On
January 14th I sat down with Linda Wiken, the owner of Ottawa’s
Prime Crime Books, for a chat about Cold Dark Matter. Linda
has been a journalist, writes crime fiction and for over ten
years has run Ottawa’s wonderful mystery store. This
is a transcript of our conversation.
Linda:
First, I’d like to know where
Morgan O’Brien came from. How did she end up being your
protagonist and where did all her characteristics come from?
Alex: When I began thinking about
writing mysteries, I knew I wanted to work within the sciences,
because that’s where I had to do the least amount of extra
learning. I knew that I had so much to learn about writing that
I’d better pick an area where I was already comfortable.
I’ve always been really interested in the
culture of science, and the fact that science is almost completely
self monitoring, which leaves it open to abuse. And science fraud
is becoming more prevalent because big money is involved. Think
about it. If you’re looking for a grant, should you actually
run the experiment or just say you did? And if you run the experiment
and your results are mediocre, should you report them as is or
just knock off the errant data points so your results look a
lot stronger than they are? Because the hard, cold reality is,
you’re not going to get that grant if your results aren’t
strong.
Linda: I’m sure that happens a lot.
Alex: I don't think anyone knows
how much it does happen, and that's one of the problems. Morgan
came about when I began to think, what if? What if there was
a person whose job it was to investigate scientific research?
Linda: So there is nobody that does this
now? She’s totally fictional?
Alex: The way she does it is fictional.
There are now a couple of places that investigate research fraud
(see Links for websites and articles
on science fraud) but in these offices the investigators are
bureaucrats: they sit at their desks and read papers, or follow
up ongoing investigations within the universities. There’s
nobody who goes out and kicks butt, which is what Morgan does.
So I began thinking, what if there was a person
who actually did this? What kind of background would they need?
How would they work? And that’s where Morgan came from,
because you’d have to have a background in investigation,
but you’d also need a background in science. And to have
a background like that, you’d probably have to be a bit
of an outsider. You’d also, I think, have to be cynical
and very tough.
Linda: Which she definitely is.
Alex: And part of that comes from
her background as a woman in science. If you’re going to
survive in that system you have to be tough, because it’s
not necessarily a nice place to be.
Linda: Is it that it’s cutthroat?
Alex: It’s cutthroat, competitive,
and can be very nasty. I mean, you’ll meet some of the
nicest people in the world, but as a system, a culture, it’s
very macho. So, if you’re going to be in it you have to
be able to play hardball. And of course if you’re investigating
these people, you really have to be tough.
Linda: What did you want to accomplish
using Morgan? Was it to show this closed, self regulating culture?
Alex: I find the world of science
absolutely fascinating. Science has a profound effect on our
culture and our lives, yet not many people are writing about
it, partly because it’s a difficult world to write about
unless you’ve actually lived in it, which I have. I made
Morgan an investigator of research fraud because that allows
me to go anywhere. I’m not restricted to one area of science,
which would bore me silly. With her, I get to research and write
about all the things that captivate me.
Linda: How are you able to make the science
so accessible? With the first book, I must admit, I thought,
well, salmon! This doesn’t really interest me, not unless
they’re sautéed. But I was drawn into it, and
I found it fascinating and understandable. How are you able
to do that? Obviously you’re making a conscious effort
to have all the facts there, but how do you make it accessible.
Is it the writing style? Is it what you decide to leave out?
Or do you even know?
Alex: I’m always very clear
about the fact that fiction is about people. It’s not about
facts, it’s not about theories, and it’s not about
issues. It’s about people being propelled, willingly or
unwillingly, into difficult and dramatic situations, and what
they have to do to survive. Sure, my characters happen to be
working in the realm of science, but it’s no different
than if they were doing law. A good legal mystery, for example,
isn’t about the law, it’s about people, but it’s
built within that context. A medical mystery, an emergency room
mystery, isn’t about surgery. It’s about people:
what they do, and think, and feel.
Science, after all, is a human pursuit, and it
carries with it all the same positive things, and the same negative
things, as any other human pursuit. There’s passion, there’s
ego, there’s power, there’s pursuit of various goals.
These are all human things, and people – readers – relate
to human things. Also, that’s what personally interests
me about science. It’s the human side that intrigues me.
Of course, I also spent years as a science writer, so I had to
learn how to present science in a simple and accessible way.
Linda: So you learned what information
to put in, but also what to leave out?
Alex: Hopefully, yes. It’s
a fine line and I still struggle with that. You have to give
people enough to make it interesting but without boring their
socks off.
Linda: One character that I find fascinating
is Sylvia. She’s a very extreme character: her background,
her sex change, the cancer. You’ve just given her these
two things that propel her in a certain direction.
Alex: When I was in university
I met somebody who was going through a sex change while taking
degree in the hard sciences. I watched what they went through,
and found the reactions of the people around me very upsetting.
Nobody is comfortable with transsexuals. The straight community
isn’t, but neither is the gay community. And the feminist
community didn’t want anything to do with her because she
was still, according to them, ‘a man’, so transsexuals
don’t fit anywhere. But they’re just people, like
you and me, trying to struggle through their daily lives.
I also got sick of seeing every transsexual in
movies and books portrayed as a drag queen in a gay bar, which
is so far from the truth. There are transexaul scientists, mathematicians,
architects, ministers. They run the gambit, just like the rest
of us do.
Linda: It’s interesting because Sylvia
has the soft touch that Morgan lacks. She’s obviously
very tough to have gone through what she has, but she still
has a soft side.
Alex: I think that’s particularly
evident in the first book, Dead Water Creek, and it
wasn’t until I’d finished the book that I understood
who Sylvia really was. In Dead Water Creek, Sylvia is
the moral center of the book. She’s the only person in
the story who has self knowledge, who truly knows who she is.
Everyone else is flailing around.
I guess that’s what intrigues me about transsexuality.
Can you imagine deciding that you have to completely change your
sex? That the body you were born in is the wrong one? To arrive
at that decision, you’d have to reassess both yourself
and everything around you, and that requires incredible strength.
I don’t think you can come out the other side without profound
self-knowledge.
So in a way, Sylvia is as hard as nails because
she knows precisely who she is and what she believes. She’s
unmovable in that sense. But that self knowledge also gives her
a humanity, a tolerance for others, that Morgan completely lacks.
I mean, you really want to kick Morgan in the butt sometimes.
Linda: She’s certainly not very forgiving.
Alex: And that’s because
Morgan is so driven. She won’t let anyone get in her way.
Linda: You told me that the new book, Cold
Dark Matter, is based on three true stories. Why these
three stories? What interested you about them, and why did
you decide to combine them into one story?
Alex: The first story was one
about a young physicist who disappeared in the 1960s, and in
a way I had to write about that story to get rid of it. To get
it out of my mind.
I was told this story in 1980, in France of all
places, sitting on a grassy knoll drinking red wine. I was with
another foreign student, a young woman from Saskatchewan, and
she told me this very disturbing story about her uncle who disappeared
during the Cold War. He was an archetypical physicist. He had
no interest in socializing. His only love was the lab, where
he spent almost 24 hours a day. When he finished his doctorate
at the University of Saskatchewan he was offered a job at a very
prestigious American university. He went there and he stayed
about six months, and then he was offered another job at another
prestigious American university. And so on. All short term jobs
at well-known American universities. The family did keep in touch
with him through letters and phone calls, so they always knew
his whereabouts. Then he just disappeared. When the family tried
to trace him they were told that he’d taken another job,
but the last university didn’t know where, so they contacted
all the previous institutions he’d been with. They said
they’d never heard of him, and they’d never had anybody
by that name working there, but the family knew he’d been
at these places. They had the letters and phone records.
I think what disturbed me most was thinking about
the family, desperately trying to trace this young man. They
went to Foreign Affairs, but they wouldn’t help. They went
to the RCMP. They wouldn’t help. You begin to realize that
somebody was interested in this young man not being found.
So this story just kind of stayed in my brain and
festered, as these stories do.
Linda: And to this day, was he ever found?
Alex: That I can’t tell
you, but this story was told to me around 1980, and the disappearance
happened in the ‘60s. According to my friend the family
had never stopped searching, and this was twenty years later
and nothing had turned up.
Later on in my career as a science writer, I started
working with astronomers, and began reading references to astronomers
going to the dark side. That referred to astronomers going from
academic research into top-secret military research. During the
Cold War in particular, people would disappear when they went
to the dark side. That’s what would happen. They’d
never be seen or heard from again.
Linda: So there was a natural tie in?
Alex: Definitely, because astronomers
are physicists. They're astrophysicists. So there was a real
tie-in. Then I spoke to an astronomer friend about this. He’s
a bit older than me, so he was in graduate school at a US in
the 1960s. I asked him if all this stuff about the dark side
was for real. I mean, it sounds pretty hokey, doesn’t it?
We were in a little cafe and my friend leaned forward
and lowered his voice and he said: “Not only is it true,
if you had anything to hide, particularly if you were gay, then
you were a target. You were blackmailed into going to the dark
side.”
Linda: And no one would ever know, would
they. You’d just disappear.
Alex: And your records, just like
in the book, were expunged. You disappeared, and nobody asked
any questions, and if they did, they were convinced not to.
Linda: Very creepy. We don’t think
about this happening in the western world.
Alex: And that’s why this
is so interesting, isn’t it? It did happen, and it still
does happen. During the Cold War, the United States, and particularly
the head of the CIA, was absolutely paranoiac about Canada. He
was obsessed with the possibility of security leaks coming from
Canada, and he was particularly worried about Canadian scientists,
because our scientists worked closely with their American counterparts,
so had access to U.S. military and nuclear secrets. But just
to be clear, their fear was justified. The Eastern Block was
very active in Ottawa trying to recruit scientists, and there
were some very famous spy cases at the National Research Council
and elsewhere, people caught passing secrets, so it’s easy
to laugh at it now, but then it was all very real. As real to
them as terrorism is to us today.
Linda: So, the fruit machine. How real
is that?
Alex: It’s a true story,
although again, I have greatly manipulated the facts in the service
of fiction. The RCMP and the Department of Defense did try and
create a ‘homosexual detector’. It was top secret
and hidden from the Prime Minister’s office, and it did
fail in part because no one would volunteer to help test the
thing. So those broad lines are all true.
The story of the Fruit Machine, just like the story
of the young physicist, was another one of those stories that
kind of stayed with me and festered. And I do feel like that
piece of history has been treated in a very inhumane way. When
I read accounts of what happened, the victims of this purge,
who were mostly gay man, are really treated with very little
humanity in the historical accounts. Nobody seems to actually
consider what these people felt, what happened to their lives,
what they went through. I was just talking to an Ottawa man the
other day in his seventies, and he told me that his partner of
50 years and his best friend were both pulled in by the RCMP
for questioning in this period, and he spoke about just how frightening
it was. There were several suicides and some people just disappeared.
But you read accounts of it and they're written almost as if
what happened was inconsequential, or worse, the fault of these
men. What I tried to touch on was the tenor of the time and how
it affected some of the people who lived through it.
Linda: In a way that reflects the human
side of it, you mean.
Alex: That’s right. I don’t
think I understood why I wrote the book until after I’d
finished it, but now I see that there are
very real questions from back then that still need answers today.
Where do you draw the line between security and rights? How do
you determine who is dangerous and who is not? And to whom do
you give the power to make these decisions?
Linda: But do you think that really applies
to these days? I mean, these days the kinds of indiscretions
that you talk about in the book are unimportant. Nobody cares.
Can people still be manipulated in this way?
Alex: I did quite a bit of reading
into modern espionage before writing the book, and I have to
say yes to that question. People are still concerned about how
they’re perceived by the world around them, and these kinds
of indiscretions can still ruin marriages and careers. As Gunnar
McNabb tells Morgan at a certain point in the book, everybody
has a weak point, it’s just a question of finding it. Everybody
has something that can be used against them. That’s almost
a direct quote from a non-fiction book written by a modern-day
secret service agent whose job it was to ‘recruit’ informants.
We all have secrets. We all want to protect the people we love.
Linda: How did you find researching these
issues? You’ve got a lot of background information. Is
that all fiction?
Alex: Cold Dark Matter is
most definitely a work of fiction. I’ve taken real things
that are based on research and incorporated them into the story,
but even the real things have been changed and manipulated to
create a story.
Linda: What about Hawaii and the telescopes?
Is that real? Have you ever been there?
Alex: That’s quite real.
There will probably be astronomers who are quite put-out by the
descriptions, because the placement of certain things, for example,
has been changed in the service of fiction, but I have been to
Mauna Kea, I’ve been to Hale Pohaku and some of the observatories
on the summit, and I can say without any hesitation that it is
one of the most incredible places I’ve ever seen. The descriptions
of the desolation, the altitude, the frigid cold, are all true.
Linda: The title. Where did you come up
with that? It feels like it works on many levels.
Alex: There are two types of dark
matter: hot dark matter and cold dark matter. Obviously, everything
about this book is cold and dark, but it’s more than that.
Dark matter makes up a huge percentage of the universe and because
of this it controls a lot of what happens in the universe – how
the universe evolves. But we can’t even see it. We only
see it by how it affects the other things around it. In this
book, there are powerful hidden forces that ultimately control
everything that happens, but they’re unseen. We only see
them through the affect they have on everything else around them.
Linda: So you’re talking here about
the physical, the astrophysical, the emotional, the whole thing.
Alex: Yes.
Linda: So, what does the future hold for
Morgan?
Alex: I’d certainly love
to write another Morgan book, but right now I’m working
on a completely different book, not part of the series.
Linda: Maybe it’s good to have a
change just for a little while.
Alex: I think so, but I certainly
wouldn’t need a lot of encouragement to write another Morgan
book. I absolutely love writing them. They’re a lot of
fun.
Linda: I’ve obviously read it and
I would recommend it. All the information is fascinating, and
also the Ottawa setting is captured really well. Along with
Hawaii, it’s not hard to take. What would you say if
somebody asked you why they should read it?
Alex: I would tell them that I
think this book will take them somewhere they’ve never
been before. For me, that’s what I want in the fiction
I read, and I’m not talking about setting. It can be into
a character’s mind, or into a situation, into a period
of history, whatever, but that’s what I demand of my fiction.
It has to take me somewhere that I’d never been before,
and I think this book will do that for most people.
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