Department of English

Latest happenings in the GWU English Department


September 27th, 2009

It was a cold and wet, absolutely miserable day. This could be the start to a novel, but definitely not a good start to your day. Nevertheless, I and thousands of others crowded the metro to get to the National Mall for the Library of Congress’s National Book Festival yesterday. Yet there was a reason we were all willing to stand out in the downpour and that reason was literature.
(I apologize for the bad photo quality. Blame it on my bad point&shoot.)

As Julia Alvarez said during her speech at the Festival, “Reading and sharing stories offers a way through the debris that come tumbling down.” Whether that debris is literal or figurative, we were there to hear some of our favorite authors expound wisdom, gratitude, and share a few stories. With the dozens of authors there it was a bit challenging to decide whose story you wished to hear, but luckily I found a chair in the Fantasy/Fiction tent and stayed there through seven authors.
(Lois Lowry)

For some authors the tent was a bit of a misnomer for their true writings. As Jeanette Walls (author of The Glass Castle) lamented, “I tried to fictionalize my book. But I couldn’t even come up with fake names for my family, so I used their middle names,” she said. Although I have never read a word of Walls, she turned out to be more engaging than some of the more famous authors.

John Irving (author of The Cider House Rules among other novels) related writing to wrestling, as repetitive and challenging. Unfortunately I found his interview a bit repetitive myself, but as he noted, “You have no choice of what your obsessions are,” he said. Apparently Irving is not one of my obsessions.

After enduring thirty minutes of Nicholas Sparks’s arrogance (I learned that besides writing sob stories he also coaches a winning track team, opened a private school, and trained his German Shepard to climb trees. What this has to do with books is unapparent to me.) I welcomed Junot Dìaz (author of The Wonderous Life of Oscar Wao) whose language was colorful and creative. He discussed how as a child growing up in the Dominican Republic he did not even expect to write fiction. He said, “My mother’s greatest fear was that one of her ’smartest children’ would be an artist.” Yet he did find a country that valued his art. “We need art so that we do not forget about life,” he said.
(Tim O’Brien)

Although I loved Dìaz, part of the reason I stayed out in the cold for five hours was to hear Tim O’Brien (author of The Things They Carried). He somehow manages to be as poetic, poignant, and hilarious as he is in his books. Compared to Sparks in his oxford shirt, O’Brien in old jeans and a baseball cap was down to Earth, funny, and inspiring. The perfect end to a long, but satisfying day of literature.


September 25th, 2009


There is the Superbowl for football fans, dozens of music festivals for anyone who owns an ipod, and there is even Comic Con for all of those scifi/fantasy/comic book geeks out there. So what is there for bookworms? Maybe there are not hundreds of festivals in honor of books (although there should be!), but there is one ultimate one, the National Book Festival!

Luckily, for GW students and professors that festival takes place practically in our own backyard! Sponsored by the wonderful Library of Congress, the festival will be held on the National Mall from 10am-5:30pm tomorrow, Saturday, September 26.

Anyone who has ever bought a book (and clearly anyone reading this blog probably has run out of shelf space for all of their purchases) should go to the festival. Authors span from young adult fiction to nonfiction. Ideally there should be an author for everyone: Tim O’Brien, Julia Glass, Junot Díaz, John Iriving, Jeannette Walls, Jodi Picoult, John Grisham, Julia Alvarez, Nicholas Sparks, Judy Blume, etc. For a full list of authors click here.

Each author will be holding discussions and signings at different pavilions on the Mall related to their genre. For a full schedule of discussions and signings, click here.
[Click to enlarge]

I know I will certainly be there tomorrow even with the awful rainy forecast. Maybe I will see you there too? If you sadly cannot go, make sure to check the blog later on this weekend for a recap of the Festival.


September 8th, 2009

From the 8/27/09 Hatchet:

Sedaris, Atwood will speak at Lisner
Michael Chabon and Al Gore round out the venue’s fall lineup

by Sarah Scire
Senior News Editor

Bestselling authors Margaret Atwood and David Sedaris have been added to the long list of celebrity authors appearing at Lisner Auditorium in the fall.

Sedaris, the popular humor author of “When You Are Engulfed in Flames,” “Dress Your Family in Corduroy and Denim,” and “Me Talk Pretty One Day,” will speak Oct. 7 at 8 p.m. His appearances in Lisner are a regular fall favorite. Atwood, known for her novels “The Handmaid’s Tale” and “The Blind Assassin,” will speak Oct. 30 at 8 p.m.

At the Atwood event, the writer will conduct a dramatic reading from her newest novel, “The Year of the Flood,” with the help of several students, according to the Lisner Web site.

Joining Sedaris and Atwood at Lisner in the fall is Pulitzer Prize-winning author Michael Chabon, who will speak Oct. 9 at 8 p.m. Chabon read at GW last year, as part of an English class designed to introduce students to prominent Jewish-American authors.

Former Vice President Al Gore will read from his new book, “Our Choice,” on Nov. 5. No ticket information has been released for the Chabon or Gore readings, and both events are being held in conjunction with Politics and Prose Bookstore.

Student tickets for the Sedaris event start at $15, and it will cost $10 to see Atwood. The Lisner Box Office is Tuesday through Friday, 11a.m. to 5p.m. and accepts cash, GWorld, MasterCard and Visa.

(BLOGGER’S NOTE: Sedaris tickets are almost sold out so make sure to buy yours ASAP!)


June 5th, 2009

To mark the beginning of June and as a nod to our 2009 graduates, this week GW English News will feature a five part interview with alumnus Mark Olshaker. A 1972 graduate of the English Department, Olshaker has put his B.A. in English to good use as a writer, Emmy-winner, theatre-goer, and intellectual. His experiences and opinions have been the subject of this week’s blog posts. The fifth and final post in our series covers Olshaker’s recent activities in D.C. and final reflections on his time at GW. If you’ve missed any of our previous posts on featured alumnus Mark Olshaker, you can find them here:
Monday: Student Protests and Student Journalism
Tuesday: Author of True Crime
Wednesday: Success in Film & Theatre
Thursday: Lessons from a Professional Dilettante

Part Five: Current Activities & Final Reflections
“There are very few things that I haven’t done once, and I’m not sure how many things there are that I’ve done twice.” In 2007, Olshaker became Executive Director of the English-Speaking Union of the Nation’s Capital. “Part of our mandate is to create international understanding through English, so being in Washington we’ve taken that to mean that we should try to find out what other people around the world think of us. We’ve started a program with various embassies around town, where we’ve sent our members… to embassies to hear what the ambassador or high official says about their position relative to the United States and relative to the world.”

The English-Speaking Union also collaborates with the Shakespeare Theatre Company: the groups jointly sponsor a competition among high school students to highlight the best recitation of the bard’s work. “We like to think that that helps keep alive the writer who’s certainly the most reliable guide to the human condition and the greatest practitioner of the English speaking language that we’ve ever had.” Olshaker’s love for Shakespeare can be traced back to GW professor Milton Crane. After having cultivated that love over the years, says Olshaker, “I now comfortably work with both the Shakespeare Theatre and the Folger. I’m sure a lot of that came from my English majordom.”

In addition to working with the ESU, Olshaker is chairman of the Cosmos Club Foundation, the non-profit arm of the Cosmos Club. “We give out grants to graduate students in various fields, and also bring in notable speakers in literature, in the arts and humanities, and in the sciences. Again, in a way that’s been an extension of my writing career, because I’ve gotten to meet and encounter some very interesting people… Wole Soyinka, from Nigeria, who is the first African to win the Nobel Prize in Literature. A brilliant man, and I got to spent three or four days with him just because of my position.”

GW is another D.C. institution that has benefitted from Olshaker’s involvement. “I’ve emceed a couple of Hatchet events over the years at the National Press Club, and I’ve certainly kept in touch with a lot of my professors over the years and, as long as they were alive and healthy, continued relying on them for advice and wisdom.” He thinks it is important for faculty to reach out to alumni, who are not educators by trade, and let them know how they can be a part of the educational process. “They asked Red Auerbach––who’s probably the greatest professional basketball coach in history and was an undergraduate at GW––‘How come you haven’t had more to do with the GW athletic department?’ And he said, ‘Nobody asked me!’”

“Jeffrey Cohen has reached out and asked me to participate, as has Tara Wallace, and I’m happy to do it when they ask… The cliché is that the only time we as alumni hear from the university is when they want money… but the people I went to college with, a lot of them became very accomplished and very interesting people, and I think a lot of them would be willing to get involved on any number of levels if they were asked.”

This month, Olshaker will fly to London to see Patrick Stewart and Ian McKellan in Waiting for Godot––a play that reminds him of his time at GW. “I’ve worked with both of them a couple of times, and the last play I was ever in was Waiting for Godot here at GW in the experimental theatre program. I was Vladimir, and I went on to nothing after that. The guy who played Estragon is named Lenny Wolpe… and he’s currently on Broadway in Wicked. He’s had a very long, good career in acting, so I guess he used the drama department in the same way I used the English department. I told Patrick I’m looking forward to seeing it; I’m anxious to see if he’s as good a Vladimir as I remember myself being many years ago in experimental theatre. He may even be better, most likely; if he’s not, there’s something wrong.”

While Olshaker’s fondness for Beckett’s play might not have waned over the years, his opinion of other works has not remained constant. “Part of liberal arts is being open-minded enough to know when your mind changes… When I was in school here, of the people that we read seriously, two that I could not abide were Henry James and Anton Chekhov. I just found them both hopelessly tedious. Today, forty years later, I still find Henry James remarkably tedious, whereas Anton Chekhov, the longer I’ve lived and the more family involvement I’ve had… I realize how profound and great a writer he is.”

Olshaker’s final recollection from his undergraduate experience should appeal to current English majors. “I managed to get through four years of English majoring here at GW without writing a paper with a single footnote. I just decided that wasn’t interesting to me, that’s not the way I was going, and I… just convinced each professor that what I had to say would be more interesting if it were my own opinion rather than somebody else’s. Looking back on it, it seems kind of a dubious proposition, but it sounded good at the time and I got away with it.”

“Not to be too flippant about this, but part of being in college is finding out what you can get away with, finding out what the shortcuts are, finding out how you do a body of work on your own terms, rather than just having the teacher tell you exactly what to do. And I don’t think there’s anything wrong with that.”

Thank you for reading our five part series on Mark Olshaker. For more about distinguished alumnus Mark Olshaker, you can also view his profile at the Internet Movie Database and read a 1998 article about him in the Washington City Paper. Or, learn more about the projects and people Olshaker has worked with by following the hyperlinks I’ve provided throughout the series.


June 4th, 2009

To mark the beginning of June and as a nod to our 2009 graduates, this week GW English News will feature a five part interview with alumnus Mark Olshaker. A 1972 graduate of the English Department, Olshaker has put his B.A. in English to good use as a writer, filmmaker, and self-proclaimed dilettante. If you have read Parts One, Two, and Three in our series, then you know about Olshaker’s collaborations with FBI profiler John Douglas, television producer Paula Apsell, and actor Kenneth Branagh. In Part Four, Olshaker shares some of the lessons he has gleaned from his professional life.

Part Four: Lessons from a Professional Dilettante
“I’m a professional dilettante. I mean, that is really what I do. I do things that interest me, and then I write about them, and I’ve been fortunate enough that in a lot of cases people have been willing to pay me for it. That is the benefit of an English major and a liberal arts education, but like everything else I think it is what you make of it.”

As an author, Olshaker hopes that his works will inspire others and inform public debate––but he recognizes that such goals can be difficult to accomplish. “Every writer wants to think that he’s changing things, and probably very few of us are. All we can hope for is… to inform people and communicate with people about what we think is right and wrong with things. Does writing actually change anything? Probably not. In W.H. Auden’s great poem ‘In Memory of W.B. Yeats,’ he has a line that says ‘But poetry makes nothing happen.’ This is probably true.” At best, writers are commentators and communicators. “What we try to do at our most effective is join the public debate, and try to steer it in the direction we want.

For his part, Olshaker has participated in the public debate by advocating for the rights of crime victims. “I’ve spoken a lot to victim’s groups… and I try to get that [issue] out before the public and make clear how important it is. When I hear people say, as I have at many forums, that… ‘victims shouldn’t have any say in the criminal justice system’ and ‘the effect on the victims shouldn’t affect sentencing,’ I disagree with that strongly… Once an offender commits a crime, he creates a relationship, and that’s not a relationship the victim wanted, but is there… and so that victim absolutely has a right to take part in the justice process, in my opinion.”

Having adapted his own novel for the silver screen and others’ books for television, Olshaker recognizes the benefits and limitations to adapting art from one medium to another. An author who starts from scratch, for example, has complete storytelling freedom but must “figure it all out” without the aid of a guide. Says Olshaker, “You sort of know where you’re going, but you have to figure it out along the way.” To illustrate his point, Olshaker offers a quote from E.L. Doctorow: “Writing is like driving at night in the fog. You can only see as far as your headlights, but you can make the whole trip that way.”

In contrast, Olshaker remarks, “If you’re doing an adaptation… you have the advantage that you know what’s going to happen; you can pick out the best scenes and use them and throw away the rest.” Writing for film is particularly challenging. “You have to figure out how to get a four or five hundred page manuscript into a 120 page screenplay (with a lot of white space in it).” The successful screenwriter must continually refine the original story, and portray it “as much as possible in a non-verbal way, by scene and setting and action.”

All this without the ability to point a camera, which depends upon the film’s director. “What you lose from novel writing is the novelist’s camera, if you will: point-of-view. The novelist can direct the reader’s point-of-view anywhere he or she wants; you lose that when you’re writing screenplays.” So adapting a story is all about “problem solving… figuring out a different way to tell a story.”

Olshaker is attracted to fields where he can find a narrative, or at least fields in which he can “imaginatively come up with one to impose on the situation.” In most cases, a narrative thread is easy to find. “It’s not coincidental that the professions that interest me to write about––whether we’re talking about detective, or lawyer, or doctor––these are professions that have to be good at storytelling. I mean, for a detective to be effective, he or she has to be able to take a set of facts and put them into a coherent story. In the same way, for a doctor the absolute tentpole of medicine… is still the medical history. You have to be able to hear a collection of symptoms and be able to tell a coherent story in order that makes sense. Probably three of the great forms that we have come up with in western culture––the drama, the mass, and the trial––are all about storytelling.”

Although Olshaker has embraced the storytelling potential of film and television, he considers a foray into “new media” unlikely. Largely due to a generational gap, he says that blogging, podcasting, and text messaging are “just not natural for me.” He particularly disparages Twitter. “I don’t understand why it’s interesting, why anybody would bother with it, it just strikes me as so much navel-gazing. Why do I care what you or anybody else is doing at a given point in the day?… It just seems like a huge, monumental waste of time and effort. But, again, I’m not part of this generation and I don’t understand it… My generation is going to be left behind on this, I mean we still read newspapers on paper and things like that.”

Despite doubts over his own participation in new media, Olshaker is hopeful for what he sees as the future of media. “When I was your age, there was network television and network radio and independent stations, and––strange as it may seem now––if you wanted to watch something on television, you had to watch it when somebody else told you to. Now I think we are getting to the point where the media are all merging together, the computer and the internet and radio and television, so that there will come a point where you can have your own studio just like CBS does, and if your stuff is more worth watching than CBS’s, you are going to have your own network.”

“Because of the means of dissemination, it does seem like media is becoming more and more democratized. Now that can be good or that can be bad: obviously it’s good in that everybody has access to it and everyone has equal means of expression; what’s bad is that a lot of the stuff on the internet is bogus, it’s phony, and it’s sometimes difficult to tell what is authoritative and what’s not. So like everything else, there are positives and there are negatives to it.”

In the end, Olshaker would prefer a good book over the latest videogame. “The real magic is taking a page of words and just looking at them and being able to conjure up this imaginary world… That’s the great parlor trick, and I don’t think that will ever change.”

To learn about Olshaker’s current activities in D.C. and his ongoing involvement with GW, visit the blog Friday afternoon for Part Five of Featured Alumnus: Mark Olshaker.


June 3rd, 2009

To mark the beginning of June and as a nod to our 2009 graduates, this week GW English News will feature a five part interview with alumnus Mark Olshaker. A 1972 graduate of the English Department, Olshaker has put his B.A. in English to good use as a writer, filmmaker, and self-proclaimed dilettante who has collaborated with notables including John Douglas, Paula Apsell, and Kenneth Branagh. Before reading about Olshaker’s successes in theatre, film, and television, read about his experiences as and undergraduate in Part One and his career as a professional writer in Part Two.

Part Three: Success in Film & Theatre
Mark Olshaker’s career as a writer has often overlapped with his interests in film and theatre. First nominated for an Emmy Award in 1992 for the Nova episode “Mind of a Serial Killer,” he won the award for Outstanding Animated Program in 1994 as writer on “The Roman City.” Based on a book by David Macaulay, the program was hosted by Macaulay and featured the voices of Derek Jacobi and Ian McKellen.

That same year, Olshaker published a foray into crime fiction, The Edge, set in Washington, D.C. It was later bought by New Line Cinema and Olshaker was hired to write the screenplay. “It hasn’t been filmed, as most screenplays are not, but it was a very good experience for me both financially and as an experience. I do have plans to try to write more screenplays… It’s a form that definitely interests me: it’s essentially trying to figure out what are the hundred best minutes of a story, and trying to render them thus.”

Olshaker is a man not only interested in creating, but also in the creative process. Having studied the creative process at GW under the guidance of Professor Claeyssens, Olshaker decided to investigate the rehearsal process of the most famous play in the English language: Hamlet. In 1990, prior to his writing of crime fiction, he directed the hour-long special “Discovering Hamlet” which followed acclaimed thespians Derek Jacobi and Kenneth Branagh.

“I thought taking a play that everybody knew, like Hamlet, and a director who had played Hamlet very successfully, Derek Jacobi, and a new young actor playing it for the first time, Kenneth Branagh, that this would be a very interesting rendition of the creative process. We started the film at the Birmingham Repertory Theatre in England, on the first morning of rehearsal, and ended it when Ken steps on stage on opening night. So we semi-facetiously say that our film ends where all the others begin.”

With his experience in both theatre and crime fiction, Olshaker has observed surprising connections between the two fields. While filming “Discovering Hamlet,” Olshaker spent about five weeks living with these very fine actors; shortly thereafter he worked with the FBI’s behavioral science unit on the Nova show. “What was very interesting to me was, that the actors and the detectives… were doing a lot of the same things. An actor comes to a scene in a script and he or she has to figure out what is actually happening in the scene, what is the actual transaction between the characters.” This subtext forms the basis of any good play. In comparison, “detectives will come to a crime scene––so it’s not a scene in a book it’s a physical scene––and instead of subtext what they call it is evidence. What does the evidence show us was the transaction between the participants in the scene, the offender and the victim? In both cases, before the practitioner––be it actor or detective––can tell us what happened, they have to understand the subtext of the scene.”

Three years ago, Olshaker was nominated to be a judge for the Helen Hayes awards, recognizing outstanding theatre in the Washington, D.C. area. He is grateful for the opportunity to be exposed to new theatre, but the position has its drawbacks. According to Olshaker, “A lot of what you see if very good, and a lot of it s real crap; you certainly learn to distinguish it, and it gives you an appreciation for the range of theatre in this town… I’m convinced that certain theatres are open merely because the people who run them like to put on plays, whether they have an audience or not… but you have to give people credit for wanting to try.”

He finds some theatre more audience-friendly than others. As a Helen Hayes judge, he sometimes reviews Spanish theatre that is presented with surtitles. “Just having to struggle for the meaning, I miss a lot of the nuance of what’s going on onstage.” Different cultural conventions can also be surprising. He recalls, “At the Kennedy Center years ago I saw a production of kabuki. I was told that it was very good, but I found it boring because I just didn’t get the convention… things that were deeply emotional and meaningful to people who understood it just passed over me.” Olshaker is generally suspicious of productions that alter Shakespeare’s original words or intention. “I think when you tamper with Shakespeare, you better have a pretty good reason for it.”

In more recent years, Olshaker has continued to write and produce films. He was consulting producer for the 2003 series “Avoiding Armageddon” and in 1995 wrote the “Stormchasers” IMAX film. In 2000, he wrote “Bridges,” the opening program of the Peabody Award-winning PBS “Building Big” series. Says Olshaker, “The more I do, the more similarities I find between the things that interest me.” For example, “an architect has a plot of land to work with, the client tells him what he wants, and the mystery is figuring out what kind of building to build on that site.” Although he has no academic background in architecture, he has explored it via the fields in which he does have professional expertise. By working on films and television programs, “I’ve been able to pursue and encounter some of the great architects of our time… same with acting, same with history.”

Although Olshaker might claim that his specialties are true crime and public health, he has enjoyed considerable success in the realms of the theatre and film. To read Olshaker’s thoughts on the liberal arts, writing adaptations, and the future of media, visit the blog Thursday afternoon for Part Four of Featured Alumnus: Mark Olshaker.


June 2nd, 2009

To mark the beginning of June and as a nod to our 2009 graduates, this week GW English News will feature a five part interview with alumnus Mark Olshaker. A 1972 graduate of the English Department, Olshaker has put his B.A. in English to good use as a writer, filmmaker, and dilettante who has collaborated with notables including John Douglas, Paula Apsell, and Kenneth Branagh. Before reading about Olshaker’s career as a professional writer, catch up on Part One of the interview in which he describes his formative experiences at GW.

Part Two: Author of True Crime
Olshaker’s undergraduate experiences as an English major prepared him well for a career as an author. “For me, ending up as a professional writer, being an English major at GW was something of career training. Not that I became a great literary writer as the people we studied, but certainly studying the best gives you a sense of who you’d like to be, and who you’d like to emulate.”

“Like a number of people in my era I was a disciple of (the now either forgotten or legendary, depending on your perspective) A.E. Claeyssens, who was a professor here. A tremendous charismatic and cult figure, he certainly influenced me in profound ways… He made literature come a live and made writing seem like a very exciting thing to do.” Claeyssens, who passed way in 1990, is remembered fondly by members of the English Department; a prize in poetry is named after him, as is a prize in playwriting.

“I’m a good advertisement for a liberal arts education, because I’ve pursued things that have interested me. Given the structure of my work in film and in books and even in journalism, it’s allowed me to do that.” Olshaker considers his specialties to be criminal justice and public health, although they developed “unexpectedly.”

In retrospect, he has identified two commonalities between those fields that might explain his interest in them. “The commonality in the first case is the idea of the mystery. In both crime and in medicine, and particularly in public health, you are trying to solve mysteries for the greater good. Who committed this crime, who killed this person, who robbed this person, and why? How did it happen? And of course the same thing is true with disease: what’s wrong with this group of kids, why did it happen, why did it happen to them? … The other commonality, I would suppose, is in both cases you’re looking at the human condition writ large. You see people in the extremes of passion and emotion, love and hate and fear and anger and suffering and distress and joy, and all of these things. And you see the human condition at its extremes. To a writer, that’s very interesting.”

Olshaker traces his involvement in crime fiction to two now-famous novels by Thomas Harris, Red Dragon and The Silence of the Lambs. In 1992, while writing for the PBS television show Nova, Olshaker saw an opportunity to tell the story of the real people behind Harris’ novel, such as FBI profiler John Douglas. “I actually parlayed The Silence of the Lambs to my own advantage. I’d been doing some work for Nova and I went to the executive producer Paula Apsell and said, ‘Look: I read this book, I really like the book, I understand they’re making a movie of it. If the movie is half as good as the book, I think it will get a lot of attention.’ I had no idea how much attention it would get. I said, ‘why don’t we try to get in on the ground floor, let me do a film about the real people behind this.’

Apsell was initially hesitant to back the project, but Olshaker continued to pursue it. “I called the FBI out of the blue––in those days, those pre-9/11 days, it was much easier––and they said ‘Come down and we’ll show you around the academy at Quantico’… I went back to Paula and said, ‘Let me do this.’” In October of 1992, the Nova episode “Mind of a Serial Killer” aired based on Olshaker’s research, with narration by Patrick Stewart and interviews with FBI profiler John Douglas. It was met with strong ratings and an Emmy nomination.

A few years later, Douglas contacted Olshaker when he was retiring from the FBI. “He called me and said, ‘Do you think anybody would be interested in my story?’ I said, ‘Well I certainly would! I’ll take you to New York, we can talk to my agent, and we’ll see… We ended up writing seven books together.” These books included the 1995 New York Times bestseller Mindhunter, The Anatomy of Motive, and 2000’s The Cases That Haunt Us. The duo have been on hiatus since then, but Olshaker hints at possible future collaborations. “When we stopped writing books together, which was about 2000-2001, I really felt that we had exhausted the major things I had to say in those regards… But if the right story comes along, and there’s one were actually considering right now, I would definitely work on that again.”

Today, Olshaker is developing a new fiction series focusing on the crime victims’ movement. The novels “will still be mystery oriented and thriller oriented,” but Olshaker wants to keep them grounded in reality. “I think one interesting thing about writing true crime is that your tolerance for the phony stuff, or fiction, goes down… How many times have you see a book jacket that reads: ‘The hunter becomes the hunted in a dangerous game of cat and mouse in which everything is on the line and nothing is for sure’? I’ve seen so many of those now.”

Olshaker disparages the cliches and misconceptions that plague contemporary crime fiction. Book jackets also like to advertise ex-FBI or ex-police authors who “have the rare gift (or is it a curse?) to be able to get inside the mind of criminals and think like criminals.” According to Olshaker, “this is a bunch of hooey too, because if you are a detective, if you are an FBI agent or a police officer, you better be able to think like a criminal… that’s the least of it; if you can’t think like a criminal, you’re in the wrong business.” Although criminals do hold advantages over police in terms of avoiding detection and capture, crime fiction ignores how stupid most criminals are. “That doesn’t come across in crime fiction; they’re all these great geniuses of crime, masters of disguise, and that’s not true. I remember ten or twelve years ago, when Andrew Cunanan was on the loose, the killer of Gianni Versace. He was being made out by the press as this master of crime, master of disguise, this arch serial criminal who was going to go on a rampage… John Douglas and I knew, just from the type of crimes they were, that this was ridiculous; this was a desperate, stupid man who was coming to the end of this rope. We wrote an op-ed piece for the Wall Street Journal and we said, he’s either going to be captured, or set up a suicide by cop situation very quickly. It actually happened that night; the night that the article appeared Cunanan was cornered. If I can do anything in fiction, it is try to be more realistic than most of the writers out there, and still be entertaining, because of course that’s what the job is.”

For more about Olshaker’s jobs in theatre and film, check back Wednesday evening for Part Three of Featured Alumnus: Mark Olshaker.


June 1st, 2009

With the class of 2009 now safely out of GW’s hallowed (and under construction) halls, now is the perfect time to provide departing English majors with reassurance in the form of another Featured Alumnus blog post. Our subject this week is Mark Olshaker, a 1972 graduate of the GW English Department. As you’ll find, Mr. Olshaker is a poster child for the liberal arts education, having put his English degree to good use as a writer, producer, filmmaker, and philanthropist. His career has spanned best selling novels, Emmy awards, and collaborations with notables such as John Douglas, Paula Apsell, and Kenneth Branagh. My interview with Mr. Olshaker was so rich with advice and anecdotes that it is being split into four parts, running the length of this week in recognition of the beginning of June and the beginning of the careers of our 2009 graduates.

Monday: Student Protests and Student Journalism
Tuesday: Author of True Crime
Wednesday: Success in Film & Theatre
Thursday: Lessons from a Professional Dilettante
Friday: Current Activities & Final Reflections

Part One: Student Protests and Student Journalism
Although it has been over 30 years since Olshaker matriculated at GW, the campus is still familiar to him. “I walk through the same streets here and see many of the same buildings, and it sure doesn’t seem like very long ago… The four years that I was here at GW were a very exciting time; an usual time. A lot of what people my age remember is simply being young; whatever time it is that you’re young you look back at with nostalgia.”

In the autumn of 1968, Olshaker became a freshman at GW and joined a campus marked by protest. Student protests, inspired by those at Columbia University by Students for a Democratic Society, had spread to the nation’s capital. “It was very dynamic. GW, being the closest university to the White House, became the staging ground for a lot of protests and a lot of action. Very few people my age do not recognize the smell and feel of tear gas as a result.”

Olshaker admits to participating in the protests, but considers himself a liberal, not a radical. “There was a certain amount of radical sheik at that time, and I was somewhat on the oust because I considered myself––and still do, interestingly enough––a liberal. In fact, one of the great informing experiences of my reading life was here at GW, reading Lionel Trilling’s book The Liberal Imagination. But most people considered themselves radicals, and if you were not a radical, there was something almost déclassé about you… I kind of strode the fence, as did a lot of people in those days.”

Though life at GW might have centered on student protests, the world outside Washington, D.C. saw little of this. Olshaker recalls commuting to Frederick County, Maryland during his freshman and sophomore years for a job as a disc jockey at a country-western radio station. “During that time, I was living a very schizophrenic existence: the radicalism on campus was very cutting edge, and it was what everybody was reading about; on the other hand, when I would repair to the mountains of rural Maryland, it was as if nothing had changed from the ‘50s. The two worlds I inhabited really didn’t understand each other and had almost nothing in common with each other.”

Olshaker also covered the protests while working for The Hatchet, though his regular position was as Arts Editor. “In those days everybody pitched in whatever needed to be done. A lot of the reporting was very spontaneous because of what was happening… So I ended up doing a fair amount of regular reporting as well.”

The beginning of Olshaker’s senior year, fall 1971, also saw the opening of the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts. Due to his experience at The Hatchet, he was asked to help promote and develop the Kennedy Center’s new American College Theatre Festival. Olshaker credits this experience with enhancing D.C.’s theatre community, not to mention his own love for the art form. “Washington is certainly the number two theatre town in the United States, and… it was already showing some strong signs of that back in the ‘70s.”

Olshaker enjoyed many successes with The Hatchet, but only dabbled in journalism after leaving GW. He worked briefly for the St. Louis Post-Dispatch before becoming a “generalist writer,” who has since gone on to write for the small screen, the big screen, newspapers, and publishing houses. For more about Olshaker’s best-selling crime fiction novels, check back Tuesday for Part Two of Featured Alumnus: Mark Olshaker.


October 1st, 2008

Hi, again. It’s me, Kirk.

Did you hear about this?! [Washington Post]
A grenade was found in Rock Creek Park this morning & removed by the army.
Hooray! Efficiency!

Like the Rock Creek’s maintenance worker, Gayle Wald[saw] something, [said] something: she linked us to this post on Will Ostrem’s blog, Northern Light. The post highlights some lines from Auden’s “Here on the cropped grass” which do that strange thing all good writing does: resound within and around an ever-widening ambit of pertinence.
I won’t post the lines themselves or conjecture much more regarding them because Will Ostrem already has it covered, so read his post!

HIs post reminds me of Rod Smith’s last poem in the last section [Homage to Homage to Robert Creeley] of his most recent book, Deed. Rod manages Bridge Street Books, a really great bookstore. It’s the closest bookstore to campus!!
Here’s the poem:

pour le CGT
We work too hard.
We’re too tired
To fall in love.
Therefore we must
Overthrow the government.

Have a good day!

top image from http://www.stanford.edu/~njenkins/cgi-bin/auden/


September 7th, 2008


The most recent Pulitzer Prize winner for fiction, Junot Diaz, is reading from his novel The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao this Wednesday (September 10th) at Politics and Prose at 7 PM (though it’s advisable to be early). This is a great opportunity to meet one of the most celebrated young authors in the country and I hope to see other English undergraduates there!



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