Interview with Christopher Rice

first ran 9/19/00

(Note: Greg Meyers assisted with the interview and deserves credit, among other things.)

Christopher Rice, 22, is locked into a torturous three-month book tour promoting his first novel, A Density of Souls, published by Talk Miramax Books. He doesn’t seem to mind the trilogy of labels appended to his name (“Rice, the son of author Anne Rice...”; “Rice, who is gay...”; and “Rice, a southern writer...”) but bristles at the notion that Density is autobiographical. “Because one of my characters is gay,” Rice mentioned during a recent interview with the Flor-Ala, “reviewers are calling the book a memoir or a roman a’ clef in a negative way.”
 There are aspects of the novel which do parallel Rice’s bio. A central character, Stephen, shares Rice’s taste in athletic men as well as the author’s high school love of theatre. Both Stephen’s and Rice’s fathers are noted poets. The setting for the novel, New Orleans, has been Rice’s home since he was ten. Stephen’s mother is called “weird” by several characters and Rice’s own mother... well, is Anne Rice. He admits Stephen is based on himself but only in a general way.
 Interestingly, even though he grew up with the reigning queen of the damned he cites Dickens disciple John Irving, whose work is as far from supernatural as one can get, as his most immediate literary influence. “I had never read him and I think every friend in college--the one year I spent in college--would rave about his  stuff. When I picked up The Cider House Rules, it was the first contemporary novel I had read that had a huge cast of characters moving over a vast expanse of time. Yet it never lost its intimacy with them. So I wanted to get that kind of feel. You know, you have the ensemble characters and... It’s a shorter span of time but there are as many characters as The Cider House Rules.” After a pause, he adds laughingly, “It’s not as good as The Cider House Rules, in my opinion. But that’s what I was going for.”
 Another influence woven into Rice’s narrative is Thomas Mann’s classic novella “Death in Venice,” which follows aging aristocrat Gustave Auschenbach’s final days in Venice, Italy, where he meets and secretly falls in love with a young boy named Tadzio.“I remember reading that as a freshman in college, probably just after I’d come out of the closet, and thinking ‘Ah!’ You know. ‘This old man is going to do nothing but watch from afar.’ I thought it would be an interesting parallel because in my book all of Stephen’s sort of unrequited longing ends up getting requited. So it’s kind of like, ‘Take that, Thomas Mann.’”
 While chiding Auschenbach’s inability to face his object of passion, Rice’s own characters suffer from similar shortcomings. When asked about the recurring theme of concealment and denial in his book, Rice explains, “For the majority of the story, you’re swamped with all these characters who are suffering from the secrets being kept by the children. And there was something to me that really worked to have, to find out the most devastating secret of all is being harbored by two parents. And that these children... They are to blame for the things they’ve done but there’s still a parental power presiding over them that ends up being kind of essentially corrupt. So they don’t exist in a vacuum.”
 The extreme consequences of kept secrets is another example of how his fiction springs more from imagination than from personal experience. His relationship with his mother and father, Stan Rice, is open and positive. Both parents routinely offer him guidance. Most recently, his father told him, “Sometimes you learn more from the works of art that you hate because they teach you what not to do. Or what you don’t want to do.”
 In August, Rice was The Advocate’s cover story. “I’ve signed more [copies of The Advocate] than of my book in certain cities,” he jokes. And in the past month, he has been to many cities, flying from Los Angeles to Portland, Oregon, to Seattle. This past Friday it was Hoover, Alabama. “I fly to a city at, like, eight in the morning and I do... I’ve been doing a lot of live t.v. so it’s driving straight from the airport into a t.v. studio and then putting a mic on. Today was rare because I actually had time to go back to my hotel and chill out before I came here but usually I don’t. Usually it’s boom boom boom boom. This past week’s been particularly hellish because I’ve been driving through the south as opposed to flying and I had to drive from New Orleans to Mobile, Mobile to Jackson and then Oxford and last night from Oxford to Memphis so I could catch a plane to come here. That’s non-stop.”
 After a four day break at home in New Orleans, he will be off again, this time to Atlanta, New York City, Ann Arbor, Austin and Denver, among other cities. When the tour ends in mid-October, Rice hopes to complete his second manuscript, a murder mystery set on a Northeastern college campus.
 

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