He participated in a Powells.com INK Q & A last year when Atomic Lobster, his tenth novel, was released. Part of the interview:
Have you ever made a literary pilgrimage?Read more of the interview.
Yes. I tracked down the last home of Jack Kerouac in St. Petersburg and collected a baggie of dirt from his yard. Then drove away fast.
True story: found his address in an old phone book in the bowels of the local library — and the directory actually spelled his name "Kerowac." I live for that kind of stuff.
What is your idea of absolute happiness?
This is it. I couldn't write a better job description: travel Florida wherever my curiosity leads me, talk to locals, venture down the most remote back roads. Then come home and weave all the cool things I found — historic, obscure, funky — into seemingly outrageous crime plots that are but thinly veiled reflections of what fills our newspapers down here every day. The books' satire also provides a cathartic vent to keep me sane in my home state, which I love too much to ever leave, while thinking I'm crazy for staying.
Visit Tim Dorsey's website.
The Page 69 Test: Atomic Lobster.
Learn more about Nuclear Jellyfish.
--Marshal Zeringue