"Mr. Swyteck
Goes to Washington
"
©
Copyright James Grippando 2008
Do we
ever really know our elected officials? It seems like we should in
this day of information
overload, but invariably, some secret comes out
the woodwork (or some
$5,000-a-night prostitute comes out of a hotel
room) and—surprise!—that guy
you voted for isn't at all the person you
thought he was.
It had been a while since
I'd written a Washington
thriller.
The
Abduction
, my third novel, was the story of
the first presidential
election in which neither
candidate is a white male. An
African-American man is in a
neck-and-neck race for the White House
against a white woman.
The Abduction
was published in 1998, and even
critics who loved the book
wrote that "readers will have to work hard to
suspend disbelief and accept
the premise that the country is anywhere
near ready for a
presidential election like this one." Well, what a
difference 10 years
makes.
The renewed interest in
The Abduction
generated by the Hillary v. Obama
primary got me to think
about writing another
Washington
thriller. I
love the role that Miami
plays in the Jack Swyteck series, but every
writer needs to stretch
himself, and I thought it would be good to see
Jack and his father (the
former governor of Florida) in another
setting—particularly one in
which Jack and his sidekick Theo are such
interesting fish out of
water. The end result was Born
to Run, a
high-stakes thriller where
dark secrets put Jack and everyone around him
in a run for their
lives.