Q & A with Nat Segaloff - author of new novel, "The Town That Said No"

 

 

 

Q & A with Nat Segaloff, author of The Town That Said No from BearManor Media.

 Q: You’re better known for your non-fiction. What compelled you to write a novel?

A: Dismissing the wisecrack that some of my non-fiction is fiction, when I couldn’t find a way of focusing my ideas in a non-fiction book, I chose the form of a novel.

 Q: Just what is your theme?

 A: Xenophobia (fear of outsiders) and religious bigotry..

 Q: How about a capsule synopsis?

A: Two stories play against each other. One is about a Muslim family that moves into a small American town and the reaction of the residents to their unwanted presence. It is also about a writer who returns to this town after being embedded with a platoon in Afghanistan and discovers that a man he saw commit a war crime is also there, possibly seeking revenge against him or kill the Muslim family.

 Q: That sounds like a stock dramatic situation.

 A: Not the way I stack the cards. First, the Muslim family didn’t want to move to the town of Hobart, Tennessee—they were sent there by the government when they fled Afghanistan. Second, Hobart is a diverse southern community with no racial strife and famously stood against an invasion by skinheads a few years earlier. But religious differences make the conflict more complicated.

 Q: Are you playing with stereotypes?

 A: Absolutely. Nobody is who you think they are. Stereotypes vanish once you get to know the people burdened with them.

Q: Who do you hope will read The Town That Said No?

 A: Well, it isn’t beach reading, that’s for sure, but it also isn’t a political or social polemic. It’s just a story that I hope is well-told.

 Q: Where did you get the idea?

 A: Part of it is based on people and a town I know, and the rest is drawn from something called “imagination.”

Q: How did you like writing a novel versus writing non-fiction?

A: It’s both liberating and confining. It’s liberating in that I can invent anything I want to, but confining in that it has to make sense because I can’t lay off inconsistencies on the people I’m quoting.

 Q: Is there any chance of having it made into a movie?

 A: I thought you’d never ask. The film rights were bought while the book was still in galleys and I am now writing the screenplay.

 Q: Who do you want to star in the movie?

 A: Gary Cooper and Robert Ryan, neither of whom is returning phone calls. I’m sure that the producers are more realistic.

 


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