Talking to actor Eriq La Salle, who reads from his new book Friday - Los Angeles Times
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Talking to actor Eriq La Salle, who reads from his new book Friday

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After a successful career as an actor, writer and producer, Eriq La Salle has shifted gears to write his debut novel, “Laws of Depravity†(CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, $15). La Salle may be best known for his long-running role playing Dr. Peter Benton on the NBC drama series “ER†and, more recently, appearances in the drama “A Gifted Man.†But it was the TV movie “Mind Prey†that piqued La Salle’s interest in writing a thriller.

“Laws of Depravity†follows a serial killer who murders 12 clergymen every 10 years, emulating the martyrdom of Jesus and his disciples. It falls on NYPD detectives Quincy Cavanaugh and Phee Freeman to catch the killer -- but the investigation becomes more complicated when they discover that the clergymen are far less pious than they would have their communities believe.

This Friday at 7 p.m., La Salle is scheduled for a reading and signing at Eso Won Books. We caught up with La Salle to ask him a few questions about his new role as a novelist.

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What inspired you to write your first novel?

I view it as all of it being connected. Being an actor, which started my career, is to me just telling great stories. The whole love of being an actor comes from being in touch with that little kid who used to tap into his imagination and play games and make up stories. For me that evolved into directing and producing and writing short films to shoot.… It’s all just been storytelling, which is my first love.

Was your novel inspired by the role you played in the movie “Mind Prey�

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Loosely. That experience really introduced me to the world of thrillers — I wasn’t a big thriller reader at the time. Once I produced and acted in that film, it introduced me to the world of John Sanford. I thought he did such a great job with these antiheroes: the cop that is so good at what he does and yet is battling so many personal demons. That really opened my eyes and created this appetite in me for this type of genre and this world. I love edgy. And I think that the truth is none of us are all light and none of us are all dark. Being able to explore the dichotomy and struggle that each person has in trying to walk that line, I find fascinating.

Your novel deals a lot with ideas of moral corruption in the church. Why was that a subject you were interested in exploring?

There are two ways of looking at the novel. First you have to make it work as a straightforward thriller. You have to have your bad guys, you have to have your interesting kills, you have to have the high stakes. The book is also designed with a lot of metaphors, so a lot of things aren’t exactly as they seem. In the novel, the church is supposed to represent the highest standard for man because it is the spiritual, it is the connection to God. Those that operate with a corrupt connection to God, I think those are the most guilty people. In the religious world, there are scandals every single day coming out about people of the cloth and politicians. I just find it fascinating when people live a double life of saying they are committed to one thing and they are in complete contradiction…. To have people at that level betray basic trust and things that we’ve endowed them with, makes for a fascinating story.

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You provide a lot of background about the murderer, Abraham Deggler. We know about his childhood, his passions, and we even see his need for confession and atonement. Why provide so much insight into his everyday life?

Shakespeare never really wrote about bad people; he wrote about people doing bad things. People who do bad things, for instance Richard III and Iago, from “Othello.†These men felt insulted, they felt rejected, they felt passed over — they felt what they were doing was justified. I used that because I also want the reader to be torn by the thought: “Why am I feeling sympathy for a man who is doing something so heinous?â€

It goes back to the question: What is the genesis of his dysfunction? And was he responsible for that? So he becomes a product of abuse and the horrible things committed against him. If you look at the set-up, we’re supposed to be rooting for the priest and the clergy — and I want to be clear that this is not an attack against the specific religion, this is not an attack against Catholicism. It’s against derelict spiritual leaders, no matter what faith, and a man betraying his commitment to God. Historically, we’re supposed to be rooting for the kind preachers and priest. Well here, you have a guy doing something so horrific, so terrible, and yet, once you see who these other people are in their entirety, it raises some questions in the reader. And that’s exactly what I wanted.

In “Mind Prey,†you played the part of a detective similar to your main character, Det. Quincy Cavanaugh. How do you think you relate to Det. Cavanaugh?

There’s a little bit of me in all my characters. I’m an actor, so trust me, the writing process that goes on in my house is a bit crazy because you’ve got me jumping up from my desk acting out stuff and being that 9-year-old kid that got me started in this business to begin with. I’m running around the house acting out, not just Quincy, but several characters.

Quincy is, at his heart, conflicted, but he’s a good man and he works at being a good man. And I think that’s something for us all to aspire to. Morally he is a sound man, standing on a firm foundation. And where we differ is that he’s a nonbeliever. And I thought that was great to explore, being a believer and being very clear on what my relationship with God is…. When you have your moments of doubt in God or when you’re angry with God, it was great to have a character to personify that part of you and to make him three-dimensional and put him on a journey and see where he ends up.

Why did you set the novel in the present day?

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The way that the story came about was I read an article that talked about how all of Jesus’ disciples were brutally murdered, except for John. One of the key points in doing a thriller nowadays is: How original are the kills? We’ve historically seen people kill in so many ways that we’re bored, you have to come up with some original stuff. So I thought, here is the greatest story ever told — and I started there. I thought it would be cool to take this old piece of history and make it current.

The murderer in your novel emulates the ways Jesus’ disciples were killed. What sort of research did you do?

I believe that as a writer, your first responsibility is to tell a compelling story. I think that when you’re dealing with fiction, you have to make it credible. People should not be able to tell what is factual and what is imagined, if you do it right. As far as the actual kills, I just took the structure of the kills. I read about how each apostle died, and it was really about Deggler going through the structure of the kill, that was the most important thing to me.

From a forensics point of view, I made sure that stood up and that it was true. For the medical and science details, I called a good friend of mine who used to be the tech advisor on “E.R.†The science, you want to make real. Thriller readers will call you on it …. Once I finished the book, the first thing I did was give it to two preachers and asked them how the spiritual elements held up.

Do you plan to write a second novel?

I’m finishing it up as we speak. It’s a follow-up to “Laws of Depravity.†This is a series, and it will be at least a trilogy. In the second book, I introduce new characters and they merit their own story. The first book was Quincy’s point of view, where Phee was a strong supporting character, and the second book is in Phee’s point of view, and Quincy will play a strong supporting character. The first one is “Laws of Depravity,†the second one is “Laws of Wrath†and then the third one will be called “Laws of Affliction.â€

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