Showing posts with label chemical pink. Show all posts
Showing posts with label chemical pink. Show all posts

Friday, May 28, 2010

Harry Crews + Joan Didion = Katie Arnoldi?

Jeff Baker of The Orgeonian in Portland profiles Katie Arnoldi: "Katie Arnoldi really wanted to see a mountain lion. That's how one seed for her new novel Point Dume was planted.

Several of her friends in Malibu, Calif., had too-close encounters with the big cats, and Arnoldi -- who loves to hike off-trail in Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks -- became obsessed with seeing a mountain lion. She would get up before dawn and head into the Santa Monica Mountains, hoping to catch up to a cougar on the prowl.

One morning, she ran into some scary-looking guys in full camouflage who glared at her and didn't say anything. The encounter was scarier than any wildlife sighting and made more sense as she got deeper into her research and learned about how illegal marijuana growing operations are everywhere, from the deep forests of Sequoia and Kings Canyon -- where Arnoldi befriended a Forest Service official and gained access to law enforcement operations that are trying to stop pot farming on public land -- to the hills above Malibu.

"It's everywhere," Arnoldi said last week during a visit to Portland. "There can be huge 100,000-acre sites way back in the woods or smaller ones that you can walk to from a parking lot."

Like much of the U.S., Oregon is overrun with outlaw pot growing operations, many of them controlled by Mexican drug cartels. The cartels often force illegal immigrants who don't speak English and don't know where they are to cultivate the plants and will threaten to kill their families if they leave. Arnoldi explored this end of the drug business in Point Dume and agrees that Americans who smoke pot don't think about the violence associated with it or the environmental devastation caused by all the illegal pot farming.

View full size"And the third thing I would add is all the toxins they use when they're cultivating it," she said. "Nobody talks about that. It's terrible."

Marijuana cultivation is only one element in Point Dume. Arnoldi grew up surfing at Malibu and now lives on a hilltop there with her husband, painter Charles Arnoldi. Surf culture has changed, and not for the better, and a theme of invasive species runs through her book. It is her third novel, after "Chemical Pink" and "The Wentworths," and she cheerfully recapped her life and writing career.

Arnoldi was dyslexic as a child but didn't know it and struggled to read. She married her husband, already a successful artist, when she was 23 and began writing short stories that were routinely rejected.

"I was so self-centered and narcissistic when I was in my 20s, and my work reflected it," she said. "When my daughter was born in 1990, I swore I'd never write another sentence. I began training as a bodybuilder and two years later I won the Southern California bodybuilding championship."

Arnoldi wouldn't take steroids, which limited her future as a bodybuilder, and she gave it up. She did some competitive surfing "longboarding, mostly, anything to distract myself." She wrote what became a chapter of Chemical Pink, her first successful piece of fiction and not coincidentally the first thing she wasn't in as a character. The novel was a success and was optioned as a movie, and she spent a couple of years writing the screenplay. She said her writing idols are Harry Crews and Joan Didion."

Monday, May 17, 2010

Katie Arnoldi on Tour for POINT DUME

Novelist Katie Arnoldi is on the on the road this week with events in San Francisco, San Mateo, Portland, and Malibu. Arnoldi is the author of three critically acclaimed books, including the newly published Point Dume. Come out and meet Katie at these upcoming readings!

5/18
Booksmith, 7:30pm
1644 Haight Street
San Francisco

5/19
M is for Mystery, 7:00pm.
86 East 3rd Avenue
San Mateo, CA

5/20
Powell’s Books, 7:30pm
1005 West Burnside Street
Portland, OR

5/22
Diesel Books, 3:00pm
3890 Cross Creek Rd
Malibu, CA

Wednesday, May 05, 2010

Katie Arnoldi's POINT DUME Gets a Rave in Library Journal

Katie Arnoldi's new novel Point Dume gets a strong review in the May 15 issue of Library Journal: "Having written novels about women bodybuilders (Chemical Pink) and rich Angelenos (The Wentworths), Arnoldi now turns an acute eye toward the aging surfer community, Mexican drug cartels, and more dysfunctional rich people. Pablo, a gentleman pot dealer, and Ellis, a tough woman surfer, are lifelong friends who’ve been surfing since they were old enough to swim. Frank and Janice have a chilly marriage in which he is the boss. They have moved to the coast so Frank can play at being a winemaker. Felix is an illegal from Mexico, brought to California by a vicious drug cartel to grow marijuana. All of the author’s trademarks are present: kinky sex, drugs, and multiple points of view. As the characters’ problems deepen and their lives converge, a massive wildfire sweeps through the mountains, altering the tenor of existing relationships and destroying lives, marijuana farms, -megamansions, and the ecosystem VERDICT: Arnoldi knows how to make readers care about her protagonists. Her well-researched, well-written novel will appeal to fans of T.C. Boyle and Cormac McCarthy as well as to readers who mourn the destruction of the environment."

Friday, March 26, 2010

Katie Arnoldi's POINT DUME Reviewed in Booklist

Booklist previews the new novel from Katie Arnoldi, Point Dume: "Arnoldi revisits the themes of obsession and amorality that she so skillfully exposed in her previous works (Chemical Pink, 2001; The Wentworths, 2008), this time pitting iconic segments of Southern California’s counterculture against each other in an apocalyptic race for survival. Flinty surfer-chick Ellis’s on-again/ off-again affair with married vineyard owner Frank is complicated by a surprise pregnancy and her equally unsettled relationship with her childhood best friend, Pablo, now a drug dealer who supplies pot to disaffected housewives, like Frank’s wife, Janice. Stealing from the contraband pot farms operating deep in the canyons, Pablo is captured by Felix Duarte, an illegal immigrant smuggled into the country by the Mexican drug cartel to manage their operation located on the periphery of Frank’s estate. When the Santa Ana winds pick up and a single spark erupts into a conflagration, Mother Nature regains control of the land everyone, save Ellis, has been wantonly abusing. Crisp pacing, caustic characterizations, and acerbic satire inform this darkly comic fable." -— Carol Haggas

Friday, September 12, 2008

New in Paperback: Katie Arnoldi's CHEMICAL PINK

New in paperback this month is Katie Arnoldi's cult classic - and Los Angeles Times bestseller - Chemical Pink. This critically acclaimed novel, set in the world of female bodybuilding, has been called a "modern gothic comedy of obsession" (Vanity Fair). The author, a former Southern California bodybuilding champion herself, offers a mesmerizing portrait of two obsessed personalities and the perverse relationship that draws them together. In a fascinating Q&A on her own website, Katie Arnoldi talks about the novel's main characters, Charles and Aurora, the culture of female bodybuilding, and really weird sex.

Thursday, March 27, 2008

At Home with Katie Arnoldi, Author of THE WENTWORTHS


No, the Wentworths don't live here. This is the home of their creator, novelist Katie Arnoldi and her husband, artist Charles Arnoldi. A recent feature article on the Arnoldi's Malibu beach house includes a virtual tour and fascinating interview with the creative couple. Katie's second novel, The Wentworths, has just been published by The Overlook Press.