I recently had the opportunity to read Paul Miller's debut book A Place to Belong. In it he details his life between the ages of 8 and 14, so what? I hear you say. Well the simple answer is that Paul's childhood was anything but normal. This is a deeply moving work, and one that will illicit disbelief that the human race can be so callous.
Paul agreed to sit down and talk about A Place To Belong.
Hi Paul, thank you for agreeing to sit down and talk to us. Can you tell us a little about yourself?
Most of my life has been spent in Structural Steel and Railcar Manufacturing. The last twenty years as a Realtor combined with six years in writing and perfecting A Place to Belong. Married and have three lovely daughters.
A Place To Belong is a powerful drug. My understanding is that you have wanted to write this story for many years, what finally made you decide to put pen to paper?
Age and confidence. You're right! I wanted to put this story on paper for 50+ years, but lack of confidence, humiliation, embarrassment and not wanting people to know what happened to me, and the directions I had to take in order to survive, kept me from writing it. Getting old does have some benefits, not many, but some, and one of those benefits is reaching the point that you don't care what people think. That's the way it was, and I can't change it. If the story hurts or conflicts with the readers beliefs or feelings, I'm sorry.
The motivation to actually sit down and start writing came from the urging and insistence of friends and relatives that were knowledgeable of some of my experiences. Armed with confidence and no more humiliation or embarrassment hanging onto my thinking, the decision was not difficult at all. I started in October, 2000 and by mid January, 2001 finished putting it on paper only, and by only, I mean just that! I paid no attention to spelling, grammar, punctuation, continuity or time lines. I just wanted the story on paper from my memory. Then it took six years to perfect it with the help of a very talented young lady. Without her, I would probably still be working on it.
Although many of the protagonists are now dead, what sort of reaction have you received from family members?
You know Simon, that's a very interesting and puzzling question. Why? I have one sister and one brother still alive, sister Sarah and brother Johnny. Johnny of course is the mentally ill brother and he is in a state hospital in Michigan. So, he has no opinion or reaction. As for my sister, I'm totally baffled about her reaction. For example; after I sent the book to her I waited a short period and then called her on the phone to ask her what she thought of the book. Her reply, floored me! ?Well, Paul, I have three other books that were given to me and I haven't read them yet either.? After being frozen on the phone for several seconds, I replied, ?Oh, okay. I'll call back in a couple of months.? Which, I did. Her response this time was; ?It was good. You have some of the dates wrong and some of the instances you mentioned a little different than what I remember them to be. But, it was okay.? That's when I decided not to ever ask her any more questions about the book.
I sent the book to my nieces and nephews with a letter enclosed explaining some of the circumstances that might have confused them, and to keep in mind that, I was telling the story from the eyes of a eight to fourteen year old boy. I received one email from a niece, by marriage, she told me she loved the book and thought it was well written. That's the only response out of a possible twenty.
There is no doubt that you are a survivor, and throughout the book you show a remarkable ability to ?look on the bright side.? There must have been moments where you were ready to give up though?
You're absolutely correct! Many times I felt so alone, worthless, and lower than whale potty. (That's Navy slang.) I was not ?extraordinarily? intelligent nor did I posses some super power, it's like I point out in the book; Noah's teachings and sayings kept me from ending everything and/or disappearing. I asked myself several times, several times, ?Why was Noah there at that particular time and place? Was he real? Was he an Angel? Was it God Himself? Why was Noah a black man? I have never had any dealings with black people in my life.? Just picture a huge black man approaching a little white kid at a dumpy fishing hole in the middle of nowhere. Scary? You betcha! I was scared to death. But he had a way about him that didn't take long to sooth the nerves and calm me down. He was responsible for my survival and I've never met anyone in my life like him, nor have I loved someone so much since, besides my wife and children. Who was Noah? Well, I was probably the only eight-year-old white kid in the world that thought God was black.
When I am not writing reviews, I can be found working at a local homeless center, I see Paul Miller's everyday, maybe it is for that reason that I found the book so moving, and heart wrenching. How can we make Paul (no offense meant here) become a thing of the past?
I don't know if the human race ever can or ever will eradicate this problem. Reduction can be achieved through everyday love and caring for each other, and the more knowledge that is gained into mental illness. Years ago there was no way to help someone. People would just say, ?Oh, he's crazy!? One could not just call up their Psychiatrist for a session or pop a Prozac, they had to handle the problem the best they could. Sad part about it is that it was mostly done through alcohol. Which didn't solve the problem but enhanced it.
But then, one thinks that the problems that exist today, are more numerous and complex. Requiring extensive treatment and more medication. So, where does it end? Sometimes I think the more we learn the more difficult it becomes to be just plain old, happy, secure and thoughtful. ?Hey Johnny, let's go outside and play ball with our friends.?
If there is a Paul reading this interview, what advice do you have for him?
Oh Lord I hope not. I don't want to see anyone go through what I went through.
I look back and ask myself what would I have done differently? I don't know, if there is an answer. Why? Because there were so many emotions surrounding everyone's decisions and actions. I can sit back and say, well if this didn't happen; and if Dad had only; if Mother didn't die; if the sister I wanted to stay with had taken me in; there are so many ifs - should ofs ? could ofs, why didn't I, I'm sorry, but the list is endless.
Only advice I can offer someone, that is, or could become in that position, is to talk truthfully and honestly, with someone that you know loves you, cares about you, your future, and that you have total confidence in, and that you are going to take their advice with sincerity and honesty. Then, ask the Lord with all your heart for guidance and wisdom.
The book business is a brutal one, it is one thing doing a biography when you are famous or infamous, it is an entirely different situation when you are neither. Was it hard to get the book world to listen?
Oh yes! Indeed it was and is! I'm still wallowing around trying to get bearings. It has cost me a small fortune to get where I'm at today. I compare it to the young man that goes to Hollywood and wants to be a big movie star. Oh boy! What a road he has to follow. It's knowing that you are going to face many obstacles, many rejections, many no's, before the right person/persons come along. But I also feel very, very strongly that I have a product that is worth working for, it is good, well done, truthful, enlightening, will and can, be helpful to many. I know this to be fact because many that have read the book have told me so, and I know they were being brutally honest with me.
Over the past year I have interviewed over 100 people, authors, filmmakers, musicians, etc, and the common thread between them is they always have a ?next? project. Yet I have read that you have no plans for another book, or have I been mislead?
No, you have not been mislead. Like I said in the beginning of the interview, I have wanted to write this story for many years, for I knew, without hesitation, that there was a helpful message to get out to people. Now, I know I have accomplished that goal and I am as happy as a puppy snuggled up into my master's lap. Well, there is one exception; I'm toying with a child's illustrated book on the Noah portion only, but not very far into it at this time. Children's books are very difficult to write.
How are sales going, and what sort of reaction are you getting from readers?
Sales are going well locally. But I'm having a difficult time getting it past the county lines. With your help and the help of people like Penny and Paula (AME), I'll accomplish that goal too. Why? Because when a salesman knows he has a great product, it will sell.
Reaction has been nothing short of fantastic. The comments and reviews I'm getting are fabulous. People have brought the skeletons out of their closets, discussed them with me, thanked me for giving them the strength and courage to bring them out into the light and face them. I have been down right flabbergasted at some of the stories I've been told. And I know they are not messing with me because I can see the passion and hurt in their faces and eyes. The stories have been numerous, I'll relate just one to you now.
A very young, petite lady told me how she was lying on a hill with her father in her gun site and was ready to pull the trigger because she hated him so much for what he had done to her. The trigger was pulled half way, when something, or someone, made her throw the gun down, run away from home and she has never looked back. I stared at this young lady for five straight minutes unable to totally comprehend what she just related to me. She cried, hugged me and said, ?Oh, God. Thank you Paul for your story.? Almost made me cry too.
Do you have a web site where people can find out more information?
Yes. placetobelong dot com.
I know I have missed at least one question that you are just itching to answer. What is the question that you wished I had asked, and what is your reply?
You did a great job of asking the right questions. Only thing I would like to add is that, and an awful lot of people have mentioned this to me also, A Place to Belong will make a great movie if done by the right people.
Yes I agree, this would transition to the big screen very well. So all you movie moguls out there, get in touch with Paul and you could be on your way to the Oscars!
Interview With The Author
Landmark Status is a wonderfully funny book. Alan Rolnick uses Miami as the backdrop, and real estate as the weapon, to take the reader on a madcap journey that I can guarantee you will enjoy. When I put the put the book down and wrote the review, I just knew I wanted to talk to this guy. Anyone that can create the outlandish characters and amazingly funny scenes that I encountered in Landmark Status, has to be a pretty interesting person to chat with. Alan agreed to an interview.
Can you tell us a little about yourself?
I grew up in Newburgh, New York, a little city on the Hudson River. It was a beautiful place, old, proud and mostly unaware it had been rendered obsolete, cut loose from history's moorings and set adrift by changing times. As a kid, I played in an abandoned brewery, took bus trips to Yankee Stadium and collected autographs from Hector Lopez and Moose Skowron (we never could get close enough to Mickey and Yogi). One time, a big kid sat on my hand for the entire bus ride, leaving corduroy-striped welts that lasted a week, but it really wasn't his fault I couldn't throw strikes.
In my teens, Beatlemania struck. My brother Paul and I decided to be rock stars, saving for guitars with car wash money, playing battles of the bands on the firemen's picnic circuit. Paul was an outstanding guitarist and singer, destined to become an award-winning producer in New York. I wasn't, but joined him there after graduating from Johns Hopkins with a major in Frisbee. Together, we made brilliant recordings that few heard, earned fifty bucks opening for Buffy St. Marie at Philharmonic Hall, and fortuitously took the equipment home instead of leaving it for next weekend's gig at the Mercer Arts Center (which collapsed later that night).
Taking up journalism to put myself through my career, I became the guy at the New York Times who used computers to rank college and pro football teams. In 1983, the human pollsters awarded the Miami Hurricanes the National Championship, but my computer preferred Auburn. I'd been to Miami, fallen in love with the place, and decided it was time to go to law school (as my family had urged since I was six, usually with comments like, "he talks so much, he's gonna be a lawyer"). The idea of living where balmy breezes caress you on the way out the door in December was particularly appealing.
Atoning for my computer's mistake, I learned torts in locked classrooms and pulled all-nighters on the Law Review, winning induction into the Society of Wig and Robe (which, fortunately, required wearing neither). After twenty years of schooling, they put me on the day shift, working at one of Miami's top legal sweatshops, representing robber barons in complex cases in federal court. Years later, I switched sides and began representing Davids against Goliaths in class actions.
Eventually, I decided it was time to throw a rope around the places I'd met and the people I'd been, and set out to write the kind of story I liked to read.
What is it with attorneys, are you all closet authors? In the past year I have read at least a dozen books by people in the profession, oh and they have all been very good. I have come to the conclusion that every lawyer must have a book in them.
Jeez, are there that many? Seriously, though, lawyers have to write to eat, and they're trained to turn "fact patterns" into stories. Many of those stories are stranger than fiction, and they do make you yearn to come up with your own. Storytelling is crucial in litigation, where winning requires framing compelling themes, keeping witnesses in character, and distilling every legal argument to the pithiest possible paragraph. One classmate used to say he aimed for hearing the imagined words, "so, f___ you," after every sentence of written argument. The unifying experience of all law students is fatigue, so I'm not surprised he's forgotten he said it.
Where did the idea for Landmark Status come from?
Miami's a frontier town, where outsiders easily become insiders, bellying up to the bar, tipping back a mojito and quickly learning there's no secret handshake. I'd never been in such a place, and my legal training had dropped me off in its inner sanctum. There, I worked and tangled with kaleidoscopically colorful movers and shakers who were busy with Miami's principal business, buying and selling the same dirt over and over again. I also got involved in litigating some of Miami's more infamous Ponzi schemes. Having become a fan of Elmore Leonard, Carl Hiaasen and Dave Barry, I wanted to do my part to honor this unique, subtropical nuthouse. It just had to involve a mad scramble for a piece of property, set against a backdrop of investment fraud. And it had to have a lawyer in the middle, doing real lawyering, citing real cases.
How long did it take you to bring this project to fruition?
Five years. It just seems longer.
I was very impressed with Landmark Status, I love the dark humor. Are you happy with the way it turned out?
First of all, thank you for the kind words. It's always hard to know if the material is working! And yes, I'm very happy with the way the book turned out. Dark humor seems to grow wild here, a place so bright and beautiful it takes your breath away, even when random catastrophe is poised to strike, well, randomly. Miami is a city built by people on the run, from the cold, from persecution or personal dead ends, for whom making it to (and in) this magic city tends to foster a sort of self-absorbed sunstroke. It's a narcissistic sense of safety and triumph you can feel merely by turning your face to the sun, until reality's sudden impact shatters your daydream. This happens a lot in Landmark Status, starting with the wrecking ball in the first scene.
As the characters careen around Miami, where most folks are from somewhere else and ethnic politics dominates, they also collide with more serious questions about the American Creed and what's happened to it in our fractious times. Everyone's immigrant story gets told, but Delia, and to a lesser extent, Benjy and Raj, are the only ones thinking about what it all means. I really didn't set out to explore Miami's own origin story, how it came to be, who built it, and who came here when or why. But, as it unfolded, the story became a little more like "Hawaii" and a little less like "Hawaii Five-O" (tire-squealing car chase through Opa-locka notwithstanding). Looking back, I think giving the historical perspective makes it a richer story. It also means I don't have to do it again.
Most authors style their characters after real people, so how much Benjy comes from Alan?
Benjy's a lot more mellow than I am, for one thing. I'd like to think we share the almost unspoken inner sense of right and wrong that propels him, even though he makes light of it. I'm proud of him for that, because swimming against the tide he's in isn't easy. He also tends to withhold judgment a lot longer than I would, and suffers fools much more gladly than I do. He hates to lose, though, and will do what's necessary to win, and we're very alike in that respect. I enjoy his easygoing tolerance of the shenanigans of the connivers all around him. I have no idea where he got that. And that trust fund thing? Completely made up. All donations will be gratefully accepted.
Are we going to see more Benjy adventures in your next book?
Benjy will definitely be back. Once I figure out how to do this whole web publishing thing, clues to his whereabouts will be provided at my website (Alan Rolnick).
I remarked in my review that Landmark Status would transition nicely onto the silver screen, what are your thoughts?
It's great to hear you suggest that. From the beginning, I've thought Landmark Status would make a smashing film (with apologies to the Spanish Inquisition sketch). I see pictures when I set a scene, and I'm looking forward to rendering them in pixels as well as words. Of course, destroying all those cars costs money, so we won't be doing this one on a shoestring. Somewhere on my desk, there's a legal pad devoted to casting choices and music cues. If it were a few years ago, I'd be chasing Dustin Hoffman to play Benjy, but I hope he'll be interested in playing Benjy's father Bernard, the legendary zoning lawyer and dealmaker.
I understand that you are currently working on a film project, can you tell us a little about that?
I'm Executive Producer of the film "Canvas," which is in theaters now and will be out on DVD early next year. Produced by Sharon Lane (a force of nature, to whom I'm privileged to be married), it stars Joe Pantoliano, Marcia Gay Harden and Devon Gearhart. The film has won a number of festival awards, as well as praise for its realistic portrayal of a family struggling to cope with mental illness. Sharon fought for years to overcome studio apathy toward this indie film and first-time Director Joe Greco. We ultimately raised the money and shot it ourselves in South Florida during the legendary hurricane season of 2005, which almost blew us all out to sea. Sharon has another drama in development that also plays to her expertise in managing and working with young actors. I'm onboard for business and legal affairs, and just might Exec Produce this one, too. I'm angling for a comedy after that.
You obviously are a multi faceted person, lawyer, movie maker, and now author. What do you do with all your 'spare' time?
I honestly don't have much spare time. I'm usually fighting to carve some out to keep up with our overbooked son, Max, who's busy with school, piano lessons, soccer and baseball.
Alan, I want to thank you very much for taking the time to talk with me, and once again congratulations on creating a wonderful book, I hope that I see it on the NYT best seller list in the very near future.
Simon Barrett has sinced written about articles on various topics from Auto Insurance, Entertainment Guide and Writing. Simon Barrett is an adult educator in Calgary, Alberta. With the 11 months a year of winter, he reads a lot of books! He is also a contributing editor for an. Simon Barrett's top article generates over 27100 views. to your Favourites.
Ant Problem In House Furthermore, it can take a toll on those that you love and care about. If you suffer from alcohol addiction, take a stand and get the assistance that you need