Interview with Lisa Lutz, Author of The Spellman Files
Published March 02, 2007
You are going to hear a lot of positive buzz about Lisa Lutz in the next few weeks as her first book, The Spellman Files, comes out. Believe the hype. She's hilarious, creative and brilliant. It's one of the funniest, most imaginative things I've read in a year or two.
Just when you may start to think that all the possible variations of mystery novels involving private detectives have been exhausted, along comes Lutz with the Spellman family. Detective work is the family business and by that I mean not only do the parents take jobs but the family members are constantly investigating each other. This drives the main character, Isabel Spellman, crazy, especially when her little sister is tailing her to report back to their parents on the details of her latest boyfriend.
Isabel announces she wants out of the business but the family says she has to first work one last case. And that case is a doozy. Isabel breaks laws and bends rules and such, while trying to solve cases and get away from her family. This book made me laugh out loud, which always gets me odd looks when I’m reading while dining alone.
Lutz was gracious enough to not only let me interview her but also to put up with questions about comparisons that are already being made about her. Just because it’s her first book doesn’t mean reviewers are going to wait to compare her to others.
Scott: In what ways are you like Isabel? In what ways are you different?
Lisa: I’m not a vandal, I use doors most of the time, and I’m fairly polite. I probably have more in common with (Isabel’s sister) Rae and Uncle Ray than I do with Isabel. That said, Isabel and I probably share a sense of humor, but our histories are completely different.
If you could collaborate with one famous writer, who would you choose and why?
I actually don’t have any interest in collaborating with anyone on anything. What I like about writing is that it’s a solitary enterprise. But, if you’re just asking as a hypothetical and I can fill it in with a dead author, then: Marlon Brando. (The word ‘author’ is a stretch, I know, but he did write his autobiography, which was pretty great). I pick Brando because I’ve always been a huge fan (aside: on the day he died, I received condolence calls) and think we could have been great friends. Most of the writers I have great respect for I doubt would enjoy my company all that much. But Brando, I think he would’ve liked me.
What are some of your influences?
Here are some authors that I LOVE: Jim Thompson, Patricia Highsmith, George Pelecanos, Dashiell Hammett, Richard Price, David Foster Wallace, Vladimir Nabokov among many others. That said, I’m not sure how significant their influences are. I don’t feel like I can emulate my favorites, so I never think about anyone else’s style or aspire to anything in particular when I write. Mostly what I’m concentrating on is how I can bypass my own literary limitations and find the best way to tell the story. Influences are the last thing on my mind and I kind of doubt they’re in the periphery either.
- Interview with Lisa Lutz, Author of The Spellman Files
- Published: March 02, 2007
- Type: Interview
- Section: Books
- Filed Under: Books: Literature and Fiction, Books: Humor, Books: Mystery, Interviews
- Writer: Scott Butki
- Scott Butki's BC Writer page
- Scott Butki's personal site
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Comments
I've been telling everyone I know to read two
books if they want to laugh and enjoy life and good writing. This one and the Spellman Files.





This article has been selected for syndication to Advance.net, which is affiliated with newspapers around the United States. Nice work!