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From Chess to Dreams: Interview on the Creative Writing Process with Fred Waitzkin

This article was published in Scientific American’s former blog network and reflects the views of the author, not necessarily those of Scientific American



In 1984, Fred Waitzkin published Searching for Bobby Fischer, the story of three years in the lives of Fred and his chess prodigy son, Josh Waitzkin. The book became an internationally acclaimed bestseller. Five years later, Paramount released the movie version of Searching for Bobby Fischer, which has become a cult classic. Waitzkin also wrote Mortal Games (1993), a biography of world chess champion, Garry Kasparov. Waitzkin has also been a blue water fisherman since childhood and has frequently written about fishing in short fiction, magazine pieces and his memoir, The Last Marlin (2000), whichwas selected by The New York Times as “a best book of the year.”


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Nearly thirty years after Searching, Waitzkin has just published his debut novel, The Dream Merchant. This exciting novel is about a gifted salesman named Jim who can sell anything to anyone. Jim is charming, charismatic and driven, and uses his skills to lure people into investing in his financial scams to realize their dreams. Just as quickly as he achieves wealth and tremendous business success, however, he loses everything, leaving wives, lovers, friends and customers ruined and abandoned in his wake. To escape his past and make it back to the top, he leaves the country and operates a lawless and violent gold mining operation in the Brazilian rainforest. Late in his life he falls in love with Mara, a beautiful Israeli woman fifty years younger. In their unlikely relationship, the woman is erotically charged by Jim and his past glory. Make no doubt: Jim does truly terrible things-- he is entirely unimpeded by moral restraint. And yet, oddly enough, throughout the book he remains winsome and charming as though immune to the cost of mortal sin.

I loved this novel. I found it powerful, sexy, unusual, captivatingly dark, and gripping. A few years back, I had the pleasure of interviewing his son Josh, and now, I thankfully was able to interview Fred about his novel and creative writing process.

What inspired you to write a novel?

When I was a young man struggling to write short fiction, I believed that the novel was the heavy weight championship of writing. Maybe I got this macho idea from Hemingway or Mailer. Or maybe from my mother who was a great painter and sculptress and also a terrific storyteller. She wanted me to be a novelist. Even when I was writing pieces for The Times Magazine or Esquire, she was telling me to get serious and write a novel. But really, for as far back as I can remember, I wanted to write a novel. For years it nagged me that I hadn’t. I didn’t feel quite complete as a writer.

The Dream Merchantis your first work of fiction, and it took you ten years to write it. Do you consider yourself a late bloomer in fiction writing?

Maybe. My earliest stories were all about my moods and they were usually dark. I had this misguided idea that the best writing needed to be about angst. I was drawn to darkness in writing. But then to make a living I started writing feature pieces for magazines. All of a sudden the mandate was to write stories about real people who had adventures and lived exciting lives. This was a great training ground for me. I learned the importance of story in a “story.” I was writing outside myself. I learned the importance of researching a story so that you knew it and felt it deeply. Journalism was a great training ground for the novelist in Fred.

Was there a benefit to taking ten years to write Dream Merchant? How would the book have been different if you rushed the process?

I wasted some time, but it was my first novel and I was learning. For example, I spent the first two years writing it from an omniscient point of view. But my central character had a chilliness that I didn’t want. Jim does some VERY bad things but he is also endearing and charismatic. Eventually I realized that he needed a close friend to trail him in his dark adventures, to love him and also to be troubled by him. That’s when I introduced a narrator and the novel began to percolate. Also, there was a lot of research I needed to do. For one thing, I had to go to Brazil.

Why Brazil?

I wanted the novel to shift gears. For me this was the home run idea—to take an American saga and suddenly turn it on its side, tell the story from an entirely different, even shocking perspective. Paul Bowles does something like this in The Sheltering Sky when he kills off his central character two thirds through—and then the novel takes off. I knew that I wanted to take this Canadian-American super salesman to a different world once his own fell apart-- that he would once more re-cast himself but this time in very unlikely circumstances. That he would do whatever it took, cross ANY line to get back to the top.

Eventually, my Jim would become a kind of slave master in the Amazon. To pull it off, I needed to understand the environment perfectly or the novel would fall on its face. So I flew to Manaus with my son Josh (Josh is always up for adventure, and besides, he sees one of his roles in life as protecting his dad whenever I travel toward danger). We explored the city, visited fancy steak restaurants where Jim would eat, the brothels where he hired gorgeous sad-eyed young girls. We went to gun shops and poor shacks on the riverbanks where Jim hired his little army of gunmen. Then Josh and I travelled to a remote area of the jungle. We slept nights in hammocks—like my character Jim—listening to the growl of hunting jaguars.

It wouldn’t have been the same novel without going to Brazil. I spent a lot of time learning about my subjects. I spent years. I researched characters in various ways to know them deeply. It wouldn’t have been the same book without the research.

While your novel tells Jim’s whole story from when he was a young boy, in many sections of the book the readers see him as an old man involved with a much younger woman, who seems to be using him just as he did with people all his life. What is the message you hope to convey here?

I don’t ever think about leaving a reader with an explicit message. As I see it, Jim’s need for young lovers is neither righteous nor reprehensible. It is an aspect of sexuality that doesn’t often make it into good writing. Marquez looks at it in Love in the Time of Cholera and less explicitly, and less successfully, I think, in Memories of my Melancholy Whores.

But why did you decide to explore the taboo subject of love and sexuality between a man and a woman less than half his age?

Many wealthy powerful old men indulge the fantasy of marrying or becoming involved with a much younger woman, George Soros, Rupert Murdoch, Tony Bennett, to name a few. Probably most seniors share the fantasy but don’t act on it for a variety of reasons—most of them wholesome and obvious. But Jim isn’t one to be impeded by social taboos. He makes his own rules and he understands what makes him come alive, his “hot buttons,” as he might say. During the course of an unusual life Jim has a need to shed his skin and start from scratch several times. For Jim, younger women have a catalytic effect; they are a part of his transformations.

But you take us up close into their little bedroom.

Jim is a lusty guy. Sex drives him, redeems and transforms him and I needed to show that part. But to your question, Jim and Mara are greatly attracted to one another although for very different reasons. Their physical relationship is a part of who they are. Actually, in an earlier draft I took out much of their sex and I felt that it took a lot of the life out of the book. They had become deadened and were no longer making sense as a couple… So I put their lovemaking back in. I like the book much more this way.

I can understand Jim wanted to have a younger woman but isn’t it unusual for a much younger woman to be attracted to a much older man?

Not so unusual as you might think. Several years ago, when I was writing these sections of the novel, I asked many younger women about how they would feel about having an older man as a lover—scores of women, friends of my kids, women that worked in my office building or who worked in a sandwich shop I frequent. I got some nasty looks along the way but many girls were interested and willing to talk. About half of them had either had such a relationship or were open to the possibility. The other half wouldn’t think of it and some were repelled by the idea of a lover twice their age.

For Mara, in The Dream Merchant, love and manipulation and power and latent violence are very tangled. She is Jim’s match in this respect. But in the process of their unlikely life together Mara finds herself increasingly turned on by the old man. In fact their age difference, and his profligate history of success and money, and even his proximity to death create an urgency that is erotically charged.

How much of yourself do you see in Jim?

I think there is some of Fred in all of my characters. I got into their skin while they got into mine. It is hard to break this down into percentages--how much of Fred in this one or that, and even if I could, I wouldn't--but for sure there was a flow back and forth.

Does writing a novel allow you to live out in your mind aspects of yourself you wish you expressed more freely in the real world?

For sure. Living the lives of characters is a tremendous ride. It's one of the side benefits. From time to time I found myself thinking about the world like Jim. Same for Lenny Bruce who also is a character in my novel. To write him well I had to crawl deep inside the hilarity and blackness of Lenny. I studied books about him and listened to his routines. For weeks I felt more like him than me.

***

How much of your son Josh's early progress at chess do you think was a result of you and your wife's parenting, and how much came from within Josh?

Wow. How can you ever know? But here are a few impressions. Josh was the complete package. He had a passion to play the game. It was what he wanted to do. He didn’t need to be forced to play after school games in the park. He was a great competitor. He was and still is driven to try his hardest to win. But on the other hand a little kid needs to be brought to great teachers, needs to be brought to tournaments or to piano recitals or to ice skating lessons. He or she needs to be reminded to study or practice. A little kid can’t do it by himself. I think we were a great team of three. Josh was the player—a one in a million talent. He and I spurred one another ahead. We had such fun. We loved our lives in the chess wars. Bonnie loved Josh’s chess greatly but also she brought some sanity to the table. If I pushed him too hard, she pushed back at me. She mothered him. It was a wonderful ride for all three of us. I still can’t believe it is long in the past.

Josh left chess at the top of his game due, in part, to external pressures from the film version of Searching for Bobby Fischer. In an earlier interview, Josh told me he felt as though he lost touch his "natural voice as an artist". How did the movie affect you and your own writing progress?

It threw me way off of my game. For years I had been a writer living quietly in a room, comporting with my thoughts, putting scenes on paper. All of a sudden I was giving one interview after the next. I was on literally dozens of televisions shows. So many people were complimenting me on my work and some of it wasn’t mine--because the movie and the book were often conflated. Eventually I found myself addicted to praise. If there was a moment without it, I craved it, like an addict. It took me months to get back to my writing studio, to grow comfortable again with silence and the company of my musings.

I noticed that both you Josh have mastered the art of learning, always on the lookout for connections between prior experiences and present initiatives. How has your nonfiction writing experience helped you in your fiction writing?

In my early writing I was mostly focused on my moods and they were often dark. In my twenties my stories were about angst. To make a living I began writing feature journalism for The New York Times Magazine, Esquire, New York Magazine and a few others. All of a sudden the mandate of my writing life was to compose stories about people that were living exciting lives, experiencing adventures. In my years as a journalist I learned the power of research but mainly I learned the importance of “story” in writing a story. In The Dream Merchant the plot is unusual, it’s sexy and exciting and it covers a large canvas. When I was a young man I would never have dreamed of writing a novel with such a story. I wouldn’t have thought of it and I couldn’t have managed it.

***

Do you think your depression while writing Searching for Bobby Fischer helped you in any way with the final product?

I think that a seasoned writer understands how to harvest his energy and to direct it wherever it is needed. For me, inspiration is largely energy. If I feel energy I can usually write the scene and make it work. If I feel dead to myself, then I don’t have a chance. Moods, even dark ones are a kind of energy. I think of depression like a river moving slowly in one direction. Ecstasy is another kind of river. A writer learns how to turn a river, get it to flow and irrigate where he wants. During periods of despondency I have been able to write very funny sections of books. Movement is the big thing. For a writer, feeling depression is much better than feeling nothing. Movement begets movement.

What role does intuition play in your writing process?

It’s huge. This is a complicated and deep question that one could write a book about. Let me just say a few things here. The term “creative writing” is often used but rarely considered deeply. I am sometimes asked, before you write an essay do you have a complete outline? The answer to this is no. I write some notes on a yellow pad, and begin. I have a few ideas in mind but I leave a lot of empty space for invention. When I look back on a days writing or a month’s writing what delights me is the surprises—the insights, sorrows, and even characters that emerge from the writing process itself—the visitors that I never expected.

How do you get there?

I like to think about it as growing friendly with one’s unconscious. When I haven’t been writing for a while I need to get in touch with my dreams. I put a pad on my nightstand behind my bed and in the morning I reach for it before I’m fully awake. I write before I am fully awake. The dreams give me important messages but even more, they provide a door to walk through to meet the unconscious.

When I am working on a book, at the end of a writing day I never entirely finish what I am intending to write. I leave a little for “tomorrow.” I leave my office with the paragraph in mind or slightly in mind. I ride home along the river on my bike, thinking about the Knicks or the Jets, but also at some level I am thinking about my paragraph. It is percolating somewhere below the surface. But often something rises to the top—this always feels a little thrilling, this message from a hard working place that we don’t know too much about. Then I’ll stop my bike and jot this gift insight on a little note pad before it drifts away. When I’m on a writing roll I give my unconscious little writing assignments every day. I always carry a pad in my pocket because the answers arrive at unexpected moments. Perhaps this sounds mystical but for me it is very concrete. This dialogue with myself is key in my creative process.

What time of the day do you think is best for writing?

In the morning, when you are closest to your dreams and furthest from the clutter of a busy day.

How important is flow for your writing process?

When you are in a flow, don’t stop. Please! I mean don’t take more than one day off. Being in a flow is precious. Sometimes it is so hard to get back there. It can take months.

Do you have any advice for aspiring fiction writers who may be older, or are thinking of switching careers?

Don’t do it unless writing possesses you with missionary zeal. Don’t do it unless it is a very big passion. It takes so long to get really good. And then it is very very hard to make a professional success. Many good writers are ignored for years and struggle to write their novels and poems while burdened with broken hearts. But if you must write then you are in for a wild heedless love affair filled with surprise, delight and sorrow—there is nothing else quite like it that I know.


© 2013 Scott Barry Kaufman, All Rights Reserved

Scott Barry Kaufman is a humanistic psychologist exploring the depths of human potential. He has taught courses on intelligence, creativity and well-being at Columbia University, N.Y.U., the University of Pennsylvania, and elsewhere. He hosts the Psychology Podcast and is author and/or editor of nine books, including Transcend: The New Science of Self-Actualization, Wired to Create: Unraveling the Mysteries of the Creative Mind (with Carolyn Gregoire), and Ungifted: Intelligence Redefined. Find out more at http://ScottBarryKaufman.com. In 2015 he was named one of "50 groundbreaking scientists who are changing the way we see the world" by Business Insider. He wrote the extremely popular Beautiful Minds blog for Scientific American for close to a decade. Follow him on X.

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