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When Is a Literary Debut Not a Debut?
June 04, 2002
With
its enthusiastic jacket endorsement from Jonathan Franzen ("Alive with
intelligence, comedy, and inside dope ... sure-handedly captures the uncertainties
of our times") and its choice as a Book-of-the-Month Club selection, Mark
Costello's Big If (Norton) would seem to be the promising debut of a
terrific new American writer.
But, as it happens, Big If is in fact the second novel by Mark Costello
-- though only the first to bear his name.
Costello (born and raised near Boston and now living now in New York) made
his actual fiction debut six years ago as "John Flood," the pseudonymous
author of Bag Men, a book the San Francisco Chronicle called "exhilarating,"
and Scott Turow said was "pure pleasure."
Mark Costello wrote that work -- a literary thriller about a murdered priest,
ambitious prosecutors, and narcotics police in Boston in 1965 -- as John Flood
in order to put some distance between his fiction and the career he was then
pursuing as a federal prosecutor in New Jersey.
"I was an active prosecutor," explains Costello, "standing up
in front of juries. Bag Men is a pretty tough view of prosecutors and police
and dirty deeds and all that; I really didn't want it to be read as a sort of
tell-all expose thing. I felt like the right thing to do by my day job was to
keep some separation there. That was the idea, anyway. It may have been overly
conscientious to use a pen name, but I felt it was just the right thing to do."
No longer representing the government in court (Costello now teaches at Fordham),
the author felt free to put his own name on Big If.
Mark Costello had used that real name on an even earlier work: Signifying
Rappers: Rap and Race in the Urban Present" (Ecco), co-written in 1990
with David Foster Wallace.
"That was written before I was a prosecutor," Costello said of Rappers,
"and it was published while I was a DA (in New York)."
But (contrary to some published reports), the Mark Costello who wrote Big
If and co-wrote Signifying Rappers is not the Mark Costello of Illinois,
who's written many critically praised short stories.
"I know of the other Mark Costello," said the 40-year-old author
of Big If, "and I admire his work. I think he's about 30 years older than
I am ... He's a very good writer. I'd be pleased," he said with a laugh,
"to be confused with him."
But, with the release of Big If (which Publishers Weekly judges "may
well be the literary discovery of the season"), any confusion may flow
in the other direction.
"It's gotten good reviews, so far," Costello acknowledged of his
new novel. "And it's gotten serious reviews, which is really important
to me."
Like Bag Men, Big If bears resemblance to a thriller: Some of
its major characters are Secret Service agents, guarding a vice president who's
running for his party's top nomination at the time of the New Hampshire primary.
But Big If is just as much a mainstream novel, in a bleakly comic modern
mode.
"I wanted to write a novel about tension," Costello said, "and
about people under pressure; about how that is a factor in everyday life. I
thought the Secret Service agents would be a great example of that, because
they have to treat every boring daily event as a potentially horrific event.
You know, they have to prepare for the ultimate, every single minute.
"I did want to subvert it, though, because the idea of what made the agents
interesting to me was that the ultimate never happens -- or if it happens, it
doesn't happen the way they expect; and they have to be ready all the time.
And I thought that was in a way similar to how civilians like you and I kind
of live, too: There's this kind of drone-note of pressure or tension or looking
out for the unexpected -- and in the midst of that, we have to lead a daily
life ...
"That's the idea behind the title: You know, the expression, 'That's a
pretty big if' -- well, that's the state of our lives."
Big If is rich with real-seeming detail, some of which came from Costello's
personal experience: "A couple different times I've worked in New Hampshire
as a political volunteer, on the Democratic side," he said, "so I've
sort of seen how these events get put together. You get advance people who come
through, and political people, and then the Secret Service agents come through,
and they've got a whole different kind of spooky agenda, really. So that struck
me as kind of a cool metaphor.
"Big If is probably half about agents and half about civilians. You have
both sides of the rope line, so to speak, and the sort of mirror image of the
two kinds of things."
Though he never studied writing, Costello said there are many writers he deeply
admires: "There's a very long list of writers who've influenced me, some
of whom I probably don't write at all like."
Among the authors he especially likes are Lydia Davis ("a wonderful, wonderful
writer"), Don DeLillo, Alice Munro, and John Berger.
"I just love their books," Costello said. "And you get motivated
to write if you read something that you love." -- Tom
Nolan
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