In June of 2009, award-winning true crime author Ron
Chepesiuk (Gangsters of Harlem and Sergeant Smack) sat down with me to do
an interview for the New Criminologist
web site about the genesis of Luggage by
Kroger and true crime writing in general. Here’s a recap of our discussion.
Chepesiuk: For Gary Taylor, Houston Texas journalist,
writing his award-winning true crime memoir, Luggage by Kroger, was truly personal. Like any good journalist,
Taylor has turned his near death experience into a fascinating and riveting
true crime tale. What is your book about?
Taylor: Murder and adultery? But that’s too cute, isn’t it?
Taylor: Murder and adultery? But that’s too cute, isn’t it?
Chepesiuk: Well, if we
leave it there, it sounds like dozens of other true crime books.
Taylor: OK. Luggage by Kroger recounts the pivotal year in my life that included a dangerous liaison with a femme fatale lawyer named Catherine Mehaffey. She ended our affair by shooting me in the head and in the back. We met in 1979 while she was under investigation for the still-unsolved murder of a former lover she claimed as a common-law husband. I was estranged from my second wife at the time and vulnerable. Although convicted in my case and suspended from law practice for a while, Catherine went on to trigger additional murder investigations in Texas, including one 1999 Dallas case that landed her husband, Clint Shelton, in prison for a life sentence. While the story of my relationship with Catherine has been covered widely and earned me status as the poster boy for true-life fatal attraction tales, my book represents the first intimate account of this obsessive relationship. What I hope emerges is a genre-crossing book that is as much psychological thriller and mystery yarn as legal procedural and personal memoir.
Taylor: OK. Luggage by Kroger recounts the pivotal year in my life that included a dangerous liaison with a femme fatale lawyer named Catherine Mehaffey. She ended our affair by shooting me in the head and in the back. We met in 1979 while she was under investigation for the still-unsolved murder of a former lover she claimed as a common-law husband. I was estranged from my second wife at the time and vulnerable. Although convicted in my case and suspended from law practice for a while, Catherine went on to trigger additional murder investigations in Texas, including one 1999 Dallas case that landed her husband, Clint Shelton, in prison for a life sentence. While the story of my relationship with Catherine has been covered widely and earned me status as the poster boy for true-life fatal attraction tales, my book represents the first intimate account of this obsessive relationship. What I hope emerges is a genre-crossing book that is as much psychological thriller and mystery yarn as legal procedural and personal memoir.
Chepesiuk: So why did
you write this book?
Taylor: Even as these events were occurring in 1979-80, I knew that, at some point, I would have to write them down as a personal project to leave a permanent record for my descendants. I also realized I was living an important psychological and cultural story with a front row seat to criminal insanity. I believe the truth of that observation even more today, now that I have written the tale. But I never really had the time to start until just a couple of years ago. And that was probably for the best because, during the past 25 years, subsequent events demonstrated to me the full extent of the drama involved and allowed me to shape the organization of my true crime memoir into the award-winning book that is Luggage by Kroger. Friends often pestered me to write it up, with some of them even suggesting I was sitting on a literary gold mine.
Taylor: Even as these events were occurring in 1979-80, I knew that, at some point, I would have to write them down as a personal project to leave a permanent record for my descendants. I also realized I was living an important psychological and cultural story with a front row seat to criminal insanity. I believe the truth of that observation even more today, now that I have written the tale. But I never really had the time to start until just a couple of years ago. And that was probably for the best because, during the past 25 years, subsequent events demonstrated to me the full extent of the drama involved and allowed me to shape the organization of my true crime memoir into the award-winning book that is Luggage by Kroger. Friends often pestered me to write it up, with some of them even suggesting I was sitting on a literary gold mine.
Chepesiuk: But the
idea fermented for years.
Taylor: Yes, I never
really had the time until recently to pursue it. The popular reception of the
movie Fatal Attraction in 1987
triggered my first recognition of the universal appeal my story might have.
Let’s face it: Femmes fatales have served as irresistible literary devices
since Adam and Eve and Samson and Delilah. Because my story was so similar to
the movie, and included a female antagonist to rank with the classics, I became
the poster boy for a series of interviews and talk show appearances based on
the theme of true-life fatal attractions.
Chepesiuk: Tell us
about some of your appearances.
Taylor: They began
with a profile in People magazine.
That led to stops on Oprah, Regis and Sally Jesse Raphael. Those generated my
first movie deal, when one Hollywood
production unit contacted me out of the blue and optioned the rights to my
story. A script was written, but a writer’s strike sidelined production. By the
early 1990s, that script was forgotten. But my unstoppable ex-girlfriend had
completed her probation and re-emerged in Dallas
with her law license renewed. Immediately, she became a controversial legal
figure in that community, and, by 1999, police there were investigating her in
a sensational murder case of their own that culminated with the conviction and
life sentence of her husband on a murder charge. Reporters included me in their
stories as part of her back story—and as the only target in her life who had
gained a conviction on her. Immediately Hollywood
called again.
Chepesiuk: Did you
have any better success with Hollywood?
Taylor: This
time the script led to production, and I collected $65,000 in 2004 simply for
sharing the rights to my tale. But the movie, starring Melanie Griffith and
Esai Morales. After receiving the fee for my rights in 2004, however, I decided
I needed to start writing my own story. I began dabbling with the narrative,
showed it to a few journalist friends, received encouragement and got serious
about finishing.
Chepesiuk: How would
you describe your book’s niche within the true crime genre?
Taylor: It plays
well as both a serial killer tale and a psycho-thriller. I do manage to get
inside the head of a woman suspected in a string of murders. I am the only one
of her targets ever to get a conviction. There is mention of three murders in
my book, but rumors of others are still around. Her conviction in my case
resulted in suspension of her law license for eight years—most are amazed she
ever got it back
Chepesiuk: Why did you
go the self-publish route?
Taylor: I opted to
self-publish in 2008 because I was too impatient to spend time seeking an
agent. My plan was to enter it in contests and see if the story had much
universal appeal. I think the results so far indicate it does. If more sales
come from that, so much the better, but, let’s face it: I only have about
$3,000 invested in this book so I’m playing with house money here thanks to
Hollywood. What do I have to lose?
Chepesiuk: Was it hard for you to stay
out of your story and make it objective?
Taylor: I was
determined to take a detached approach and use humor to illustrate my tale
because I did not want the book to read like some sort of bitter attack on a
cruel world that had done me wrong—as some true crime memoirs turn out. I’ve
never been bitter about what happened to me, but I still feared it might be
seen in that light. As a lifelong student of literature and nonfiction, I also
wanted to create more than a mere slash-and-burn true crime thriller. I
envisioned something along the lines of Fatal
Attraction meets Angela’s Ashes—a so-called “nobody memoir” with an authentic
dramatic tale. Since I could tell my story in the first-person, I decided
to make it more interesting by at least trying to channel Mickey Spillane. I
became a poor man’s Mike Hammer and my girlfriend became the femme fatale trying
to bring him down.
Like any good work
of literature, my book also has a strong subplot and that actually proved the
hardest to write. It concerns the end of my second marriage, which
happened simultaneously as part of my fatal attraction story and resulted in my
assumption of custody of my two young daughters as a surprise ending to my
book. So, the subplot reads more like Fatal
Attraction meets Kramer vs. Kramer,
and the process of writing that portion forced me to turn myself inside out. I
have pulled no punches covering anything I’ve done in my life. The intersection
of that subplot with the main story creates the metaphor for my unusual title, Luggage by Kroger.
These events
occurred at a time when I was sleeping on a buddy’s couch while estranged from my
second wife, driving around town broke in a $200 car and toting my dirty
laundry in a paper grocery sack. Into this desperation suddenly walked a woman
who solved all my problems by becoming the only problem I could have. And, as a
self-publisher, I enjoyed using that image for the first cover design of my
book. I found clip art of a sultry, film noir-style dame pointing a pistol and
told the designer: “Stick her in a grocery sack full of dirty clothes. That’s
my story!”
Chepesiuk: What were
some of the major sources and resources you used in writing the book?
Taylor: I have always
been a dedicated pack rat. I kept a journal back when all this was happening. I
realized I was romantically involved with someone important, even if she was a
psycho-babe. I wanted to psychoanalyze her and study her. There were also
depositions and trial transcripts. Much of the book includes testimony from
three different trials. I accumulated the documents as part of the 1987 movie
deal, when the production company reimbursed me to purchase them for their
script. I simply made extra copies and kept them. I recreated some
of our conversations from memory. I am satisfied I am close enough. Readers
will just have to determine for themselves whether my 40-year reputation as a journalist
deserves their trust. I had a law professor pal read the book in an early stage,
and he gave it a clean bill of legal health.
Chepesiuk: Who are some of the true crime writers you like and have learned from?
Taylor: True crime has always been a favorite genre of mine. Early influences were Joseph Wambaugh (The Onion Field), Peter Maas (Serpico) and Tommy Thompson (Serpentine and Blood and Money). Thompson in particular influenced me because I was the first reporter on the scene of the 1972 John Hill murder inHouston and then had to
watch while Thompson turned that story into a bestseller. I mention this
incident in my book. Rick Nelson with The
Cop Who Wouldn’t Quit also served as an influence because he was a
colleague at The Houston Post in the
1970s. His book of a Houston
murder case from those years is fascinating. Regarding more recent direct
influences on this book, I have to mention two. From Clifford Irving’s The Hoax I learned the importance of
harnessing humor to entertain in explaining my relationship with an obviously
dangerous woman. And, from James McManus’s Positively
Fifth Street, I learned the power of creating an alter ego to humorously
blame for all my shortcomings. He called his alter ego “Bad Jim,” and I simply
called mine “the rogue.” I had fun writing about my “evil twin” and, I hope it
helps the reader to forgive me my sins.
Chepesiuk: What are your future plans as a writer?
Taylor: I work full time as a senior writer for an oil and gas business newsletter and plan to continue doing that until I retire, hopefully in about four years. While that may sound pretty stale, I have to say I’ve managed to work my courts and police background into that job. I ended up covering one of the criminal trials of former Enron CEO Ken Lay, and I did a series of articles a couple of years ago about a young industry CFO who embezzled $70 million from his oil rig company. It seems that crime reporting finds me wherever I go! I would like to do some more ghostwriting of memoirs or even another book if I find a good story to tell. I have been writing something every day since 1968, so I imagine I will find something if I have any time on my hands. It’s become a habit after all these years.
Chepesiuk: Who are some of the true crime writers you like and have learned from?
Taylor: True crime has always been a favorite genre of mine. Early influences were Joseph Wambaugh (The Onion Field), Peter Maas (Serpico) and Tommy Thompson (Serpentine and Blood and Money). Thompson in particular influenced me because I was the first reporter on the scene of the 1972 John Hill murder in
Chepesiuk: What are your future plans as a writer?
Taylor: I work full time as a senior writer for an oil and gas business newsletter and plan to continue doing that until I retire, hopefully in about four years. While that may sound pretty stale, I have to say I’ve managed to work my courts and police background into that job. I ended up covering one of the criminal trials of former Enron CEO Ken Lay, and I did a series of articles a couple of years ago about a young industry CFO who embezzled $70 million from his oil rig company. It seems that crime reporting finds me wherever I go! I would like to do some more ghostwriting of memoirs or even another book if I find a good story to tell. I have been writing something every day since 1968, so I imagine I will find something if I have any time on my hands. It’s become a habit after all these years.