Lets start with the sizzle before we get to the steak. Are you gonna run for president . I think i just got an f. applauding t. C. Boyle, welcome. My pleasure. Congratulations on the book. Thank you so much. I publish books all the time, every year, and i go out on the road and every once in a while somebody says, congratulations, and im wondering, for what . Its like going to war when you publish a book. No, its like giving birth, here it is. It was long awaited. No, no, the thing about this book that i thought was especially great was it took me back, truly took me back to the mid and early 90s, you know. This is a novel based on real events. Its based on the experience of biosphere, biosphere 2 in arizona in the early 90s. You have really drawn a picture that is similar to, but, in so many ways, different from the real thing. Well, thank you. When the biosphere 2 experiment first happened in 91 through 93 northeast of tucson, i was fascinated by this. Like most of the public, i clipped out all the articles. I thought, this is right up my alley because as you know, evan, i often write about ecological concerns. For those who dont know, a friendly texas billionaire ed bass. Ed bass put up the money to create a new world. 3. 15 acres, 3800 species of plants and insects, four men, four women, to be sealed inside for two years. This was the first closure of a projected 50 so this would go on for 100 years. The whole point is, nasa is still after this, by the way, is could we create another biosphere, other than the one we live in here, in the event that this one should collapse, which it sure looks like its happening right now honestly, its about 50 50 isnt it . Exactly, or a mars colony, or whatever. And the idea was that they would be observed as a Laboratory Experiment or a Laboratory Environment all along. Yeah, they were famous. They were aping the astronauts of nasa. Now, nasa was congenial with them but this was a private enterprise, a tremendous chutzpah. I mean, build a new world . Also, what the fun of it for me is they had hundreds of scientists helping to build this thing. I would think they would put in maybe just one biome. They did take a section from a florida everglades, for instance, for their marsh. Instead, they had five biomes. You had savanna, you had desert, you had marsh and ocean. Ocean. Which with tropical fish, and so on. It was kind of a mix and match world that they created and they had galagos in there. These are the bush babies from africa, these prosimians, very cute, this big, they, climbing through the trees in the rainforest that they built. Whyd they put them in there . For fun, for fun. A fascinating thing is, if it had go on 100 years, by the way, it didnt, the friendly billionaire got into a fight with the friendly creator and bailed out six months into the second second time, it always happens. We have Big Aspirations and then it ends up not happening. Anyway, if it had happened for 100 years, okay, successively every two years they put in a new crew, but, imagine what that world would be like. There are so many unforeseen consequences when you tryo be god. For instance, it took them a year and a half to build it and enclose it, and that me, some Invasive Species came in, some volunteers. They put in three species of cockroach because theyre essential detritivores to this world. But, the cockroach that some unfortunate people watching this see under the bathroom sink, that one got in, too, and, of course, took right over. Right, i mean, the law of unforeseen consequences is in effect here, and sort of the arrogance of assuming, you used to describe it as playing god, they were literally in this case. This is terally creating a world, right . Playing god. Exactly. I also thought, what if we had 10 friendly billionaires and we built 10 of these 10 different ones at the same time . Yeah, and they could be a mile apart, and they could even try put the same suite of creatures in each one. After 100 years it be a totally different world. They were criticized because its not real science. Science, you have a theory and you test it. This was more theatrical. It was more like, hey, kids, [both] lets put on a show. laughing and to the point of being theatrical, it really was as much entertainment as it was science in that you also had these eight personalities who were placed in this experience. Honestly, this was the first reality show. As im reading this book, im reminded that this is really a reality show that was a precursor to everything thats come. It remains, by the way, a tourist attraction. You can go there, ive been there. Theyll take you through it, its just not closed. Absolutely, again, these people were on the front page of all the newspapers, and magazines, and Everything Else. Everything they did, behind the glass wall were tourists who paid to come and see them and gawk. And gawk, while they were slopping pigs and the book youve written, instead of biosphere 2, its ecosphere 2, its e2. You have eight people, as was the case back then, theyre all white, in fact, the women are all blonde, right . And to think, again, lets just go back for a moment to when this really occurred. Could you imagine getting away with this kind of a public experiment where the participants are all white . Today, i mean, this would be a protest, youd have this whole cry, right i mean, this is a very different world. This is part of why im setting this in the past. To examine that and see what those ironies are all about. Also, pretechnology. Yeah, they didnt no social media, no cellphones, none of that stuff. The beauty of this is i can take the original history, all the details ive just given you, or part of this. The biosphere has wrote books. Theres a whole history of this full of newspaper articles and so on. But, you had a wealth of material to draw on. Of course, but then i can project a second closure, and in mine, its even more of a big brother sort of atmosphere, just for the fun of it, so theyre not allowed to communicate with the outside world except at the visitors window. Its like prison, you have a ltle phone and theres the window. They would give a handshake by putting their hands to the glass. And, of course, theres a little simulated sex going on, too, right at that window. In fact, i didnt realize how sexy this was going to be. Four men, four women, locked inside yeah, how could you have imagined . What are they gonna do . laughing what could you have been thinking about . What i love, as well, about the story is that its told in a series of alternating, or rotating, narratives. Two of the participants of the eight, and one of the people who hoped to be a participant but was not chosen and then ends up working, essentially, on the outside with the hope of getting into a future one of these. Theyre the three narrators. One of the three, the man, ramsay roothoorp, is actually kind of a horndog. That would be the technical phrase, is that right . Yeah, thats the typical phrase. Pbs friendly phrase, yeah, this is a guy who is a bit of a sexobsessive. Yes, so, you mention having that, or three narrators. Ive never done this before. Im always trying to do something new at every book. Right, mix up the structure. Mix up the structure. So, they talk to you, ultimately first person, right at you, so it becomes very intimate. And, of course, as in any group of people trying to get ahead, they have their conflicts. The points of view might cover the same territory, but in a different way. Yeah, its got a little rashomon quality to it, right, how you tell the story is how you see the story. Exactly, exactly, so one of the ones who was excluded, of the three narrators, we have dawn chapman, she is a very pretty blond. Again, this is theater, so they want a goodlooking woman who can look good in a swimsuit. Then theres ramsay roothoorp, who you mentioned is the communications officer. And the third narrator is a woman whos been excluded. She was part of the sixteen, but wasnt chosen. Shes korean, her name is linda ryu, and she is now promised that shell get in the next time if she remains as support staff. All of these people, its a kind of cult. They want desperately to be in, and so they will do whatever Mission Control tells them to do. Linda is a little bitter. laughing i love the characters then, and i also love the concept that youve overlaid, you eluded to ed basss involvement in the previous. There is god, the creator, gc, and then there is god the financier, gf, who are themselves relevant players in this world that youve created. Honestly, as you think about this, or as i think about this book, its got elements of, as i said, reality shows, but it also feels a little bit like 1984, it feels a little bit like the wizard of oz. Theres actually elements of stories that are very familiar to us that youve brought together in this and i think that it ends up being a very interesting story as you tell it, and i think people who have read your books in the past know that youre obsessed with subcultures and youre obsessed also with dominant institutions and individuals, whether its a kellogg, or frank lloyd wright, or kinsey, you know, people youve written about in the past. You do well writing about that universe. I dont trust, as an american who has done and said whatever he wants his entire life and has been able, in this great country, to have a life as an artist, i dont trust the domineering leader who says, whether its in fundamentalist religion or in politics, who says, give yourself over to me and i will guide you. I alone can fix it. That phrase is running through my head. Yeah, i wonder why. Thats actually been a consistent throughline in a number of your books. Again, evan, you dont know what your themes are when you start to write. You can only see this in retrospect. So, yeah, i mean, im fascinated by cults and groups. A lot of you will remember my novel from 2003, drop city, which goes back to the backtotheearth movement of the late 60s, hippies. The whole proposition was this wheel of capitalism is destroying the world, can we get off it, and go back to nature, and live simply. Well, of course, we cant, theres seven billion of us. But, in some ways, these two books, drop city and this book, are actually married thematically. I was amazed in going back to look over your career that really the only one of your works of fiction, this is the 16th novel, there have also been 10 books of shortstories, the only thing that really has been translated into an entertainment vehicle that we would recognize or remember was the road to wellville. Right, anthony hopkins, bridget fonda, matthew broderick, alan parker, the great alan parker directed this film. I love the movie, i love everything about it. I dont participate in films because, well, the artistic reason is i have to make my lifes work, this is it, its a distraction. Theres another reason, too. I couldnt imagine doing anything creative with somebody elses opinion involved. Well, its your book, but when it becomes a movie, it really becomes theirs, right, i mean, you have to be able to distance yourself from that Creative Process. I met alan when he bought it and we had a dinner, and it was very nice. I realized, im a fan of his, i love his work, he had made the commitments just before this. Hes exactly like me, hes pedal to the metal, this is his project, and i loved what he did. The terranauts, this is the first time this has happened, has been bought for tv by warner bros. And jim parsons, the actor, jim parsons they think they wanna make it into a series . They will make it into a series. See, i wondered about that because as i read this, actually, my thought was, it seemed like a play because the setting is effectively stationary, not literally stationary, but its effectively stationary, its sort of one setting. I thought it lent itself almost to be made into a stage play. And dont forget, im also taking the reality of this in which they did, the terranauts, where the biosphere ends, did produce plays inside as a way of bonding, and also to perform for people. Further, since there are 50 2year closures, if this show were to come and be successful, our greatgrandchildren could be watching it still. You know, anything could happen because you have eight new people going in each time. Well, again, i come back to, im embarrassed to say, the lowculture reference that came to mind reading this book was mtvs the real world. In some ways where its like a different cast of characters every season and a different location, i thought thats basically biosphere 2 on mtv. I have to confess that while im sitting here on tv with you, the amazing host of an amazing show, ive never seen any reality tv is that right . God, good for you, oh my gosh. audience laughing on behalf of america, thank you. Youre not part of the problem. As i say, i have inner resources, i know how to read. I dont need reality tv, in fact, couldnt imagine watching one second of it whats remarkable is how youve gotten everything perfectly, instinctively, without actually having seen it. I mentioned 16 novels and 10 works of shortfiction. I wonder which you prefer. Your novels are not, themselves, the extension of the shortstories that you write. You dont start out to write something in miniature and then make it into a full novel, so you really are picking, essentially, one or the other. Do you have a preference . Each has its joys. The novel, you know what youre gonna do tomorrow when you wake up, however, youre locked into it, so whatever you should tell me, or my friends tell me, or excites me thats happening technologically, i cant write about. With a story, its the opposite. Anything that occurs to you, you can just jam up a story. However, once the storys over, lets say it takes a month from the initial idea, two weeks of the writing, a week to polish, then you send it off, then youre completely bereft. You dont know what youre gonna do tomorrow and you have a period where you have no ideas and you twirl that gun on your desk a lot, you know, to kinda stimulate yourself. Its very difficult, but i think one of the reasons ive been so productive is ive been able to go from one form to the other, back and forth. Well, in fact, youve already gone, as i understand it, to your next creative output will be a book of stories. Yeah, the book of stories for next year, i delivered it earlier and im working on the research for the next novel. I wanna go back to your origins as a writer. The first thing you published was in fact a shortstory, was it not . Yes, and my first book was a collection of stories. Talk about that time. You grew up in peekskill, new york. You went to college in the suny system, an undergraduate, and then you had a period of time when, as they say, you were younger and wilder, right, you had kind of a wild period. As a musician well, shucks, who doesnt . Right, everybody had one, im not passing judgement, its an observation. But, you eventually went on to the iowa writers workshop, got graduate degrees there, and the shortstory that you first wrote and published was actually instrumental to pointing you on that path, was it not . It was. So, i was very lucky early on to get a story published. And then that gave me the confidence to apply to the only graduate program i had ever heard of, the iowa writers workshop, where all my heroes had gone, or taught. By the grace of god, they accepted me, and i also did my phd there. John cheever was a professor of yours. John cheever, john irving, and vance bourjaily, who had been john irvings teacher in the workshop. Its like the very best possible people you could learn from, right . Yes, evan, but as you know, when youre an artist, whether its in music, or in the literary arts, or painting, you already know how to do it. What you need is a guide or coach to say, alright, kid, youre on the right track, which is essentially what all three did for me, very generously. But really, no one can teach you how to do it. No one really offered suggestions, they just read it and encouraged me. Youve gotten better over time in your own mind, right . The t. C. Boyle of those days in iowa, who thought he knew a lot and thought he could do a lot, learned over time what more he could do and what was right and wrong with his work. I think you grow. You grow as an artist if youre lucky. And i have no restrictions, i write in any mode that occurs to me. I think that allows me to be very productive. When i first began writing, in my first collection of stories, i was much more interested in humor, design, and language than in character. I didnt really have much by way of character in the stories. My wife would always say, well, you know, your women characters are really flat, and i would counter by saying, yeah, well, so are my men. laughing yeah, theres an equal opportunity. Then i wrote, water music, my first novel. You cant write a novel without creating great characters. That taught me something. Cheever taught me something, too, in this, when i met him, he was sort of on the run, he was drinking a lot, and he seemed impossibly old to me. I had read his stories some years before but they were more in a conventional mode and i was an experimenter and he was just this old guy, you know, who cared. Then, he published his collective stories which i read, probably every decade, i read through that youve cited this as actually one of your favorite its a touchstone for me. And he taught me to expand in another direction, towards realism. Id never been interested. Also, at that time, ray carver was living in town and i became friendly with him, and, of course, i was under the spell of his magnificent fiction, which is primarily in a realistic mode, so i adopted that, too. I can go from a kind of folktales, or to surreal stories like the one that youve just mentioned thats in the new yorker this week. And the previous new yorker story, three months ago, the fugitive, is straightforward realism, and its about something thats happening in santa barbara, where i live. A guy has multiple drugresistant tuberculosis. Hes a transient, he didnt take his meds, so his body is a furnace for creating new strains of tb that will kill us all. He was being pursued as a criminal. He hadnt committed any crimes. What are the ethics of that . Did it mean, do we have the right to lock somebody up who has not committed a crime because theyre a threat to Public Health . I wrote the story to kind of investigate that, but its in the same book as are we not men, and another story that hasnt been published yet, warrior jesus, about a cartoonist who creates a superhero. Its great that i can move from one to the other. Where do these ideas for the shortstories or an idea like the, i mean, i think theres an obvious basis for this book, and i know that youve said previously that at the time that biosphere 1 was going on, and even biosphere 2 was going on, you were thinking to yourself, boy, i should write about this, right. The idea for this actually goes back to the origin. Right, but, like most of the public, i became disenchanted with this because the hook was absolute material closure. They had sealed that thing so that there was less transference of air from there to the outside world than even in the space shuttle. So this is exciting, they cant get out. In fact, it is true that with the real biosphere that somebody put your extralarge Pepperoni Pizza outside the airlock to see if they would open it. Right, tempt them. So, 12 days in, and again, i have the real history, i can tell the story. One of the biospherians cut the tip of her finger off she was working like a rice hulling machine. So, one of the eight, of course, has to be an md, for obvious reasons, and he sewed it back together and did his best, but it wasnt looking too good. It was kinda looking like blood sausage, you know. So, she held her hand up to the window and they got the best handman in pima county to come and look at it, he said, you gotta come out of there or youre gonna lose that. She came out into our world, 12days into this, for five hours only. They even estimated how many lungsfull of our air she breathed rather than the inside the biosphere. She went back in and she was carrying two bags with her, two shopping bags, that nobody knows what was in them. But, still, if it was mars, theyd be dead. The public began to lose interest because they broke closure. In my telling, of course, now im positing a second of 49 more closures, and this crew is determined, even if somebody should die inside, no matter what, theyre not gonna break that, because that killed the deal the first time around. Its wonderful for me to have this real history and then project. In that respect, the real history is the impetus and its also the, its the basis, but im saying, in the case of other things youve written, or the shortstories, are you collecting ideas as you go . Do you have a list of things that you wanna get to eventually right now i wanna understand the Creative Process. Right now, already, just talking with you, evan, i have 20 new ideas, i gotta scribble them down when i go offstage. Im mortified. I cant imagine what those are. Lame talkshow host asks questions. laughing thats a story. No, seriously, obviously, every author approaches these things differently, and im just interested in the Creative Process where you fit yourself into that. Its a miracle, which is why i will do nothing but make fiction until i die. Its a kind of miracle. A musician can tell you this, a painter can tell you this. Once you open up the unconscious, and its hard to do, you dont get there every day, youre in some other world and it makes itself, it just happens. My ideas come from many sources. I write an awful lot about ecology and science, and the new technology, this, are we not men is about crispr cas 9 technology in which we are now able, quite quickly and easily, to make transgenic creatures. Is this a good idea . Well, i write a story to find out. Sometimes i would write a story that is autobiographical in content, very rarely, but once in a while, why not. So, that, all you have to do is find an incident and try to see what it means. You read a lot of other peoples stuff. You mentioned that you read cheever, but, of course, cheever is another generation, or another era of stuff, you read a lot of contemporary fiction . I do read some contemporary fiction and only when im writing shortstories. The problem with reading a novel when youre writing a novel is the voice will creep into your head. You dont want this. The hardest thing with a book like this is the middle, and sustaining the energy, and finding out where its going. The voice has to remain consistent and i, distracted by the voice. In some ways, you cant break the lock, right . Its comparable to this, you have to stay completely contained and sealed. Its like this, i have never written anything without music playing cause its rhythmic. Rhythm and reading it aloud is so important to me. But, the music im playing cant have vocals in it unless theyre in a language i dont understand, like german opera or italian opera. Youre a big jazz fan, right . A big jazz fan, jazz is fine. Coltrane, miles coltrane, j. S. Bach, all of this sort, im listening to, but i cant listen to anything with lyrics in english because its a distraction. The same thing obtains for reading another novel when youre writing a novel. Yeah, itd be like listening to somebody elses lyrics. Exactly. We have about a minute left. So you have another novel in the can or coming . I do, im just starting to do research on it. I dont wanna tell too much about it, but its going to be set in the early 60s. It has to do with a certain chemical that got widespread use in that period of the 60s, and i dont wanna give anything away, so ill just tell you the initials, lsd. audience laughing well, we only have 30 seconds, i could guess, but, excellent. Its a treat to get to see you. Like i said, i think this book is terrific and if, in fact, it becomes a television series, ill be the first to program my dvr to see it. We can only hope, my dear fellow. And good luck with the shortstory collection, and that is called . Its called the relive box after the story that was in the new yorker two years ago. [evan] relive box, and itll be out soon . About a game, gaming, its about gaming and what does it mean. Very good, well, i wish you continued success with this and Everything Else you do. T. C. Boyle, thank you very much thanks, evan. Great seeing you. audience applauding wed love to have you join us in the studio. Visit our website at klru. Org overheard to find invitations to interviews, q as with our audience and guests, and an archive of past episodes. Im not coming out of a journalistic background so, i like tom wolfe, for instance, whos books i love. I dont want to reproduce how many spots are on the dalmatian at the firehouse and how they talk. I want to have my imagination run free, so im using these real facts to then create an entirely different set of characters that have nothing to do with them. [narrator] funding for overheard with evan smith is provided in part by the Alice KlebergReynolds Foundation and hillco partners, a texas Government Affairs consultancy and by klrus producers circle, ensuring local programming that reflects the character and interests of the greater austin, texas community. dynamic music greater austin, texas community. Steves while neighboring croatia is famous for its coastline, slovenia enjoys its own 29mile stretch of adriatic seafront. Thats about one inch per resident. Its best stop the town of piran. Many adriatic towns are overwhelmed by tourists and concrete, but piran has kept itself charming and in remarkably good repair while holding the tourist sprawl at bay. Crowded onto the tip of its peninsula, piran cant grow. The main square was once a protected harbor until it began to stink so badly they had to fill it in. A colorful mix of work and pleasure boats fill todays harbor. These days, pirans walls are inviting, rather than defensive, and the town is simply an enjoyable place in which to relax. Explore the evocative back lanes. Hike up to the cathedral. Scale the venetianstyle bell tower. On top, catch your breath by enjoying views of piran and nearly the entire slovenian coastline. The trafficfree harbor front, lined with slovenes enjoying fresh seafood, is made to order for a stroll. Swimmers frolic while sunbathers claim more than their share of the national coastline. Piran clusters around its showpiece square, piazza tartini. As with most towns on the adriatic, it was long ruled by nearby venice and retains its venetian flavor. In fact, the town is officially bilingual slovene and italian. Today the square is enjoyed by visitors and locals of all generations, savoring the good life where the slavic world, the alps, and the mediterranean all come together