The Mean Season; The Traveler; Day of Reckoning; Just Cause and Hart's War, which were also made into movies; The Shadow Man, another Edgar nominee; State of Mind; The Analyst; and The Madman's Tale. Katzenbach has been a criminal court reporter for the Miami Herald and Miami News and a featured writer for the Herald's Tropic magazine.
He applied the Page 69 Test to his new novel, The Architect, with the following results:
Well, first off, this is what they say in Latin America is “complicado...”. Readers turning to that page in The Architect might get the right idea – if intrigue is what they’re hunting for. Here is what is on page 69: the architect of the book title gets her first assignment from her new employer. Instead of being explicit --each element of that assignment is a cryptic mystery.Visit John Katzenbach's website.
The set-up of The Architect is this: A brilliant young woman graduating at the top of her architecture school class at a moment of personal stress and intensity – a mother that has suddenly disappeared and is seemingly dead and an ex-boyfriend who abruptly starts to stalk her -- is asked to design a memorial by an anonymous wealthy patron. It is the proverbial offer she cannot refuse. He gives her six names to investigate – people he alleges influenced his life profoundly. But as Sloane Connolly researches each name, she discovers that none were particularly worthy of memorializing. Instead of being valuable, they exhibited cruelty, betrayal, bullying, addictions and the sorts of routine evils that make us swallow hard and be grateful that those people aren’t in our lives. Despicable is more accurate, she learns, than saintly. The why of memorializing these names and the what did they do to her employer dominates her unsettled feelings.
And – adding to her unease – she learns each of the six died in unusual and undeniably savage fashions.
Her inquiries lead her into a twisted history, a whirlpool of danger --- where her own past is a major thread, and her life and her future are thrust on balance scales. What she doesn’t know about who she is puts her at great risk.
Page 69 exhibits a first step – one that is slippery and unsteady – but a stride that my character is determined to take. In a fashion, much is said on that page – but it is the undercurrent of what is being asked of young Sloane Connolly that creates the inherent tension in The Architect. What lies hidden beneath the surface is the heat that brings the story to explosion. And that is what is hinted at on page 69.
Like I said above, “complicado.”
But from the author’s perspective – essential.
My Book, The Movie: Red 1-2-3.
Writers Read: John Katzenbach (January 2014).
The Page 69 Test: Red 1-2-3.
Writers Read: John Katzenbach.
Q&A with John Katzenbach.
--Marshal Zeringue













