On Research: Extrajudicial Killing, Maggie and Me
This is a rambling post about a few things I found interesting while doing some recent research.
Extrajudicial Killing Research
As I do the research necessary to write another novel, I continually run into things I didn’t think existed or knew could exist. Take for example the following statement from HR 6010, introduced in 2010 and which died in committee:
United States citizens have been included on lists maintained by the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) and the Joint Special Operations Command (JSOC) to be assassinated.
Really?
If you read the full text of the bill (and to be honest, there was a second attempt at passing this legislation introduced in August 2012–outcome unknown), you’ll see it’s quite interesting we, as a nation, must pass laws to uphold the right of due process.
Bills like this are good fodder for those out there who might be looking for a story line or two.
I only mentioned this because some writers might need a little inspiration, and the archive of legislation through the years is certainly broad enough to provide that inspiration to many people.
Research into Stephen Crane
I’ve also been reading more Stephen Crane, both poetry (a reread) and his collected works. I find it interesting that Crane’s first novel, Maggie: A Girl of the Streets, was self-published and sold very little. I read it for the first time a few years ago. It’s rather short (a novella), and written in a very realistic style, something readers (or perhaps publishers) of the time didn’t want on their shelves.
Those who read my first novel Castles might then know what I mean when I say:
Huh. Interesting.
It’s also interesting to note that Maggie was considered “vulgar” and is anything but uplifting. If you haven’t read it before, check it out: Maggie: A Girl of the Streets. Of course, after you read Maggie, check out Castles for comparison.
Some other points of interest (if interesting only to me because I know what I’m thinking):
- Crane often referred to some of his body of work as “sketches.” A posthumous volume of work was published as Stephen Crane: Sullivan County Tales and Sketches.
Huh. Interesting.
- The Red Badge of Courage is a character-based novel set in a time of war.
Huh. Interesting. (In one of my most ambitious and as yet-unfinished-but-certainly-outlined-to-death novels, this was the point.)
- Crane was the son of a Methodist minister.
Huh. Interesting. (Okay. My father was a Baptist minister.)
- Crane was also convinced to published a volume of poetry, The Black Riders and Other Lines, which he released in 1895.
Huh. Interesting?
Wait. No. I have never released a volume of poetry, although some teachers in high school pointed to my style of intellectual poetry (versus those that evoke feeling) as something “Crane-like.” I once thought I would publish a volume, but I never felt I had enough material to fill one up. I did add a few poems to the upcoming collection Regarding Dead Things on the Side of the Road.
What’s the Point of this Post?
None, really. These are just thoughts that have been running through my mind for the past few days.
There are many different parallels I find in my work and some interesting thoughts to ponder. I think I’ll dive back into the work-in-progress for a while and leave you with this:
While I gazed at the sea
Through a glass-bottom boat,
I noticed a small fish
That,
At closer scrutiny,
Appeared to have a hook
Stuck in its mouth–
A lesson from the past
That reverberated
Through the present.
The fish looked up at me
With pitiful eyes
And a bleeding found,
Crying for help,
Screaming for need……but all I could do
Was gaze at the sea
Through a glass-bottom boat.