Biff
Mitchell Writes World’s First Laundromance
Released on
= March 17, 2005, 2:54 pm
Press Release
Author = biffmitchell.com
Industry = Entertainment
Press Release
Summary = Author Biff Mitchell’s novel, Heavy Load, may be
the start of a new genre of fiction: the laundromance. Heavy Load,
originally published in Australia, is now a self-published book
available at eBookAd and CyberRead.
Press Release
Body = “Heavy Load was inspired by a laundromat,” said
Mr. Mitchell. “It was inspired by all the hours I spent sitting
around in a laundromat watching my clothing spinning around in the
dryer. It’s the sort of thing that puts you in a reflective
mood. I began to wonder what stories a laundromat would tell if
it could talk.”
“From
then on,” said Mr. Mitchell, “I began taking a notebook
to the laundromat. I studied the other people doing their laundry
and made detailed descriptions of them. I made guesses about their
lives based on what I could see of their laundry. I listened to
the sounds of the laundromat and tried to recreate them with words.I
studied the floor, the walls, the ceiling, the machines…every
inch of the building, and eventually filled four notebooks.”
On one of these occasions, Mr. Mitchell narrowly escaped a violent
confrontation. “I was watching a very large and mean-looking
man who was dumping his white and colored clothing into the same
machine. I was half-tempted to warn him, but I was furiously making
notes. He noticed me watching him and walked over to where I was
sitting. He was about 30 pounds heavier than me. He asked me if
I wanted a picture or a punch in the face. I told him neither. I
was glad he didn’t notice that I was making notes.
I’d just described him as one of the ugliest cusses I’d
ever seen. I used him as a pervert in the novel.”
“For back
stories,” said Mr. Mitchell, “I went to the notes I’d
made while working as a bartender for six years. My customers would
get drunk and tell me their stories. The drunker they were, the
more detailed the stories, and the more personal. They told me things
they would likely not even have told their dogs or cats. At the
end of each night, I went home and made notes, thousands of pages
of notes.”
“Heavy
Load is based on observation and listening,” said Mr. Mitchell.
“That’s what gives it the gritty, and sometimes seamy,
feel that Deborah Fisher in Tregolwyn Reviews describes as ‘the
unfashionable idea that ordinary, everyday life is worth observing’
in her review of the book.”
“I tried
to create a window into ordinary life,” said Mr. Mitchell,
“by studying ordinary people and not elevating their lives
to some kind of literary plateau, but by just keeping things simple
and everyday.”
Depicting everyday
life is one of the six elements of a laundromance, according to
Mr. Mitchell. “You can’t hide the stains and dirt on
your laundry,” he said. “The laundromat sees it all,
which leads us into the second element of a laundromance: it must
be narrated by the laundromat.”
Heavy Load is
in fact narrated by the Washing Green Laundromat, “the biggest,
coolest, most-up-to-date, user-friendly, human/machine integrated,
full service laundromat in town.”
“I used
a sentient, mind and body-reading laundromat as the narrator,”
said Mr. Mitchell, “because a laundromat is a place where
people have to wait, a place where people think and daydream. The
laundromat has plenty of time to delve into the lives of its customers.
It’s the perfect storyteller.”
“And,
of course, there must be an element of romance,” said Mr.
Mitchell. “In Heavy Load, the romance is a triangle of interest
between two men and a woman. They eye each other. They think about
each other as the laundromat explores their past lives. They watch
for opportunities with each other, but they never speak a word to
each
other. That would break the triangle and cut the story short. And
that’s why one of the elements of a laundromat is that none
of the romantically involved characters are allowed to speak to
each other. Not a word.”
According to
Mr. Mitchell, a laundromance must include at least one laundry tip.
“But there’s plenty of tips in Heavy Load,” he
said. “I spent hours cruising the Web for tips and information
on laundry. I found some really cool stuff on the Tide site, and
I found entire lists of laundry tips written by people who use laundromats.
I even discovered the secret of the missing sock. It’s in
the first chapter.”
The last element
of a laundromance is the theme: “things get dirty, things
get clean…”“A
laundromat is very much a place of regeneration,” said Mr.
Mitchell. “People bring in dirty clothing and leave with clean
clothing. There’s something optimistic and uplifting about
having newly cleaned clothing, almost like having a new wardrobe,
except that tags and pins have already been removed. There’s
even a reflective and zen-like element inherent in the various cycles
of washing and drying and the folding and sorting. It’s a
calming experience. Then, you wear the clothing and it gets dirty
again. Just like life, it’s an endless cycle of problems and
solutions, balance and imbalance, action and inaction. That’s
why I like the cover by Brock Parks so much. The Yin-Yang symbol
in the machine cuts straight to the main theme of the book.”
Called a “creative
masterpiece” by Cynthia Penn in WordWeaving, Heavy Load is
a novel of optimism. “I believe in our ability to make ourselves
better than we are, and to discover great nobility in even the most
ordinary lives,” said Mr. Mitchell. “What better stage
for this discovery than a laundromat?”
Heavy Load is
available in ebook format at eBookAd
(http://www.ebookad.com/eb.php3?ebookid
Web Site = http://www.biffmitchell.com
Contact Details
= Biff Mitchell
biff@biffmitchell.com
506-455-3678
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