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Orangutan by Colin Broderick
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Orangutan

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Orangutan by Colin Broderick
Paperback $22.00
Dec 29, 2009 | ISBN 9780307453402

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    Dec 29, 2009 | ISBN 9780307453402

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Praise

“Colin Broderick has that magic touch that allows him to mix comedy and tragedy in just the right proportions…Clear, cleanly written, forward-moving, and—best of all—vibrantly alive.”
—Billy Collins

“I have great admiration for the style and the tenacity and the sheer swerve of Colin Broderick’s work. He is one of those younger writers who makes sense of where we are right now. He has his finger on the collective pulse.”
—Colum McCann

“Colin Broderick has written a book that is not of the “I was lost & now I am found” genre. It is his unique story of drugs drink dregs & degradation uniquely told and devoid of self pity or any attempt to justify his loony behaviour. Broderick does not preach. He merely says as they did in the old west “Ah wouldn’ t do dat if I was you.” Read the mans book and it might save a life which might be your own”
—Malachy McCourt

“His book is part grail quest, part cautionary tale and part rollicking Irish emigrant’s adventure story. What makes it remarkable is that he manages to snatch a victory out of near impossible odds. This book is written in blood, it deserves to become a classic.”
—Irish Voice

“Readers who appreciate the gritty style of Charles Bukowski or are fans of Augusten Burroughs’s Dry will find this work enveloping.”
—Library Journal

“It is honest, moving and at times heart-wrenching. Orangutan is, at its core, a story of a man who spent two decades fighting the beast inside of him and surviving life as he did so.”
—Irish America magazine

“…to my delight, Broderick has all the storytelling abilities the Irish people have become known for around the world and in almost every culture.”
Irish Focus

“As a writer, he’s a bit like the driver of one of those illegal taxis, taking you at high speed to some very dark places.”
Minneapolis Star Tribune

Author Q&A

Colum McCann is the internationally bestselling author of the novels ZoliDancerThis Side of Brightness, and Songdogs, as well as two critically acclaimed story collections. A contributor to The New YorkerThe New York Times MagazineThe Atlantic Monthly, and The Paris Review, he has been named one of Esquire’s “Best and Brightest,” and his short film Everything in This Country Must was nominated for an Oscar in 2005. His 2009 novel, Let the Great World Spin, won the 2009 National Book Award for fiction. Read his interview with Colin Broderick on Orangutan: 

Colum McCann: The book starts with a warning: “This is not a very pleasant story… and if you don’t like it, I don’t care.” There’s a fury in this book that I found really honest.
Colin Broderick: You’re right about that, Colum. I was on the last rung of the ladder when I started this book. I knew if I didn’t come out fighting with this one, I was done for. Desperation has been a great motivator for me over the past three years.
Colum McCann: The first time I met you was about twelve years ago at the Barnes & Noble in Union Square. You handed me a manuscript and asked me to read it. You had a fire in your eyes that suggested you were never going to give up. I think at the time you told me it was your second novel. How many did you write before you finally managed to see something in print?
Colin Broderick: That fire has kept me alive through two unpublished novels, two plays, a screenplay, reams of poetry, and a nice folder of short stories over the years. It’s been a long and arduous apprenticeship. But the option to quit was never viable for me. The noise in my head demands articulation. I obey, or it destroys me. When I sat down to write Orangutan I realized that I had most of it already written subconsciously. Since I stopped drinking I realized I have been walking around with all these stories in my head for years, and they’ve been driving me crazy. I drank to quiet the noise. I write now for the same reason. My goal now is to untangle the stories one word at a time so that they don’t drive me completely mad.
Colum McCann: Drink is one of the great levellers of fiction writers. But it’s also one of the great clichés, that it somehow fuels creativity. How did you actually manage to write while you were on the jar? Or did you just pretend?
Colin Broderick: That romantic image of the half pint of whiskey next to me on my writing table while I toiled almost killed me over the years. Personally I never wrote a coherent sentence when I was drunk. It took me a long time to accept that writing is basically hard, lonely work. It was easy to feel inspired when I was drinking. Once in a while, usually after about two or three bottles of wine, I was so inspired that I was convinced that I was just going to rattle off the next great American novel. I’d wake up in the morning with a head on me like the tire of a dirt bike and pick up my notebook and I wouldn’t be able to read a single word. There might be twenty pages or so of enthusiastic, unintelligible scrawl to magnify my sense of utter hopelessness. I destroyed a lot of nice notebooks like that over the years. I never woke up with a hangover and a masterpiece in my hand. I think that whole idea of the drunk writer is a very dangerous myth. Most of the drunk writers I’ve researched wrote sober. Then they got drunk to celebrate.
Colum McCann: Personally I don’t care about the difference between fiction and nonfiction. A story is a story, full stop. Clifford Geertz says that “the real is as imagined as the imaginary.” But there’s a lot of hullabaloo about “lies” and “fabrication” in the memoir genre. What would you say to the skeptics who say that this story is too crazy to believe?
Colin Broderick: I’d say, “Put my book down so I can kick your ass.” What’s really crazy to me is how much madness I had to leave out of the story in order to keep it within the confines of a readable book.
Colum McCann: I think the whole bollicking that James Frey got was ridiculous. So he made a mistake; leave him alone. It wasn’t like he was telling lies and sending kids off to war, like some politicians were doing at the time…
Colin Broderick: I totally agree, Colum. I loved A Million Little Pieces. I couldn’t put the damn thing down. In the bars where I drank, there were characters who would tell the same story over and over for years. We would be disappointed if it wasn’t a little more entertaining on every new telling of it. The art of storytelling started around turf fires years ago, way before there were laptops and recording devices to take the magic out of it. If the storyteller didn’t do his job right, no one would be able to remember the story to convey it orally to the next generation. Tell me a boring story you heard when you were ten.
Colum McCann: You worked in the Irish construction scene in New York for twenty years while writing. How was that for you, on the job? Did you ever have to go looking for the infamous “striped paint”?
Colin Broderick: I didn’t go for the striped paint myself, but I’ve sent a few newcomers looking for it over the years. I would always tell them to bring it back and hang it on a sky hook. The Irish construction scene in New York is not a job you need a hard hat for. What you really need is a full suit of body armor and a spare liver stored in your cooler. Those guys are the best craftsmen there are. I’m just glad I survived the ride.
Colum McCann: We get our voice from the voices of others. I can see Pete Hamill here. And Nick Flynn. Some Bukowski, even. So, who would you say gave you your voice?
Colin Broderick: I think my own voice came up one morning when I had my arms wrapped around a toilet bowl, praying for survival. I read everything, including Hamill and Flynn. But I’ll name a few of my favorite writers: Hemingway, Bukowski, Philip Roth, Graham Greene, John Irving, and the late great David Foster Wallace.
Colum McCann: In the story of drinking with the transvestite in a hole-in-the-wall bar in San Francisco, you relate to her by explaining how you are in fact an orangutan trapped in the body of a man. She claims, of course, that she’s the Queen of England, and maybe she is. That must have been quite a session. Has that feeling of being trapped in another body subsided any since you’ve put down the bottle?
Colin Broderick: No. But not drinking has helped me understand that part of myself a little better and I’ve come to terms with the beast, which makes it easier for me to stay on this side of the prison bars.
Colum McCann: A drunk, a carpenter, a writer, a womanizer, an emigrant? They’re all open to particular stereotype, especially on the page. So, how do you lift yourself–and the story–away from the old tropes? How do you make it new?
Colin Broderick: Every story is new. I just hope mine is authentic and entertaining.
Colum McCann: Life is unfinished, isn’t it? I mean, we constantly find out that there are new ways and new directions. You’re a father yourself now. You have a little girl. You’re a published writer. Does happiness scare you?
Colin Broderick: I’m not a real happy person in general, but my life is better right now than it’s ever been. I’m on a path now that I’m treading cautiously. I look at my daughter and it’s all the incentive I need in the world to keep putting one foot in front of the other, do the next right thing.
Colum McCann: The late great Frank McCourt was a good friend of mine. And I assume you knew him also. He talked about the miserable Irish Catholic childhood and yet he rose above it. If you had to tag your story with a one-liner, what would it be?
Colin Broderick: An Irish construction worker in New York digs through the rubble of his life to find an identity.
Colum McCann: And yes, he finds it. It’s a great read. And I assume you’re working on your next project. Do you want to give us an idea of what it is?
Colin Broderick: I’m still digging in the rubble right now. When I get to the bottom of it all and clear away the mess, I’m going to pour myself a nice, solid, concrete platform to stand on. And I’ll start building again from there.
Colum McCann: Good luck to you, Colin. If I find you drinking, I’ll throw all your pens away forever…
Colin Broderick: See, now that made me laugh out loud. Thanks, Colum.

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