date published: November 19, 2007
David Hosp
by Josh B. Wardrop
Massachusetts attorney-cum-novelist David Hosp has made his mark in the legal thriller genre with three acclaimed novels, the latest of which, Innocence, is set in and around Boston. Hosp reads from Innocence on November 29 at 7:30 p.m. at the Charlestown Branch Library. Call 617-242-1248 for information.
Q: How did you make the journey from the legal world to the literary one?
A: By accident. Writing was just a hobby for me that I pursued while riding
the commuter ferry to Boston everyday, and I fell into a situation where an agent
read my manuscript.
Q: Do you get tired of the names “John Grisham” and “Scott Turow”
invariably being mentioned in your reviews?
A: I don’t take any offense, certainly (laughs). I understand that
they’ve become shorthand for describing books in the legal thriller genre.
Q: As a still-practicing attorney, has your “moonlighting” earned you
notoriety in the Massachusetts legal community?
A: I take my share of good-natured ribbing, but the response has been mostly
positive. My partners understand that my writing’s never gotten in the way
of the law—my clients are my top priority.
Q: Your current book Innocence was inspired by work you did with The Innocence Project,
a group that helps exonerate wrongly convicted plaintiffs. Were there ethical issues
in writing a book based on real-life events?
A: I follow pretty strict guidelines. My characters aren’t based on
real people, and I work to ensure the specifics of incidents in my books aren’t
connected to anything in real life. With Innocence, the closest connections to reality
were the elements of investigation and evidence gathering I’ve learned about.
Q: Your next book deals with one of Boston’s most famous unsolved crimes, correct?
A: Yes, I’m writing a book about the (1990) art heist at the Isabella
Stewart Gardner Museum—more about the search for the paintings, actually,
than the theft itself.