Secrets, Reveals, and Consequences by Dean Gloster
One of the
most delightful things I’ve read lately is the short story “Thrown” in the The
Hero Next Door. An autistic boy makes the transition from the kids’ class
in Aikido to the teen and adult class. In addition to it being a wonderful
story, it’s by a guy I know, middle grade author Mike Jung, who I actually practice Aikido with. And it’s set in an Aikido studio that
resembles the one where we study, Aikido Shusekai in Berkeley. The characters have names slightly changed
from real people I know. (Anika Sensei! Kristof! Brandon Sensei!)
One secret
of publishing is that sometimes we writers borrow from real people for characters in our
books, or pluck their names.
I wrote a book, Dessert First,
about a teenage girl who was dealing with the most difficult year of her life, even
before her younger brother had a cancer relapse, and she became his last hope,
as his potential bone-marrow donor.
For the nurses
in that book, I took the first name of one law school classmate and then the
first names of half a dozen nurses I knew.
And I’m not alone in that practice.
I’m lucky enough to know lots of writers now, and one thing I notice is
them slyly putting each other’s names in their books. So my current novel in
progress might have a principal and teachers with names Principal Kisner, Ms. Sarig, and Mr. Reichs. Unless someone inserts a graphic here, we’ll never know from where my subconscious could have gotten names like that:
(Oops.) That’s the thing about
secrets. If there’s a paper (or electronic document) trail, they’ll often be
found out. As a friend of mine said, “Dance like nobody’s watching, but email as
if it’ll be read aloud in court.”
I thought about that recently, as I
read Ronan Farrow’s gripping bestseller, Catch and Kill, about his
breaking the story of Harvey Weinstein’s serial sexual assaults, which—as the
book described—had been hidden by decades of aggressive litigation, threats,
gaslighting, intimidation, and non-disclosure agreements. In the end, a number
of women agreed to come forward—expecting that doing that would further wreck
their lives—because they wanted to stop Weinstein's future assaults. NBC killed the story, under pressure from Weinstein, but The New
Yorker ran it, and that, in turn, caused many other women to come forward
publicly.
Despite tremendous efforts, the
truth will out. And—if we pay attention—it will have consequences. Shortly
after the story on Weinstein broke, he resigned from the board of The Weinstein
Company and he was fired. Eventually The Weinstein Company filed
bankruptcy. Weinstein was arrested and charged with sex crimes and now faces
trial.
As I write this, coincidentally, the
President of the U.S. has been accused by at least 67 women of
inappropriate conduct, as detailed in the recent Barry Levine/Monique Al-Faizy
book, All the President’s Women: Donald Trump and the Making of a Predator.
Two Courts of Appeal have ruled that the President cannot prevent his accountants
from turning over his subpoenaed tax returns. This week, another federal judge
ruled that his aides have no blanket immunity from being required to comply
with subpoenas, and still another federal judge required the turnover of
documents showing that aid to Ukraine was withheld
by the President. There are reports of multiple additional
whistle-blowers coming forward with further complaints of specific misconduct.
There will be a paper trail, an
email trail, a text message trail, and probably the clumsy smudge prints over
all of those, showing an attempted cover-up. The truth—or at least conspicuous
parts of it—will out. And then the only question will be—will that matter?
Because it’s partly up to all of us whether it does.
On this day of thanksgiving, may we
be grateful for what we have, and may we continue to have things to be grateful
for, including the rule of law, the bravery and integrity of individuals who
tell the truth, and an involved citizenry willing to take that truth into
account in holding people in power accountable.
Happy Thanksgiving and good luck to
us all.
Dean Gloster has an
MFA in writing for children and young adults from Vermont College of Fine Arts.
He is a former stand-up comedian and a former law clerk at the U.S. Supreme
Court. His debut YA novel DESSERT FIRST is out from Merit Press/Simon Pulse.
School Library Journal called it “a sweet, sorrowful, and simply divine debut
novel that teens will be sinking their teeth into. This wonderful story…will be
a hit with fans of John Green's The Fault in Our Stars and Jesse Andrews's Me
and Earl and the Dying Girl.” His current novel is about two funny brothers who
have to team up with their friend Claire to save the world. It has all the
usual Dean Gloster novel ingredients: Death, humor, the question of whether
it’s possible to save someone, a love interest to root for, dysfunctional
parenting, and a slightly off-kilter sensibility. Also a mergers and
acquisitions lawyer dad who is missing 74 percent of his soul.
When
Dean is not writing, studying Aikido, or downhill ski racing, he’s on Twitter:
@deangloster
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