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Laura Lippman's 'Dream Girl' Is The Latest Thriller To Center On Stolen Stories

Book critic Maureen Corrigan says the plot of Laura Lippman's latest standalone suspense novel, Dream Girl, arises not only out of this anxiety about who gets to tell whose stories, but also out of the #MeToo movement.

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Other segments from the episode on August 18, 2021

Fresh Air with Terry Gross, August 18, 2021: Interview with Eyal Press; Review of book 'Dream Girls.'

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DAVE DAVIES, HOST:

This is FRESH AIR. There's much to be anxious about these days, from the delta variant to events in Afghanistan. Our book critic Maureen Corrigan has read a lot of so-called beach books this summer, including Laura Lippman's recent "Dream Girl," and has found that many are filled with an anxiety specific to writers about a very literary form of theft. Here's Maureen's review.

MAUREEN CORRIGAN, BYLINE: Something strange is afoot in mystery and suspense fiction. The plot of almost every thriller I've read in the past six months has had something to do with one character stealing the story of another character and passing it off as their own. The rundown includes "The Plot" by Jean Hanff Korelitz, "A Lonely Man" by Chris Power, "The Other Black Girl" by Zakiya Dalila Harris, "Palace Of The Drowned" by Christine Mangan and "A Slow Fire Burning," the forthcoming novel by Paula Hawkins. Worry over manuscripts falling into the wrong hands is nothing new in mystery fiction. After all, Edgar Allan Poe, the acknowledged father of the form, relied on that plot for his 1844 short story, "The Purloined Letter."

But this year's crop of mystery and suspense novels puts a socially conscious spin on the missing manuscript tale. They're about the anxiety of appropriation, about one character in a position of privilege in terms of gender, financial security or race, laying their sticky mitts on the writing or life story of another character who's not so advantaged. The plot of Laura Lippman's latest stand-alone suspense novel, "Dream Girl," arises not only out of this anxiety about who gets to tell whose stories, but also out of the #MeToo movement. And it also owes a lot to Stephen King's 1987 horror classic "Misery," all together making "Dream Girl" the ideal cutting-edge, socially conscious entertainment for late summer.

"Dream Girl" is set in the penthouse of a lofty eyesore of a luxury high-rise in Baltimore, Lippman's hometown and the site of most of her novels. We savvy readers sense that something is off from the opening description of famous novelist Gerry Andersen's lavish digs. Lippman's narrator tells us that Gerry Andersen's new apartment is a topsy-turvy affair - living area on the second floor, bedrooms below. The brochure - it is the kind of apartment that had its own brochure when it went on the market in 2018- boasted of 360-degree views, but that was pure hype. Nothing means anything anymore, Gerry has decided. No one uses words correctly, and if you call them on it, they claim that words are fungible, that it's oppressive and prissy not to let words mean whatever the speaker wishes them to mean.

Isn't this delicious? A cranky novelist ensconced in a swanky setting railing at the idiocies of the contemporary world. As Lippman imagines him, Gerry owes something to Philip Roth, as well as to Roth's fictional alter ego, Nathan Zuckerman. There's the brilliance, the wit, the complicated sexual history with women and the fraught relationship with his own mother. But at the end of the first chapter, Gerry, the literary lion in winter, is taken down - literally. He stumbles over the rowing machine in his bedroom, skids to the edge of the floating staircase that connects the floors of the duplex, windmills down the steps and lands at the bottom a crooked, broken thing. There, he lies alone throughout the night until his young assistant Victoria arrives in the morning.

For months, Gerry will be imprisoned in that penthouse, his only constant visitors - Victoria and a night nurse named Aileen. During that time, Gerry will be tormented by dead-of-night phone calls from a woman who claims to be the person whose story Gerry stole for his breakthrough novel, also called "Dream Girl." Whenever the phone rings, Aileen claims she doesn't hear it. In his medicated state, Gerry can barely think straight. Is he being gaslighted? Think Stephen King's "Misery" starring Zuckerman bound.

With each stand-alone novel she writes, Lippman veers off in a different direction. "Sunburn" was a sexy noir, winking at James M. Cain. "Lady In The Lake," a historical crime story winked even more broadly at Raymond Chandler. And now, Lippman has poked a toe into horror. The source of the jitters here is that very high rise Gerry is marooned in. Lippman's series detective Tess Monaghan makes a cameo when Gerry tries to hire her. Tess turns up at Gerry's place and ultimately turns the job down. As she explains, the reason is the penthouse itself. I couldn't spend a lot of time in this apartment, Tess says. Maybe it's like the Spielberg movie where it turns out a grave has been desecrated, only the thing that's buried beneath your beautiful apartment is jobs. There were silos here, grain silos. There were jobs all over this peninsula. This place gives me the creeps big time. I could never do surveillance here.

Packed with social criticism, satire, ghosts and narrative turns of the screw, Lippman's "Dream Girl" is indeed a dream of a novel. And all the literary pilferings Lippman herself has committed here are acknowledged front and center.

DAVIES: Maureen Corrigan teaches literature at Georgetown University. She reviewed "Dream Girl" by Laura Lippman. On tomorrow's show, we'll explore the reasons for the Taliban's sweeping victory in Afghanistan and consider future prospects for the country with Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and New Yorker staff writer Steve Coll. He's written two books dealing with U.S. involvement in Afghanistan and the role of Pakistan in the conflict. I hope you can join us.

(SOUNDBITE OF ANAT COHEN AND THE ANZIC ORCHESTRA'S "LA COMPARSA")

DAVIES: FRESH AIR's executive producer is Danny Miller. Our technical director and engineer is Audrey Bentham. Our interviews and reviews are produced and edited by Amy Salit, Phyllis Myers, Roberta Shorrock, Sam Briger, Lauren Krenzel, Heidi Saman, Therese Madden, Ann Marie Baldonado, Thea Chaloner, Seth Kelley and Kayla Lattimore. Our producer of digital media is Molly Seavy-Nesper. Roberta Shorrock directs the show. For Terry Gross, I'm Dave Davies.

(SOUNDBITE OF ANAT COHEN AND THE ANZIC ORCHESTRA'S "LA COMPARSA") Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.

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