\u201cI enjoy writing Westerns that make people think, which often leads them to be pissed off,\u201d said novelist Max McCoy<\/a>.<\/p>\n
When McCoy\u2019s novel I, Quantrill <\/em>\u00a0came out a couple of years ago, I wanted to write about it for my weekly newspaper column.\u00a0 Figuring that the column and McCoy\u2019s book would appeal Civil War buffs, I wanted to be extra-sure to be historically accurate in my discussion of William Clarke Quantrill.\u00a0 To my surprise, my usually talkative sources in the Wofford College<\/a> history department pretty much just said, \u201cQuantrill was a monster.\u201d\u00a0<\/p>\n
Below, McCoy and I talk about villains, research, and making readers angry.<\/p>\n
Has your approach to writing fiction changed over the years?<\/strong><\/p>\n
What do you enjoy about writing the West?<\/strong><\/p>\n
*
\nMax McCoy:<\/strong>\u00a0 Pissing people off. Just kidding. No, really, I guess I’m not.<\/p>\n
Oh, and I, Quantrill <\/em>\u00a0has been my worst-selling western, absolutely awful. It probably ended my writing career with Signet. But, I think that says more about the way most westerns are marketed. I’ve always felt my books are marketed poorly, in fact — here I am writing these books set in the west that have this very odd and very wicked streak (some of my fans describe it as western noir<\/em>) and the covers look like something that was published in the fifties. Again, publishers are playing it straight, trying to provide a familiar and comforting reading experience. At least Kensington seems to be catching on a bit, because on my last couple of books they’ve used a great blurb by my friend, the bastard Johnny Boggs<\/a>: “Wickedly savage.”<\/p>\n
What is the biggest challenge in writing the West?<\/strong><\/p>\n
Max McCoy:<\/strong>\u00a0 Damned if I know.<\/p>\n
Jeremy L. C. Jones <\/em><\/a>is a freelance writer, editor, and part-time professor.\u00a0 Jones is a frequent contributor to <\/em>Clarkesworld Magazine<\/em><\/a>.\u00a0 He is also the director of <\/em>Shared Worlds<\/em><\/a>, a creative writing and world-building camp for teenagers that he and <\/em>Jeff VanderMeer <\/em><\/a>designed in 2006.<\/em><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"