Recently, we reviewed the memoir, "Finding Fitzgerald," by author Carrie Lynn. As a fellow fan of the late writer, John D. Fitzgerald, she recounts a decades-long love of the writer's work and her efforts to uncover the mysteries behind his writings. While his best-known books, such as Papa Married a Mormon, and The Great Brain series, are based on people, places and events in Fitzgerald's life, they are fiction, with locations and individuals' lives adapted to fit the historical fiction.
Here is an excerpt from my review: "Finding Fitzgerald" is a memoir. Lynn blends her dogged, determined search to uncover the secrets behind John D. Fitzgerald's mysteries, with her family life of the past two generations. The book opens with Lynn visiting Price, Utah. That's where the Fitzgerald family actually lived. Frankly, for this Fitzgerald fan, it's a thrill to witness Lynn talking to people who knew the Fitzgeralds of the novels, to have her be at locations that we see in a photo in one of the novels, and see buildings and streets in Price that she can visualize as settings in the novels.
Here's an interview with Ms. Lynn. I appreciate her taking the time to answer these questions as she is busy with a book tour.
Plan9Crunch: Tell us what you
discovered about Price, Utah, and how it can serve as a model for Adenville and
Silver Reef, both prime locations in Fitzgerald's books?
Lynn: Ages ago, some historian somewhere,
determined that Adenville was based on the Utah towns of Silver Reef and Leeds.
The deductive reasoning that brought them to that conclusion makes sense. John
morphed the placement of Adenville, from the very beginning. He still had
family living in Price when he wrote his first book, Papa Married a Mormon. Therefore,
he set his stories in Southern Utah – Dixie. He connected it to cities in that
area like Enoch. Historically the closest thing to Adenville-Silverlode would
be Leeds – Silver Reef. Maybe someday when we get to ask John himself, he will
confirm the idea. However, he only gave 2, maybe 3 interviews about his work.
No one asked that question.
Originally when I ran across the
Leeds-Silver Reef, I agreed. Yet the more I read, the more I learned that Price
has a gorgeous lawless history. Complete with saloons, gunslingers, outlaws,
thieves, and the like. In its infancy Price was Adenville/Silverlode rolled
into one. It straddled the train tracks. Then a fire decimated the town. And in
an instant, the lawlessness ceased. You can’t even imagine it now in modern day
Price. The city rebuilt itself and has maintained a kind of Mayberry-eque
quality. My key understanding came from a hand drawn map. From that map, I
could better imagine the gunfights, the town layout, and the stories that John
remembered when he wrote his books.
Plan9Crunch: The story of the Great
Brain's character, Tom Fitzgerald, is very bittersweet. He had a life with a
lot of tragedy and setbacks, yet you encountered recollections that paint a
very positive picture of him. Do you see the real Tom depicted in the
books?
Lynn: I do. Partly based on a
handwritten letter by a neighbor, named Elgin Grames, and his devout commitment
to Tom Fitzgerald being “known as “The Great Brain””. I think John admired his brother immensely.
He had 2 older brothers in real life. He could have used either of them, if the
model were entire fictious. But I think he saw in Tom something, that he knew
life may not see in Tom, that was his heart. I believe he wanted the world to
remember the same guy, that Elgin Grames remembered.
One of the key things I learned to keep in mind during my research was to stop letting my book images crowd my discoveries. We as readers will never get to read the original “Great Brain” book. It was the fourth and final book in John’s initial series. Because it was never published, as he initially intended, we likely get a more slanted view of T.D. because John eventually had to write 7/8 books on the “Great Brain” character. I conjecture that many of the stories in The Great Brain series were likely spread across his siblings and friends. I have no absolute proof on that. But if I ever found that out, I wouldn’t be surprised.
Plan9Crunch: As an equally devoted fan, tell us what it is like to actually
speak with an correspond with people who knew the individuals characterized in
the books?
Lynn: It wasn’t always as fun as one would imagine. I never spoke with
any of Tom or John’s siblings. His younger brother Gerald was alive but barely
communicative. He would be closest conversation I would have. All of my
interactions with Gerald happened through his son, who was very gracious and as
helpful as he could be.
The others I connected with were helpful, but in a tougher way.
The first painful correspondence I received, didn’t even make it in the book
because it’s about a lesser known family member, but the sting of the letter
really set me back. I had put the characters in the books on such a pedestal,
that having them taken down, sometimes felt like a wrecking ball. Yet, after I
let things settle, I could find nuggets of joy in the raw pieces. Over time it
made me love both versions of a character even more.
Plan9Crunch: Finding Fitzgerald is a memoir of your family as well. Do you
think your children will share the same lifetime love for the series and novels
that you do?
Lynn: Likely not. They do still talk about them. Largely because of the
project. They have a favorite book, Great Brain at the Academy. Each of
them has their own favorite authors and book series. I love that. We have
richer conversations because of it. Ironically, I have a slew of other favorite
books and authors, too. Fitzgerald just needed to be found.
Plan9Crunch: Why do you think Fitzgerald created historical fiction, rather
than placing the books in Price and keeping characters as they were? Was he
writing more about an era than just a family?
Lynn: Possibly.
It is also possible that he was respecting all the living relatives in his
family that still lived in the area. He had siblings and cousins in the nearby
area. He also wove his tale more broadly with those extended family members
initially. We don’t see it as much it The Great Brain. Lastly, who knows
what he initially submitted for publication. He took the story off of family
history, as he and his siblings recalled it. Maybe the initial story was too
complex? Or may too unmarketable? We have no galley proofs to look at.
Plan9Crunch: What advice do you have to future Fitzgerald sleuths? What issue
unresolved could be still be answered?
Lynn: My best answer is “go with your gut.” This Fitzgerald discovery
story seems to have an assignment for each seeker individually. None of have
ever met. We have never lived by each other. Or hold any other connection than
the love of the books John wrote. We each brought something new, it added to
the next seekers information. Specific ideas would be finding the pulp fiction
stories he wrote. There are more than 300. Finding his pen name. there is also
a world of Utah pioneering that the Neilsens did, especially Aunt Sena’s
husband that may unearth new insights. Whoever takes it from here, will be led.
That is all I know. It really is a Field of Dreams experience.
No comments:
Post a Comment