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Charlie Stella Books a Winning Title With Cheapskates
March 22, 2005
"I'm
a big romantic at heart," said Charlie Stella -- a statement that might
startle readers of this Brooklyn-raised author, whose four published novels,
including the just-released Cheapskates (Carroll & Graf), describe
the often quite unromantic doings of various small-time East Coast hoods and
hustlers.
But Stella began writing his gritty chronicles of streetlife a few years ago,
he noted, for a reason as romantic as anything in the works of F. Scott Fitzgerald:
to win the attention of a woman he'd met.
"I was ... running out of time," Stella recalled recently in a phone
call from New Jersey, the morning after the launch party of Cheapskates
in a Manhattan bar he used to frequent. "I was a bookmaker -- the kind
that takes bets on the street. So I was making a lot of money. And every once
in a while I'd work six months or a year as a word-processor, for my insurance
-- medical stuff. And I met Anne Marie at work, on the job, and I just decided,
'I'm going to take a shot at it.' I did it literally to impress her. So I started
to write and feed her chapters, and, little by little, I had a book. And then
I tried for an agent. I got an agent. And, next thing I know, the book was sold.
And it all came about because I tried to impress the woman I'm now married to."
Author Charlie Stella
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Before this breakthrough, the 48-year-old Stella had written sporadically ever
since college, he said. The son of a lithographer ("a knockaround guy"),
Stella went to school in North Dakota on a football scholarship. There, an English
teacher named Dave Gresham changed his life, he said: "He read the opening
of [George V. Higgins's] The Friends of Eddie Coyle in
our class, and I was hooked. I became a reader and a writer."
But Stella married young, fathered three children, and took a variety of non-literary
occupations to earn a necessary living. "I was a window cleaner in Manhattan,
up on the scaffolds, on the skyscrapers," he said with a chuckle. "I
did like two or three jobs most of my life, until I got divorced. And then I
had to take on some other stuff, and I did some street stuff."
All the while, though, "kind of on and off," Stella kept trying to
write. "I would go take a wild shot at it, every once in a while -- and
usually get depressed about how hard it is to get started. I would try a novel,
then give it up." But he did get a couple of plays produced off-off-Broadway,
in his early thirties. And he kept sending his work to his old college mentor
in North Dakota.
"He was a great, great teacher," Stella said, of Gresham, "just
a terrific guy -- probably the smartest guy I know. Kind of a fountain of inspiration;
he just constantly encouraged me to keep going."
When Stella's first book, Eddie's World -- the one inspired by Anne
Marie -- was published in 2001, the author dedicated it to Dave Gresham.
In that novel, and in its three successors, Stella has resurrected the world
of urban adventure he himself was once a part of. He brings affection and a
sense of humor, he said, to his depiction of that seemingly harsh environment.
"I really was like 18 years involved in the street stuff, and it's one
of the funniest worlds you'll ever know. I mean, they're just funny guys. Not
that they're stupid; not that they're clowns, but -- a lot of the stuff that
goes on is just hilarious. Some of it's dark humor; some of it's not so funny.
But in the end, it's kind of [a] microcosm -of life: If you look at it from
a certain angle, you know, you have to laugh at it.
"I'm not talking about murderers. I'm talking about guys that are doing
hustles on the street: You know, bookmakers, scam artists -- things like that.
That world, as bad as it is and it appears, there are also some endearing characters
in it. A lot of those guys are just trying to make ends meet so they can send
their kids to college."
Several of Stella's fictional characters, crooks and cops alike, appear in
more than one of his books, a notion he said he got from Elmore Leonard. "When
I read Elmore Leonard, I became like an instant fan ... The whole idea of overlapping
characters, it always stuck in my head that, 'Boy, if you ever get so lucky
where you can get a book published, this is something to shoot for.' So rather
than a private eye series, or one protagonist going through all my books, what
I do is -- all four books kind of relate back and forth."
Having left the world of knockabout guys, Charlie Stella now knows a whole
new bunch of people: writers.
"I've met like a worldful of them," he said. "Not only a community
of writers who are published, but a lot of guys who are just getting their feet
wet and trying to break in. I remember how tough it was, going back when I started,
and what I'm finding is that everybody really, really does work together.... You
know the publishing business, how tough it is today; but they're really good
talent, and I'm sure they'll break in."
Among the published writers Stella has come to know recently is the well-regarded
Irish author Ken Bruen. ("Among writers," George Pelecanos has written,
"Ken Bruen has become the crime novelist to read.") Ken Bruen's new
book The Magdalen Martyrs bears this dedication: "To Jason Starr,
Craig McDonald, and Charlie Stella, stars ascending."
"That is probably the most generous man on the face of this earth,"
said Stella. "Ken -- God -- he's just wonderful. The thing about Ken is
that he can't do enough for other people. And that was just way over the top
being nice, what he did there. That's an honor."
There's another author who continues to have a tremendous influence on Stella,
he said: George V. Higgins, whose prose about Massachusetts tough guys, read
aloud in a North Dakota college-classroom, years ago made a young fellow from
Brooklyn want to write stories of his own.
"No, actually I didn't [ever meet him]," Stella said. "But I
have an autographed copy of one of his books hanging on the wall here, over
my computer ..."-- Tom Nolan
Topics: Book Sense, News - Books, People,
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