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        BOOKS: Audio Book Buzz March 2008

        BY: JONATHAN LOWE

        BALDACCI: Well, I took a trip across the country which was documented in that book in a fictional sense. The Capitol Limited, Washington to Chicago, then to L.A. on the Southwest Chief. You know, I grew up reading the Sherlock Holmes, the Hercule Poirots, the Jane Marples of the world, and they used trains and seemed mysterious and also enlightening. It's a great place to people watch. I've also taken trains in Europe, across Italy, France, Germany... Most of the time I have to fly just because of the demands of time, but love taking trains, and I've written so much on trains, just sitting in your compartment, the lights flashing by, the darkness outside. It's the perfect atmosphere to write. 

        LOWE: I wonder if you've read Strangers on a Train by Patricia Highsmith, and what other writers have influenced you.

        BALDACCI: I actually enjoy Patricia Highsmith's work. She is quite dark and compelling, and also unpredictable. That type of genre appeals to me. I like mysteries that break outside the normal rules. Other writers, John Irving, Anne Tyler, Eudora Welty, Flannery O'Connor, John Updike. Updike deals with many generations of people, as does Irving. Any writer can be influential, depending on what you're reading them for.

        LOWE: How are the movie and TV projects coming along?

        BALDACCI: Absolute Power as a movie did very well. A couple other books have been in development too. But it's tough, you've got seventy different factors out there competing.  

        LOWE: Screenwriting is very different from novel writing, isn't it?

        BALDACCI: It is. Different questions are asked, and there's a different discipline involved. I've sold a number of screenplays, none produced yet, but I worked with producers at studios, where everybody has input, you know, depending on what day it is, and what angle they want you to take. And so you have to know your marks. I've sat in offices with six people on the other side, just firing questions. And it helped me, in a way, because it made me think out things a little better. In a script, if you don't think things out, at some point they start asking questions, and it becomes a long afternoon.   

        LOWE: Do you listen to your audiobooks, and what do you think of the medium? 

        BALDACCI:  I do, and it's an exploding medium. It's amazing, the number of audiobooks that are sold now. For example, I've gone to Cracker Barrel, and seen the displays there, and I think it's a great value-added thing for customers, because more and more people these days are popping them in their cars while commuting. People don't want to carry books around, and would rather listen to them while they're doing something else.

        LOWE: Plus they don't have time.

        BALDACCI:  Right, they really don't have time to sit down with a book, but if they can do something else too, that's a great thing. Just looking at the numbers of my books, it's extraordinary the increases over the years. I enjoy them. I remember first listening to Ron McLarty reading Last Man Standing, actually while on a train, and he's like this diminutive Irish character actor you see all the time, but when he did the voice of this big villain, I couldn't believe it. It was like the guy was right in the train with me! I wrote him a letter, and said, "my God, you just nailed that character!" He did that voice so effectively.

        LOWE: Some of his female characters are just uncanny, too. You start to wonder...there's gotta be somebody else in the studio...some woman there doing this! 

        BALDACCI: (Laughs)  I know, it's talent. I certainly can't do it.

        LOWE: Literacy is one of your charities. I'm wondering how much TV you let your kids watch, and how parents can get their kids to read more.

        BALDACCI: Our kids don't watch much TV. We're very strict about that. No video games in our house, just a computer where we let them go to specific sites while we're there. We read to each other instead, and make it a family affair, even making up stories sometimes. Often we'll read a story, come to the end, and I'll close the book and say, 'what did you think of that ending?'  Then we'll discuss alternative endings, and why an author did it the way he or she did. Kids want to be creative, use their imaginations. 

        LOWE: And if you're just watching TV, everything is given to you, so you can't picture things in your own mind.

        BALDACCI: Right, it's totally passive. I gave my daughter a journal, and told her she could write anything she wanted in there, drawings included. And if she wants to show me anything, we'll discuss it. Our kids are outside playing, too, coming up with things on their own, as opposed to just clicking on a Game Boy. And what we're doing is paying off. Our kids are bright, imaginative, they play well, and come up with interesting stuff. I'm convinced it's because they don't sit in front of the television.

        Visit David Baldacci's official website, DavidBaldacci.com.

        Tucsonan Jonathan Lowe is also author of FAME ISLAND, numerous articles and stories, and is editor of a new satirical website, JustSayNoWay.com.

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