legacy?
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)













