Fictional author authors fiction

Clever. It’s a lit­tle bit of a dis­turb­ing prece­dent to set, but nev­er­the­less clever. Here is a nov­el writ­ten as a tie-in to ABC’s tele­vi­sion show Cas­tle. Cas­tle is a show about sus­pense nov­el­ist Rick Cas­tle (played by Fire­fly’s Nathan Fil­lion) who rides along with NYPD homi­cide detec­tive Kate Beck­ett (Stana Kat­ic). The pair comes right out of the tra­di­tion of screw­ball com­e­dy and the show is gen­er­al­ly fun­ny, car­ried most­ly by Fil­lion’s comedic delivery.

Fil­lion’s char­ac­ter, Rick Cas­tle, writes a nov­el inspired by his expe­ri­ences shad­ow­ing Beck­ett, and to build inter­est in the show, ABC had a nov­el writ­ten and mar­ket­ed with Rick Cas­tle as the pur­port­ed author. The dis­turb­ing thing about it is that the actu­al author of the nov­el is nev­er cred­it­ed. It’s a mys­tery argued on fan web­sites and I won’t add to the speculation.

The nov­el itself is dis­ap­point­ing. Though view­ers of the show are led to under­stand that Heat Wave is based on Beck­et­t’s char­ac­ter, in fact the entire book reads as though it were a screen­play for Cas­tle with the names changed and Cas­tle him­self writ­ten as a Gary Stu ver­sion of him­self who ends up get­ting the girl, though that’s not how it hap­pens in the show. Castle’s name has been trans­par­ent­ly changed to Rook, Beck­et­t’s of course to Nik­ki Heat, and every oth­er char­ac­ter from the show makes an appear­ance in the book in exact­ly the same role they inhab­it in the show.

It’s not that the book isn’t entertaining—it is. It’s fun­ny and well-paced. What’s dis­ap­point­ing is that it under­mines the illu­sion that the char­ac­ter Rick Cas­tle is actu­al­ly a good writer. It takes some skill to write a mys­tery nov­el like this, but in the con­text of the series it means that Cas­tle writes only about peo­ple and sit­u­a­tions he knows. There’s no sly or sub­tle hints that these char­ac­ters bear resem­blance to their «real» fic­tion­al coun­ter­parts. They are the char­ac­ters any view­er of the show would know, with names changed.

The whole point of mar­ket­ing a tie-in nov­el like this is to extend the myth of the show. If the net­work sim­ply want­ed to cash in on the pop­u­lar­i­ty of the show they could have licensed the fran­chise to authors the way that count­less tele­vi­sion shows have. But the very idea of releas­ing the book writ­ten by the fic­tion­al author is sup­posed to enrich and deep­en the expe­ri­ence of the world we see in the show. This was done near­ly twen­ty years ago with the show Twin Peaks and the Secret Diary of Lau­ra Palmer. The Secret Diary pro­vid­ed clues to the show that view­ers would­n’t see just by watch­ing. If you want­ed to know who killed Lau­ra Palmer, you could go through her diaries and search for things that might explain some of the mystery.

ABC entire­ly missed the oppor­tu­ni­ty to do this. Not only did the book fail to reveal any­thing about the char­ac­ters, it under­cut the illu­sion that the title char­ac­ter is as skilled at his craft as view­ers had been led to believe. Instead of deep­en­ing the read­er’s invest­ment in the show, it reduced the read­er’s stake in it.