Author Interview from Mothership
|
Home
-> Articles ->
Author Interview from Mothership |
 |
Clive Cussler
next to one of his favorite classic cars, a
1929 Model J Dusenberg, featured on the back
cover of FLOOD TIDE (©1997).
|
by J. A. Hitchcock
Clive Cussler may very well be the best author you're
probably not reading
Come on, admit it - do you know who Clive Cussler is?
How about Dirk Pitt? How about NUMA? I thought so. With
over 16 novels to his credit, Clive Cussler should be
as popular as Tom Clancy and John Grisham... but he's
not. So read our exclusive EON interview with the author
who should be more famous.
After gushing about how much I enjoy his books (yes,
I've read every one of them and loved them all), Clive
Cussler gushed right back that he loved the fact that
I gave ATLANTIS FOUND, his most recent book, such a
nice review. It's always good when you hit it off with
the person you're interviewing.
We began talking about ATLANTIS FOUND and how he ever
came up with the idea for the book.
"Everything starts with a 'what if' concept,"
Cussler explains. "What if we find Atlantis, you
know, it's just kind of wild. The more I got into it,
I thought it'd be great fun to just make up my own Atlantis,
because I think that's what Plato did, and there it
is. I mean, he might have used the big volcanic explosion
that destroyed Crete there on Santorini, that could
have been the basis of it, but there's certainly no
big continent out in the middle of the Atlantic."
So there. But what about the tie to World War II, Hitler
and a secret base way up north?
"I ran across a bunch of material and a book written
by this German and this British Intelligence Officer
about actually surveying Antarctica before the war,"
he says. "They claimed that they did hide all this
stuff (in ATLANTIS FOUND) there after the war. There
was always this mystery about these submarines, because
they didn't show up in Argentina until after the surrender
and everything, so I threw that in along with the comets"
-- he laughs again -- "and everything but the kitchen
sink."
 |
Cussler ready
to take Dirk Pitt's 1932 Stutz for a spin, featured
on the back cover of DRAGON (©1990).
|
Let's go back a few years -- 30 to be exact -- to the
creation of Dirk Pitt (the main character in all the
Cussler novels) and the books.
"My son's name is Dirk and I was looking for a
good, tough name and there it was," Cussler says.
"He was only 6 years old when I started writing
[in 1965] and I was working in advertising at the time
as a copy and creative director for an agency in Los
Angeles. My wife would go through cycles where she would
get bored and would get a job when the kids were in
school, then she'd get bored with that and stay home
for a while.
"So, she found this job working evenings at the
local police department as a dispatcher, clerk, that
kind of thing," he continues. "We'd see each
other for about an hour and a half before she had to
go to work, then I'd fix dinner for the kids and play
with them, then put them to bed by 8:30. I didn't have
anyone to talk to and I thought, 'Gee, I'll write a
book'."
As simple as that. But what would he write about? Cussler
didn't have that "great American novel" inside
of him, but he thought it might be fun to do a paperback
series of adventure, mystery, intrigue. So he began
researching what was out there, from Edgar Allan Poe's
"Inspector Dupont" to James Bond, Travis McGee
and Sherlock Holmes.
But then he began to wonder how he could make his book
and character different.
"Then it hit me - I'll take my hero and put him
in and around water, because I'd been scuba diving for
years and I thought it'd be a great backdrop,"
Cussler exclaims. And that's how Dirk Pitt was born.
 |
American Graffiti
meets Cussler's SAHARA (©1992)
and his 1936 Avions Voisan. |
What most people don't know is that the first book
of the Dirk Pitt series was PACIFIC VORTEX, even though
it was actually published later. This is where Cussler
introduced all the characters, setting the action in
Hawaii and telling the story of this evil old guy who
lived under the sea. Long story short, Pitt fell in
love with the guy's daughter and she was killed. Then
throughout all the books, sometimes this long-lost love
is mentioned -- gotta have that romance factor! The
real-life Dirk still remembers that period of his life
vividly - Cussler's desk and typewriter were in his
room and he'd fall asleep to his dad pounding away on
the typewriter.
"I sent PACIFIC VORTEX out and kept getting rejections,"
Cussler recalls. "In the meantime, I began writing
the second book, and finished it in 1969, then found
an agent, Peter Lampac of William Morris. He tried to
get me published, but couldn't and after a couple of
years even his bosses said to dump me because it wasn't
going anywhere. Peter hung in and I finally got published
in 1973."
This was just a little paperback of THE MEDITERRANEAN
CAPER (actually the second book in the series), then
a hardcover of ICEBERG was published, but only 5,000
copies were printed, of which 3,200 were sold. Today,
a first edition of ICEBERG has been known to sell for
as much as $1,000. Then came RAISE THE TITANIC, which
turned out to be Cussler's breakthrough book (spawning
a movie adaptation), and people congratulated him on
his "overnight success."
But with this success, fame did not come. At least,
he did not become "famous" with his name in
the media eye and known in every household.
 |
Ready to travel
on his next trip, Cussler and his 1936
Pierce-Arrow & Travelodge Trailer, featured
on the
back cover of INCA GOLD (©1994).
|
"Everybody's always mentioned that and you know,
I don't know why," Cussler marvels. "I guess
I've never pushed that hard and Carole [Bartholomeaux,
his publicist] is amazed I'm not better known because
Stephen King just writes, he isn't looking for shipwrecks
or collecting classic cars and all the rest of it like
me. After 30 years, I guess it is kind of strange, but
it's fine by me."
But it is a shame, and brings us to the question: Are
you ever going to do another movie based on one of your
books? I can almost hear Cussler cringe.
"Well," he begins slowly, "I took the
books off the market - it's been over 20 years - because
RAISE THE TITANIC was such a disaster. I mean, what
made me mad about it wasn't the fact it was a bomb,
but the screenwriting was awful, the direction was bad,
even the editing was just pathetic. The quality of the
production was just junk. So I always said I would never
sell again unless I had cast approval and script approval,
and of course, Hollywood doesn't want to give that.
But they have been pounding on my door for years - actors,
too, who particularly want to play Dirk Pitt."
Actors pounding on his door? And who would that be?
But Cussler doesn't want to answer that just yet.
"I don't feel any of the ones who have come looking
would fit the role of Dirk Pitt," he admits. "I'd
like to see somebody who's not well known play him.
You know, Sean Connery - nobody knew who he was when
he played James Bond and he became James Bond. If you
get a Bruce Willis or Harrison Ford, you don't see Dirk
Pitt, you see them. They've talked about George Clooney
and Matthew McConaughey (who's been to Cussler's house
twice), who's not too bad. He's a little short, and
he doesn't have green eyes, but that can be taken care
of with contacts."
However, Cussler still doesn't sound convinced, and
he wouldn't comment on my suggestions (which I listed
at the end of my book review - Sam Neill or Timothy
Dalton. So if Cussler had his choice, script and actor
approval, which book would be a movie?
"My choice would be INCA GOLD, but apparently
the one they're doing the screenplay on now is SAHARA,"
he says. "I've gone through the screenplay and
made suggestions on it and it's all right...so far."
 |
James Dean has
nothing on Cussler and his 1953 Allard,
featured on the back cover of SHOCKWAVE (©1996). |
Now, you may be asking yourself, what the heck was
the NUMA mentioned at the beginning of this interview?
NUMA is the National Underwater & Marine Agency,
the fictional organization created by Cussler that Pitt
and his cronies work for and that always gets involved
in Pitt's adventures, whether NUMA wants to or not.
Most people don't know that NUMA is also a real-life
organization formed in 1978.
"I was looking for the John Paul Jones wreck,
the Bonhomme Richard in the North Sea," Cussler
explains. "It was suggested that because I was
coming up with the money to fund the expedition, I should
form a non-profit foundation. One of our volunteers
was an attorney from Austin, Texas, so he set it all
up. I had some really big trustees on this thing and
they insisted we call it NUMA, like the one in my books.
I wasn't keen on it, but they outvoted me," he
laughs, "I wasn't really thinking commercially,
but they thought it'd be great fun, so I guess, Virginia,
there really is a NUMA."
Looking for shipwrecks around the world, Cussler has
found many thought to be lost forever. One of the most
recent was the Confederate submarine Hunley, the first
to sink a warship off Charleston during the Civil War.
When found buried three feet down, a port was broken
and they found that silt had filled the submarine, which
means the bones of the crew may be intact. In July,
the Hunley will be raised and yes, Cussler will be there.
The most recent wreck NUMA has found was this past
December: the Carpathia, the ship that rescued the Titanic
survivors, which was torpedoed six years later in World
War I. They managed to get a camera down to film some
of the wreck, but the weather beat them out, so they're
returning in April 2000.
 |
Cussler stepping
out in style with his Cord L-29, featured
on the back cover of TREASURE (©1988). |
If you think that doesn't keep him busy, ask Cussler
about his classic car collection and the coffee table
book about classic cars he's planning for a December
release (just in time for Christmas!). With 87 cars
in his collection, his favorites are a 1929 Dusenberg
("the epitome of a classic car," he enthuses)
and a 1948 Talbot Lago ("beautiful, it's gorgeous.")
One of his classic cars is always featured on the back
cover of his books, with him standing next to it, looking
like the contented author he is.
So what's next for Cussler?
"In the next book, Pitt discovers Captain Nemo's
Nautilus, although I still have a long way to go in
fleshing out the plot," he reveals. "And NUMA
heads to Fire Island, New York this summer, where the
Savannah, the first steamboat to cross the Atlantic,
is buried in the sand." Cussler says he'd die happy
if he could just find the Bonhomme Richard, John Paul
Jones' ship - the one that started NUMA. He's gone looking
for it three times and plans to give it another go this
year.
Maybe that will be Dirk Pitt's next adventure.
(Used with permission of the author, this article appeared
in the April 17, 2000 issue of Mothership)
|