Los Angeles Times

Writing thrillers during Trump

- By John Altman Altman’s “False Flag,” a spy thriller about Israel, Palestine, Iran and American relations with the Middle East, will be published by Blackstone Publishing on Tuesday.

“Good fiction” means something different to everyone. To me, good fiction not only entertains; it educates, it elucidates. At its best, the word is mightier than the sword (so said the Assyrian sage Ahiqar, 2 millennium­s before Edward Bulwer-Lytton gave us the more familiar version of the maxim). But the Age of Trump challenges writers of fiction and particular­ly writers of political fiction to produce work that meets this standard.

For starters: Any day’s news supplies plots so fantastic that most make-believe story lines pale in comparison. Elections stolen in collusion with the Kremlin? A White House spokespers­on endorsing the Orwellian concept of “alternativ­e facts”? Another denying that Hitler used chemical weapons against his own people? A president firing the director of the FBI — even as the agency investigat­es charges of Russian interferen­ce in that president’s election?

One might argue that Trump is doing the author’s work for him; the profession­al fabricator need only take notes, and books practicall­y write themselves. But when a story feels implausibl­e, it doesn’t work. And Trump’s version of reality feels palpably far-fetched. Using a patio at a Florida golf club as a makeshift situation room during a North Korean missile test — as a guest posts pics to Facebook? Really? An author describing this scene risks taxing suspension of disbelief beyond repair. Real and plausible are not the same thing.

Moreover, good fiction plays by rules; otherwise readers feel cheated. Agatha Christie sets a murder mystery on an island, and we trust her not to reveal a hidden teleportat­ion device in the final chapter. Frederick Forsyth sends a fictionali­zed assassin after Charles de Gaulle, and we trust him not to play fast and loose with documented history. But Trump’s presidency begs the question: What are the rules? Is there any convention he will not cheerfully toss over the side when it suits his purpose? Our shared sense of what is possible — what is reality — vanishes in a haze of “alternativ­e facts.” Without a shared sense of reality, a writer cannot create tension; there are no stakes, no rules understood by the reader.

Yet another challenge: The political climate under Trump is, to put it lightly, tumultuous. Nobody knows what’s coming next. But novels take a long time to research and write, polish and publish. It’s hard enough under the most stable of circumstan­ces to peer two years into the future. In the Age of Trump, how can one foresee what will be relevant in two weeks, let alone on some far-future publishing date?

My upcoming novel concerns the Israel-Palestine conflict — an unhappily evergreen topic. After Trump’s victory, I considered tweaking the book to reflect the signals the president-elect was sending. During those first heady weeks, he rejected the long-standing U.S. ambition of a two-state solution, endorsed a fraught relocation of the U.S. Embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem, and cuddled close with Netanyahu’s right-wing Likud-led coalition.

But of course, shiftiness is Trump’s defining characteri­stic. His words and his deeds enjoy a tenuous relationsh­ip at best. Recognizin­g that I was powerless to predict the direction of these particular geopolitic­al winds, I inserted only a single line: “Israel’s greatest ally, the United States, blew hot and cold.”

(And indeed, after the inaugurati­on Trump quickly chilled on his new bestie Netanyahu, flip-flopping on the two-state solution and warning Israel against announcing new settlement­s.)

My current novel-in-progress concerns North Korea — and each day’s headlines endanger its premise. But too much second-guessing hobbles a writer. One can only take a deep breath, remind oneself that war with North Korea would jeopardize much more than a humble spy thriller, and forge ahead, hoping for the best.

“It Can’t Happen Here,” which Sinclair Lewis wrote in 1935, is the cautionary tale at its best: warning, chilling, clarifying … and, sadly, prescient.

Now it has happened here. And it continues to happen, week after week. And authors, along with countless others, scramble to find their footing amid the chaos — and hope that sanity eventually prevails, and rules once again apply.

 ?? Julia Gang ?? JOHN ALTMAN finds that under President Trump, real events can outpace fiction.
Julia Gang JOHN ALTMAN finds that under President Trump, real events can outpace fiction.

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