The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

AJC BOOKSHELF

Pandemic check-in with Karin Slaughter

- Suzanne Van Atten

When so many others are suffering, Atlanta crime writer Karin Slaughter says she’s grateful to weather the COVID19 pandemic in safety and comfort so far. Her sister contracted the coronaviru­s and was sick for a few months before she recovered.

Still, the pandemic has wreaked havoc with what should have been a milestone year for Slaughter. “The Silent Wife,” her 20th book and the 10th in her Will Trent series, publishes Tuesday. Instead of celebratin­g with her longtime editor Kate Elton and chatting up fans on tour in the U.S. and Europe, Slaughter will mark the day from home over Zoom.

In addition, production was halted just three days before the principal photograph­y began in Vancouver, British Columbia, for the Netflix series of her 2018 novel “Pieces of Her” starring Toni Collette. Shooting is tentativel­y scheduled to resume at the end of the year in Australia.

But through all the ups and downs, Slaughter has maintained her

zany sense of humor, apparent in Zoom videos she’s posted on Facebook and Instagram. Donning silly hats, she interviews authors, attempts to learn a foreign language and reads her fan mail.

Speaking recently from the home she shares with three cats — Maggie, Grace and Dexter — Slaughter spoke about how she was faring five months into the pandemic.

Q: Do you miss being on tour?

A: What I miss the most is when I would leave Belgium or England or Australia, my tour would be over, and now it’s just all the time because of Zoom. Which in a way is good, but also, weirdly, there’s no finality to it. In the scheme of things, there are far worse things that could be happening. At least I have a job and can put food on the table and feed my cats.

Q: What’s the worst part of social distancing for you?

A: The worst part is that this is my 20th book. I was looking forward to celebratin­g with my editor, who’s been with me for 20 years and who’s in England. Obviously, I’m not going to England right now; they’re not letting us in. I also miss going out to breakfast with friends. I used to go to Highland Bakery and meet friends there. I’d go to First Watch in Decatur. I still go to Duck’s Kitchen in Decatur to get takeout.

Q: Have you taken advantage of this downtime? Do you have anything to show for it like learning to speak Mandarin?

A: I would like to say I have not put on my COVID-19 pounds. I would like that made clear. It’s been a real struggle. The first month I think everybody was just sort of self-medicating with whatever they had handy, like pita chips. But then I thought, “OK, you’ve got to get your (expletive) together and figure out a routine.”

Q: You clearly mastered Zoom.

A: I did early on, back before I hated Zoom. I decided I was going to talk to my author friends all over the country and all over the world and see what it’s like for them. That was really fun. It’s fascinatin­g talking to different people because this is something that is affecting everybody in the world at the same time. In our lifetimes, we’ve never had that happen. Even in World War I and II, it wasn’t the entire world that was affected by it. Here, even Amazonian tribes in Brazil are affected by it. Every person on the planet has had an experience with it or will have an experience with it. It was just a way to reach out and talk to people.

Q: Now you hate Zoom.

A: Pretty much. Well, I hate it, and I love it. I feel like we all have Zoom hairstyles. The front of my hair looks really great. If you saw me from behind, it looks like a duck’s (back end). I think we’re all going through that thing.

Q: Will the pandemic find its way into one of your books?

A: It already has for the next book. The book I’m writing for next year, it’s not about the pandemic, but it incorporat­es the changes to our lives that the pandemic has caused. I’m having to be a bit of a futurist and think about, “Well, is everybody going to still be wearing masks? Will there be rolling quarantine­s? Will we have little home tests we can spit on, and they’ll tell you if you’re positive or not?”

Q: What’s your best tip for not going crazy during quarantine?

A: I’ve been reading a lot of history because it feels weirdly comforting because I know how it’s going to turn out. I really love Eric Larson’s “The Splendid and the Vile” about Churchill trying to get the U.S. engaged in World War II and about how crazy that time period was in London. And I’ve got Katherine Anne Porter’s “Pale Horse, Pale Rider.” You know, she had the Spanish flu, and her fever was so high it turned her hair white. She was, like, in her early 30s. The eponymous short story is about the Spanish flu.

Q: What have you been watching?

A: I blew through “Ozark.” Oh, my God, that was so fantastic. And “The Morning Show” on Apple TV. I thought I knew what it was about, and then I watched it, and it was so amazing. I loved “Greyhound,” the Tom Hanks movie. I love WWII movies where Americans are heroes, and they do the right thing.

Q: What are you looking forward to most when things return to normal?

A: Mostly having this anxiety lifted. What I’m looking forward to is knowing what to expect.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY HARPERCOLL­INS ?? “The Silent Wife” by Karin Slaughter is out Tuesday.
CONTRIBUTE­D BY HARPERCOLL­INS “The Silent Wife” by Karin Slaughter is out Tuesday.
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