Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

‘DEFINITELY A PLOTTER’

STACEY ABRAMS GETS RESULTS, FROM HELPING DEMOCRATS TAKE THE SENATE TO WRITING A GRIPPING THRILLER, ‘WHILE JUSTICE SLEEPS.’

- BY CHARLES FINCH Finch’s novels include the Charles Lenox mysteries.

WHO KNEW competence could be so electrifyi­ng? “I love Stacey Abrams because she gets things done,” a friend told me as I was preparing to write this article. Except she didn’t use the word “things.” ¶ A lot of people on the left feel the same way. After Abrams narrowly lost the 2018 Georgia governor’s race to Brian Kemp, in part thanks to restrictiv­e voting laws Kemp had implemente­d as secretary of State, she set about not to capitalize on her new fame but to fix the problem. In the next two years, the organizati­on she started, Fair Fight, registered around 800,000 new voters in Georgia, many of them from Black communitie­s.

It was the kind of hard, detailed political work you can’t perform on Twitter. It paid off on a national scale. On Nov. 3, Joe Biden carried Georgia by the slimmest of margins, scarcely 10,000 votes. Six weeks later, Abrams came through again: Democrats Jon Ossoff and Raphael Warnock swept a pair of Senate runoffs, defeating two heavily funded incumbent Republican­s and handing the party 50-50 control of the Senate.

The highest office Abrams has held in government is minority leader of the Georgia House of Representa­tives. But in important ways, her work led directly to Biden’s ability to pass a $2-trillion stimulus package in March and possibly even HR1, the pending voting rights legislatio­n named for the late Georgia Congressma­n John Lewis.

This record has made Abrams, along with Katie Porter, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Elizabeth Warren and others, the face of the reborn left — tough, pragmatic, even-keeled, resultsori­ented.

What relatively few of her new fans may know, however, is that before politics swept her up completely, Abrams was also a writer, the author of eight wellreceiv­ed romance novels under her pen name, Selena Montgomery.

For a while, that fact was little more than a fun political trivia question in a bar quiz. Now, though, the publisher Berkeley has announced plans to reissue the first three Selena Montgomery books. And this month, with the publicatio­n of “While Justice Sleeps,” an intricate, fast-paced legal thriller under her own name — acquired last week for television by Working Title after a bidding war — she steps squarely into the spotlight as a writer of fiction. She has no plans to leave. Could a novelist make it to the White House?

In conversati­on, Abrams is warm, funny, curious and unpretenti­ous, though also precise, giving answers of a legal clarity. (She wrote the first Selena Montgomery book while still a student at Yale Law School.) After 10 minutes, I wanted to be lifelong friends with her, which is of course a reaction the best politician­s are famous for inducing. Yet she reminded me more of the writers I’ve met through the years: a chatty listener.

Abrams grew up in a house full of readers in Gulfport, Miss.. Her mother was a college librarian. “If you could reach it, you could read it,” she says. (Abrams and her five siblings still have a book club to this day.) As a child, Abrams loved “The Phantom Tollbooth” by Norton Juster and pored for hours over the volumes of the family’s Childcraft Encycloped­ia and a book of her mother’s filled with myths, tall tales and anecdotes, whose title she’s tried without success to identify. Her father, who worked in a shipyard, “was dyslexic, but he was also the family’s chief storytelle­r,” Abrams said, spinning out long, fantastica­l tales she described as “lighter versions of ‘Game of Thrones.’ ”

Abrams was a very good student. In high school in Georgia — where her parents moved to study at Emory — she grew to love writers like James Baldwin and Bharati Mukherjee. She started her first book when she was 14, a volume with the unimprovab­le name “My Diary of Angst.”

But it was in politics that Abrams was a prodigy. After she organized a protest against legendary Atlanta Mayor Maynard Jackson for his response to the Rodney King riots, Jackson was so impressed that he hired her. Soon she was a rising star, in 2007 winning an open seat in the statehouse. By 2018, when she became the first Black woman nominated for governor by a major party in the U.S., she had been fighting for voting rights in Georgia most of her adult life.

On the eve of last year’s election, though, Abrams was scrupulous­ly reworking “While Justice Sleeps.” Her drive calls to mind Avery Steele, the novel’s heroine, a clerk on the Supreme Court who has too many problems — she’s broke, with a mother addicted to drugs — to save the world. Unfortunat­ely, the world sometimes needs saving.

The book is a canny, closely plotted legal thriller in the early Grisham style. It begins when Howard Wynn, the swing justice on the Supreme Court, falls into a vegetative state. The timing is suspicious: He has just delivered a scabrous attack on the smoothtalk­ing President Stokes. (“The common touch had supplanted common sense,” Abrams writes. Choose your own president to think that line’s about.) Wynn’s enigmatic last words, involving chess and an internatio­nal biotech conspiracy, are left in the care of the only clerk he holds in any esteem — Avery.

Like the protagonis­ts in many Selena Montgomery novels, Avery is a smart, resourcefu­l Black woman facing long odds. Abrams has said it’s the kind of character she wants to see more often in fiction — “as adventurou­s and attractive as any white woman,” in her words. The difference is that the Montgomery books fall into the genre of romantic suspense; Abrams told me she made them romance novels in part because women weren’t publishing much pure suspense fiction 20 years ago. (Things have improved only marginally since then.)

When I tried to draw her out on the relationsh­ip between her writing and politics, however, she was diffident. They’re her passions, a fact she doesn’t seem to query; the angst is gone. It was refreshing, this mature unwillingn­ess to conflate self-mythology with introspect­ion. It reminded me of her decision to abjure the chances she had to run for Senate (or indeed, the suggestion­s that she run for president) after 2018.

Perhaps it’s no accident that women like Abrams, Warren, Porter and Ocasio-Cortez have emerged as leaders recently; locked out of politics for so long, they don’t treat it as a personal psychodram­a, in the dubious tradition of LBJ and Bill Clinton and James Comey, but as a job. In a way — allergic to cant, in love with facts, bearing whiteboard­s and willing to work hard — they offer a corrective to the feral romanticis­m of Donald Trump’s hardcore supporters.

Given this defining pragmatism, it should surprise no one that Abrams the novelist is, by her own descriptio­n, “definitely a plotter.” That goes for her literary career too. She has written sections of children’s and YA books, is excited about the Berkley reissues and has plans for (spoiler alert) another Avery Steele book.

She’s less committal about whether she will ever run for president — not out of classic “Meet the Press” coyness, I think, but because in both writing and politics her signature characteri­stic is patience: Having seeded Georgia with voters and her writing career with books and ideas, she has waited out the seasons to see them bloom.

WHEN SHE was 17, Abrams set up a table at Spelman, where she had just begun college, to register voters. As important as books were in her childhood, politics and protest were central; her father, the family storytelle­r, had once been arrested outside the Hattiesbur­g, Miss., courthouse doing the very same thing — registerin­g voters. He was 14.

“I have a goal that will never be achieved,” Abrams said when I asked about what larger vision lay beneath her local focus. “I believe in the eradicatio­n of poverty.” She paused for a moment. “But I’ve met people.”

What becomes clear in talking to Abrams is that justice is her lasting fixation. Some of the articles about her novels express wonder that she’s so adept in such seemingly separate vocations. But reading “While Justice Sleeps” or listening to Abrams discuss how her second organizati­on, Fair Count, is planning vaccinatio­ns, you find the same person. In a very real and nonmystica­l way, her politics and her writing are continuous, not conflictin­g.

Both profession­s, after all, are different ways of trying to figure out and solve the world. In a surreal moment in her nonfiction bestseller “Our Time Is Now,” Abrams recounts being denied her own ballot in 2018 when she was one of the candidates for governor. True to form, Abrams found out what the problem was, fixed it and went into the booth to cast her vote.

 ?? Kevin Lowery ??
Kevin Lowery

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