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AN INTERVIEW WITH AUTHOR JEFF
EDWARDS
by W. H. McDonald Jr.
Retired Navy Chief Petty Officer
Jeff Edwards is the author of ‘Torpedo.’
Jeff’s name isn’t a household word yet, but it’s going to be. A born
storyteller and a veteran submarine hunter, he might just be the hottest
thing to happen to naval fiction in twenty years.
After several long-distance phone conversations, and an extensive email
correspondence, I finally got to meet Jeff a few months ago when he flew to
Sacramento for an awards ceremony at the American Author’s Association Book
Fair. As the President of
Military
Writers Society of America, it was my privilege to present
him with the ‘2005 Admiral Nimitz Award for Outstanding Naval Fiction.’
I
am pleased and honored to have this opportunity to interview him for
Military.Com.
Military Writers Society of America:
What made you decide to write ‘Torpedo?’
Jeff Edwards: (Grins.) Wow!
You’re going to put me on the spot right away… My first novel was sort
of a high-tech murder mystery. It was a cross-genre piece that
somebody once described as ‘Blade Runner on crack.’ There was a lot of
technology built in to the story, and my agent saw that and decided that I
should put my Navy experience to work. He asked me to write a military
thriller. I wasn’t crazy about the idea. I was still on active
duty then, and I was too close to the military to want to write about it.
I really didn’t think I’d enjoy it, and I didn’t think I’d be any good at
it.
MWSA: But you did write about
it.
EDWARDS: Yes, I did. My agent
asked me to give it one honest attempt. Just ten pages. Then, if
I wasn’t having fun, I could toss the whole thing in the trash and go work
on something more appealing.
MWSA: What happened?
EDWARDS: I put it off for as long as
I could. Then my ship pulled into Abu Dhabi in the United Arab
Emirates, and I found myself with an entire weekend off. I was
planning to go out sightseeing, but I decided to sit down with my laptop and
bang out ten quick pages to make my agent happy. After what seemed
like a few hours, I left my laptop and went to look for something to eat.
I’d worked all the way through the night without realizing it. I had
fallen in love with the story, and I had fallen in love with writing about
the Navy. That was quite a surprise. I really hadn’t expected to
like it.
MWSA: That was the manuscript that
became Torpedo?
EDWARDS: Yeah. The book went
through several name changes, but the story stayed pretty constant.
MWSA: How much of Torpedo is
autobiographical?
EDWARDS: That’s not an easy question
to answer. There’s a bit of me in a lot of the characters, but there’s
no one in the book who directly represents Jeff Edwards. On the other
hand, some of the little adventures that are woven into the story are based
on actual experiences.
MWSA: You spent the better part of
two and a half decades hunting submarines in real life. How accurate
are the military hardware and combat tactics in Torpedo?
EDWARDS: They’re as accurate as I
could make them without revealing classified material. Sometimes that
meant changing my descriptions of tactics or equipment. When I made
those changes, I tried hard to maintain the flavor of the real thing, even
when details had to be omitted or adjusted. I was still on active duty
when I wrote the early drafts of Torpedo, so I had to get permission
from the Navy, the Department of Defense, and the State Department to
publish the book. They went over it with the proverbial fine-toothed
comb, to make sure I hadn’t accidentally revealed anything classified.
MWSA: You’re retired now, so you
won’t have to ask permission to publish the next one. Is it going to be a
relief to be able to bypass that bureaucracy?
EDWARDS: Actually, I’m not planning
to bypass it. When my next military thriller is ready, I’m going to
submit it through the same channels.
MWSA: Even though you don’t have to?
EDWARDS: Even though I don’t have to.
This isn’t just about covering my back. There’s something more
important at stake here. My number one priority is to do nothing that
could endanger our national defense. I work very hard to keep
classified material out of my writing, but it never hurts to have someone
knowledgeable go through and double check for anything that might have
slipped past me. It’s well worth dealing with a little red tape to
maintain military security.
MWSA: Where did you get the
storytelling gift?
EDWARDS: I’ve always attributed it to
my father. When I was young, he would tell me incredible stories about
a talking bear named Oliver, who drank chocolate milk. Over the past
couple of years, I’ve begun to realize that I also probably get a lot of it
from my mother and my sister, both of whom are wonderful story tellers.
Come to think of it, my brothers can both spin a pretty fair yarn too.
I guess my whole family has the gene, or the gift, or whatever it is.
MWSA: Several bestselling authors,
including
Homer Hickam, have compared you to
Tom Clancy. Do you think that
sort of comparison is inevitable?
EDWARDS: I think it is
inevitable. (Smiles.) Not because I’m actually in the same
ballpark with the man, but because anyone who writes military fiction with a
strong technical component is going to wind up being compared to Clancy.
Sooner or later, every martial artist gets compared to Bruce Lee. It’s
the nature of the game.
MWSA: How do you feel about having it
happen to you?
EDWARDS: (Laughs.) The real
question is, how does Tom Clancy feel about it? Of course, I’m
delighted. How could I not be flattered by any comparison to the
master of the genre?
MWSA: What the strangest thing that’s
happened to you since you started writing?
EDWARDS: Hmmm… (Pauses for
several seconds before speaking.) The Naval Institute Press sent me a
rejection letter for a novel called ‘Ice Fire.’
MWSA: What’s so strange about that?
A lot of writers get rejection letters.
EDWARDS: Of course they do.
I’ve gotten my fair of rejection letters. But I didn’t write Ice
Fire. I have no idea who did write it. Some poor
writer somewhere is still waiting to hear what the Naval Institute thinks of
his book.
MWSA: I saw in the ‘Hollywood
Reporter’ that Torpedo has been optioned by
a major movie producer. How much can you tell us about the movie deal?
EDWARDS: Not much. I don’t
think I’m allowed to discuss details right now. I’ll just say that
it’s an honor to be dealing with a producer of
Paul L.
Sandberg’s caliber. Some very smart people think
Torpedo would make a good movie, and that’s flattering. I don’t
think I’d be willing to comment beyond that.
MWSA: Who should play Captain Bowie
in the film?
EDWARDS: (Grins.) No Comment.
MWSA: You have an opinion on the
matter?
EDWARDS: Of course I have an opinion.
I’m just not going to share it. If things get that far, I’m just as
interested to see who’s going to play Captain Rachel Vargas, and Chief
Theresa McPherson. They’re both strong female roles, warriors from the
ground up.
MWSA: Do you have any plans for your
next novel?
EDWARDS: Certainly. I’m neck-deep in
the first draft of a new book.
MWSA: Is it a USS Towers
story?
EDWARDS: The Towers will definitely
factor into the plot. And some of the characters from Torpedo
will be back.
MWSA: Is that all you’re going to
tell us? Can you at least give us a hint?
EDWARDS: There are several hints
buried in Torpedo. That’s all I’m going to say, for now.
Military Writers Society of America:
One final question… What advice can you offer to people who are trying
to break into writing?
Jeff Edwards: If that’s your dream,
don’t let anyone talk you out of it. A thousand people, many of them
writers or publishing insiders, will hammer you with horror stories about
how tough it is to get anywhere in the writing business. Tune them
out. Every bestselling author started out as an unpublished wannabe,
listening to the same gloomy predictions. Every one who made it did so
by ignoring the voices of doom and following the dream.
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