The Narcissism of Small Differences is Dennis Dorgan's first novel. He recently retired from a lifetime of working with private and government agencies that took on the heart-breaking issues confronting low-income persons in our country: domestic violence, homelessness, hunger, unemployment and systemic racism. So, instead of writing the Great American Novel, he wrote a carload of funding proposals and similar documents. They steered millions of dollars to legal aid and other organizations that serve low-income families and communities. It was important work. He claims that his interest in politics, history, law enforcement, criminal gangs, dark matter, Ojibwe culture, the subconscious mind, dreams, psychopaths, the many forms of narcissism, and the City of St. Paul's criminal-friendly past, all came together in a dream that led him to write this novel. He lives happily on the shores of one of Minnesota's ten-thousand lakes with his wife, Debra, dog, Finnegan, and an invisible water sprite that keeps plugging new characters into his psyche.
An Interview with Literary Titan:
The Narcissism of Small Differences follows a man with a special ability to read people who is tasked with solving a peculiar murder case. What was the inspiration for the setup to your story?
I was actually writing what I thought would be a sci-fi short story about craniopagus twins whose streams of consciousness had melded together. They had access to each other’s every thought and could even watch each other’s dreams. But that story fell apart when I realized their unique relationship couldn’t work if they were separated. That’s the moment when a new idea was hatched that became the book. I had a much clearer idea of who Conor was at that point.
It was also around that time that I was given a copy of Seamus Heaney’s, Door Into The Dark, a book of poems that were, of course, quite dark. From it I had an image of the poet as the guardian of the door. It was a short leap from the poet to Conor Delaney.
Conor is an intriguing and well-developed character. What were some driving ideals behind your character’s development?
What a terrifically interesting question. The first ideal that he had to model was that of the anti-pulp fiction private eye. Early in the book, Camille tells him: “[you] have never been a boozer, nor are you a womanizer, a veteran, a former cop or a loner. You don’t own a gun and apparently have never been the target of either criminal or police intimidation.” She goes on listing more of his unconventional traits before ending with, “I have a feeling, Mr. Delaney, that you’ll never make it big as a pulp fiction detective.”
Then, he had to have some qualities that set him apart from other men. These turned out to be his ability to see into the dark and his proficiency with kinesics and hypnosis. Keep in mind that each of these abilities is a two-edged sword. Grandmother Raven warns him that he will not always appreciate his “gift” of seeing into the dark. The same is true of the other two.
Finally, he had to be genuinely empathetic. The opposite of a psychopath. He had to know and feel for people of all kinds, recognizing that everyone is a victim and/or beneficiary of the history and culture of the society within which they came of age.
I also wanted him to be an enigma. For instance, he hypnotizes Kyle Lilly and the book doesn’t tell us if Kyle thinks Delaney is the world’s greatest man because he really believes it of his own free will, or if Delaney used hypnosis to control him.
There’s more, but let’s leave it there or we’ll have to call in the nearest shrink to give us a full-blown psycho-analysis of Conor Delaney. I’d rather leave that task to the academics.
What were some themes that were important for you to explore in this book?
The title names the principal theme I wanted to investigate. I was particularly interested in the ways in which large criminal organizations reflected their legal counterpart’s values and behaviors. Freud initially coined the phrase to explain why we fight more mercilessly with people who are most like us. That’s why the Irish civil wars are prominently featured in the book. Talk about your narcissism of small differences.
But I also wanted to take a good look at the ways in which our subconscious mind, and dreams, influence us. The Ojibwe believe that the world of dreams, visions and the subconscious mind are every bit as real and important as our material world.
Memory and what it really is, or isn’t, is a related and vital matter I wanted to include. Human memory is generally fallible to a fault. Given that one’s sense of self and place in the world, is based on memories, it seems as though we all should be spending more time digging into them.
I also wanted to do something with the idea of the city and used the City of St. Paul as the model. St. Paul actually did have an agreement with gangsters and had officially recognized crime bosses. This was during the 1920 – 30s. Perhaps earlier. I thought it would be interesting to simply stretch that system into the past and future and see what it might look like.
Then there’s the idea of justice. Plato said, “If we should watch a city coming into being in speech… would we also see its justice coming into being, and its injustice?” In other words, would the idea of justice in a city like the book’s St. Paul, be significantly different from what is generally accepted in real American cities today? Just as critical, would they have differing senses of injustice?
What is the next book that you are working on and when will it be available?
It is going to have many of the same characters as Narcissism, but I plan to focus on Gene Swearingen, the attorney. I don’t want to say much more about it because it could, and probably will be, very different from my current plans for it. My fourth and final draft of Narcissism was just completely different from the first one.