Deborah Levison’s life has two parts: the first in Canada, where she attended the Royal Conservatory of Music and the University of Toronto, and the second in Connecticut, with three children, two doodles, and one husband.
She's an award-winning writer, published in national and international media, and is the recipient of the State of Connecticut Martin Luther King 2024 “Courage Like Coretta Award” for raising awareness of world atrocities through her writing and speaking.
Her first book, THE CRATE, is a nonfiction, true crime story about a murder that involved her family. A NEST OF SNAKES followed, inspired by real-life lawsuits against elite New England private schools. A NOVEL CRIME, her latest, is about a desperate romance writer whose chance encounter with a glamorous celebrity novelist sends her down a rabbit hole of mayhem.
Debbie’s dream of storytelling began one summer night by a camp bonfire as she listened to a ghost story: The Monkey's Paw. The memory still makes her shiver.
Synopsis:Since A Novel Crime is meant to be funny, I love that one reader said in a review she laughed so hard she had to use an inhaler. Not that I would wish respiratory distress on anyone… but a little wheeze here and there is kind of flattering, right?
Before that, The Jerusalem Post called my true crime book, The Crate, “exquisite” and “a brilliant story” that “should be used in classrooms;” and one bookstagrammer posted that my first novel, A Nest of Snakes, was a “bloody masterpiece.” I try to remind myself of compliments like these on days when it seems like everything is going wrong.
What is something new you learned while writing A Novel Crime?
To get inside the head of the bad girl. In my first book, I recounted the discovery and investigation of a gruesome crime – a murder that involved my family –from our point of view, not the murderer’s, of course. In my second book, the main character was a middle-aged man who’d suffered physical and sexual abuse at an elite New England private school. Again: I wrote from the victim’s point of view, not the abusers’.
But A Novel Crime tracks the downward spiral of a desperate woman who goes down a rabbit hole of mayhem and is deluded enough to justify her reprehensible actions, all of which was so much fun to write.
If A Novel Crime was made into a movie, who would you cast in the leading roles?
Thank you for this question—hopefully we’re sending good juju into the movie-verse!
There are four female leads plus a whole supporting cast. Marcy Jo Codburn, around whom the story revolves, morphs from blah beige romance novelist wannabe to off-the-rails criminal mastermind. I can totally see Elizabeth Banks or Kristen Bell in this role, and I imagine Angourie Rice, from The Last Thing He Told Me, as Marcy’s studious, judgmental daughter, Beatrice.
Then we have the glamorous celebrity author Francesca Barber, portrayed by Rose Byrne. Or maybe Amanda Peet? Unsure. However, I am sure that Francesca’s stunning young daughter, Hollywood It-Girl Aspen Barber, should be played by Sara Waisglass, who stars as Maxine in Ginny & Georgia. Sara’s a Toronto girl with a ton of acting credentials under her belt. Her parents also happen to be dear friends of mine… but no favoritism here, I swear.
What is the last book you read that you would recommend?
Argh, that’s like having to pick your favorite child. It depends on the day, and even then, I wouldn’t want to hurt the others’ feelings. I’ve recently read so many great books by thriller-author friends of mine it’s hard to choose, so I will go off-genre and recommend Circe. Madeline Miller’s writing is so rich and lyrical, some of her prose is permanently seared into my brain (“his mouth stretched around his laughter” and “humbling women seems to be a chief pastime of the gods.”) Song of Achilles is up next.
If your life was a TV series, which celebrity would you want to narrate it?
If we were to visit you right now, what are some places you would take us to see?
I’m in Toronto as I write this, and there are endless options for sightseeing, dining, major league sports, and nightlife. It’s the fourth largest city in North America but has ten million trees (a fifth of its area is parkland!) so it’s charming as well as urban. It’s also incredibly diverse: take a walk down any street and you’ll hear dozens of different languages. Do I sound like a tour guide?
To answer your question, though, I’d take you to the CN Tower, the tallest free-standing structure in the western hemisphere—and I’d make you do the Edge Walk, this insane thing where you put on a harness and frolic around this narrow metal grate at the top of the tower, over a thousand feet above the Earth. People literally lean out over the edge! I feel queasy just looking at the videos on YouTube. And no, I won’t go up there with you. Ever.
Thanks to Deborah for visiting with us and for sharing her book with our readers.
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