TDR
Interview: Chris Walter
by
Matthew Firth (March 2008)
Chris Walter is not a subtle writer. It’s
obvious by the name of his website: www.punkbooks.com.
It’s obvious from the tattoo in block letters on his stomach: PUNK
BOOKS. Above, another tattoo on his chest depicts an old Underwood
typewriter spitting out flames. I know this not because I’ve seen the
man naked but because he’s boldly shirtless in some of the author
photos in his books.
And then there’s his small press
called Gofuckyerself Press. The press’s logo is the same flaming
typewriter. When I ordered a couple books from his press, I also got a
Gofuckyerself Press button and GFY Press stickers.
My three-year old son likes the
stickers, recognizing that I have a similar model of typewriter that he
bangs away on. All of this to say; Walter stands out and so does his
fiery prose. Picture Joey Shithead Keithley of DOA fame as a writer
rather than a punk rock maestro and you’d have a close approximation
of Chris Walter.
But beyond the body ink and
provocatively named press, Walter is a deadly serious writer committed
to his art and subject matter. He is mostly a novelist, though also
handy with the short story form. His novels include Welfare
Wednesdays, Booze Can, Kaboom, and Mosquitoes and
Whisky. Shouts from the Gutter compiles more than 30 of his
short stories. Walter’s subject matter is largely what he knows: the
junkies, whores, crackheads, thieves, punks and drunks of Vancouver’s
downtown east side. But he also reaches into his punk past in Winnipeg
to fuel some of his prose.
And – particularly in his short
fiction – Walter is capable of stretching it further, writing about
the dashed dreams of the poor and barely surviving, scheming ex-cons,
and even the mysterious origins of clowns deep in South American
jungles. Walter’s fiction is the antithesis of CanLit and its dour
middle class musings. He writes with conviction about the street like no
one else in this land. Walter’s fiction is convincing, lively, real,
accessible and wildly entertaining.
I caught up to him online and had this
conversation …
*
MF: How many books have you written
and over what time period?
CW: 12, or 15, if you count the books I
abandoned or allowed to go out of print. I wrote Beer in 1999 and
kept going, though at an irregular speed for the first few years. My
life was very chaotic and I didn’t have a computer or a typewriter for
the first few books.
MF: How do you keep up this pace?
CW: I’m an addict, and addicts do
everything obsessively and compulsively. Luckily, writing is not as
detrimental to my health and sanity as drugs are. Still, I have to force
myself to take time out for my family. Not enough time, if you listen to
my girl. She mostly understands, though. Writing is therapy.
MF: All of your books are published
by your brilliantly named Gofuckyerself Press. Why the DIY route? Did
you send your stuff out to other small presses at any time? Or was your
mind made up to start GFY Press right from the start?
CW: Actually, my second book, Punk
Rules OK, was published by a small press called Burn Books. When I
learned there was little they could do for me that I couldn’t do
myself, I decided to cut out the middleman. I was only getting 7% (which
is standard), but now I keep all the profits. I have printing
connections and can produce my titles fairly cheaply. The business end
is a hassle, but at least I don’t have to take orders from anyone.
Also, I like being able to control even the smallest details. If a book
doesn’t turn out exactly the way I’d hoped, I have no one to blame
but myself. If I hadn’t gone this route then I’d have to take a day
job, and I’m done with that.
MF: How do you distribute, market
your books?
CW: I ask fans to find stores where
they live, and then I call the stores and ask if they’ll take my books
on consignment. Sometimes things don’t work out, but more often they
do. It’s tough though, especially collecting money. I plead or
threaten; whatever it takes. And I NEVER QUIT UNTIL I GET PAID. I’m
also a relentless Myspace whore and I contribute to various magazines,
which helps get my name out there. Word of mouth seems to work for me.
MF: Any sense of who reads your
books? Are your readers more varied than might be expected?
CW: Much to my surprise, storeowners
tell me that old people, young people, and even businessmen and yuppies
buy them. It’s a good thing that I don’t rely on punk customers
because one will steal a book and pass it around. I’m amazed that anyone
buys them, actually. It’s hard to sell books and I feel very fortunate
to eke out an existence this way.
MF: You come from a punk background.
But why, mainly, do you write novels, rather than, say, one minute and
forty-five second punk songs? In other words, why books?
CW: I’m a failed musician. I was
never able to re-create the sounds in my head on guitar. But I can
capture my thoughts on paper, and I don’t get too fancy. I want people
to understand what I’m saying, not admire my flowery prose.
MF: How are your books received by
the punk rock crowd?
CW: Meh, some dig ‘em, some don’t.
Same as everyone else. I’m not trying to please everyone; I just want
to write what is true for me. Don’t get me wrong: I’m in the
entertainment business, but I know that I can’t appeal to everyone, so
I cater to the rude, crude, and loud. I also need to have a laugh or
two.
MF: Yeah. Humour plays a big part in
your fiction. Why?
CW: My subject matter is often so grim
that if I didn’t throw in some black humour, readers wouldn’t be
able to get through a whole book. If I describe a crackhead digging
through the storm drain looking for crack that doesn’t exist, I have
to find a way to make it funny, which isn’t always easy. I want
readers to laugh and cry. If I can do that, then I have truly
succeeded.
MF: Okay, don’t hold back – why
is CanLit so fuckin’ lame-assed?
CW: Publishers are unwilling to take
chances on anything that might not sell. They stick to cookbooks and
formulaic fiction because they exist on a razor’s edge as it is. The
small presses, since they operate with government funding, publish books
that are of little interest to anyone except literary snobs. Some like
to think that they are bold and outspoken but mostly they are pretty
tame. I think publishers have seriously underestimated the potential of
books that deal with the nastier side of life. I’m sure that I could
sell assloads of books at Chapters, but that will never happen because
the book industry is fucked. Mega-stores such as Chapters are largely
responsible: they run roughshod over publishers and make their own
rules. There are a few good independents and I applaud them. McNally
Robinson, for example, are fucking awesome. Duthies is also good. Too
bad there aren’t more bookstores like them. I’m lucky that I can
also sell my books in record stores.
MF: Are there any Canadian writers
out there whose stuff you dig?
CW: I’d say that John Armstrong of Vancouver is pretty much my
favourite Canadian writer. His first two books, while brilliant, were
autobiographical, so it remains to be seen if he can apply his acidic
yet brutally funny prose to fiction. I suspect that he will manage. John
humbles me.
MF: What if a big publisher came
knocking, realized that they could also sell assloads of your books;
would you jump on board, go that route?
CW: It would all depend on the conditions. If they allowed me complete
freedom to write the books I wanted, then sure. If they tried to tell me
what to do, then fuck that. I’d love to sell out, but not if it means
compromise. I’ve worked too hard to see GFY go down the shitter.
MF: Why do you concentrate so much
of your fiction on Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside?
CW: Douglas Coupland can write about
yuppies but I can’t. I am endlessly fascinated with junkies, drunks,
punks, and whores.
MF: Why? What draws you to junkies,
drunks, punks, and whores and why write about them?
CW: Put it this way; when a junkie wakes up, his day will be full of
drama, though usually of a nasty sort. Punks, drunks, junkies, and
whores are infinitely more interesting than the average well-adjusted
and secure citizen. I am them and they are me.
MF: How do you react to
comparisons – in terms of the names of writers and others that are
used to describe your fiction? Do comparisons annoy you, flatter you,
confuse you, etc?
CW: I don’t pay attention to any of
that. I don’t even read my reviews any more. My girlfriend goes
through that stuff and picks quotes to use for the back covers. If I
believe critics when they say I’m good, then I must also listen when
they say I suck. They’re all frustrated writers, anyway.
MF: Who are your literary influences
and why?
CW: I like Irvine Welsh because he is
the king of black humour. I like Bukowski for his brutal honesty. And I
like John Steinbeck because his characters are real enough to bleed on
you, and he is master storyteller bar none. My favourite Vancouver
author is John Armstrong.
MF: You comfortably summon up a
broad range of cultural references in your fiction, from obscure punk
bands to Homer Simpson and lots in between. Can you comment on the role
of punk and pop culture, and maybe the meeting of the two, plays in your
fiction?
CW: I feel that people like to read
about things they can relate to, and pop culture references are merely a
device to draw readers into the story. I use punk rock references
because I want my punk readers to know that we are of the same tribe.
MF: What’s next?
CW: Gofuckyerself Press recently
launched a book by Australian author, Drew Gates. The Crooked Beat,
which details the twisted adventures of a punk junkie in Southeast Asia,
is a very funny and but dark and raunchy rollercoaster of a book. GFY
also launched my newest book, Rock & Roll Heart on February
29th. Rock & Roll Heart is a fast and wild tale of
a love triangle gone wrong. In August, GFY will launch my rock
biography, Personality Crisis: Warm Beer & Wild Times, which
details the brief but turbulent life of one of Canada’s largely
unknown but hottest rock bands.
Matthew Firth’s
most recent book is Suburban
Pornography and Other Stories. He lives in Ottawa where he works a
day job and publishes Front&Centre
and Black Bile Press chapbooks under cover of the night.
|