Larry Bograd is an award-winning, widely translated author whose works have been published by Farrar/Straus, Harper, and Macmillan. Bograd eventually turned to playwriting, screenwriting and documentary filmmaking. He grew up and currently lives in Denver, Colorado.


SunLit: Tell us this bookโ€™s backstory โ€“ whatโ€™s it about and what inspired you to write it? 

Larry Bograd: Two weeks after my 13th birthday, my physician father killed himself. This trauma led me to spend the next four decades learning what I could about him and what may have led to his death. Iโ€™ve written and rewritten the memoir many times as new information and insights arrived, and after I decided on a final narrative structure, tone, and chronology.

UNDERWRITTEN BY

Each week, The Colorado Sun and Colorado Humanities & Center For The Book feature an excerpt from a Colorado book and an interview with the author. Explore the SunLit archives at coloradosun.com/sunlit.

SunLit: Place the excerpt you selected in context. How does it fit into the book as a whole and why did you select it? 

Bograd: The excerpt represents the opening chapters of the memoir. I selected it to provide readers with the central plot, themes, characters, and emotional tone that unfold throughout โ€œBlood Flow.โ€ 

SunLit: What influences and/or experiences informed the project before you sat down to write? 

Bograd: Two traumatic experiences informed the project. My fatherโ€™s suicide just after my 13th birthday and my heart bypass surgery when I was 53 years old. Having written for the stage and screen, I was influenced by how various writers handle monologues and first-person narration.

SunLit: What did the process of writing this book add to your knowledge and understanding of your craft and/or the subject matter? 

Bograd: I wrote and revised โ€œBlood Flowโ€ dozens of times over many decades before I โ€œgot it right.โ€ These hours and my experience teaching creative writing at Metropolitan State University of Denver (MSUD) helped me hone my narrative skills.

SunLit: What were the biggest challenges you faced in writing this book? 

“Blood Flow”

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Bograd: At first, the biggest challenge was getting three separate hospitals to grant me access to my dadโ€™s inpatient psychiatric files. Over time, the biggest challenge was craft-based: finding the best narrative structure, chapter length, order of information, adding emotional depth and appropriate humor and so on.

SunLit: What do you want readers to take from this book? 

Bograd: That major trauma never escapes an individual, but one can integrate it into their life in productive ways.

SunLit: Why was suicide such a taboo topic when your father died? 

Bograd: In many ways, suicide remains a taboo topic. Some cultures treat it as a crime. Other cultures refuse to accept it. Itโ€™s interesting how many readers have contacted me to share their own stories of a family member taking their own life. Fortunately, there is much more awareness of mental illnesses like depression and better treatment options than in the 1960s when my father died.

SunLit: Tell us about your next project. 

Bograd: Iโ€™m completing a short, satirical novel about how contemporary life is increasingly affected by AI, surveillance, paranoia and vengeful politics.

A few more quick items

Currently on your nightstand for recreational reading: โ€œA Marriage at Sea: A True Story of Love, Obsession, and Shipwreckโ€ by Sophie Elmhirst, โ€œThe Idiotโ€ by Fyodor Dostoyevsky, โ€œUnderland: A Deep Time Journeyโ€ by Robert Macfarlane, and โ€œThe Stone World,โ€ a novel by the masterful Joel Agee

First book you remember really making an impression on you as a kid: โ€œMy Side of the Mountainโ€ by Jean Craighead George

Best writing advice youโ€™ve ever received: Donโ€™t expect to write a decent novel before the age of 40.

Favorite fictional literary character: Jeeves the valet in many hilarious books by P.G. Wodehouse

Literary guilty pleasure (title or genre): Nonfiction books about science

Digital, print or audio โ€” favorite medium to consume literature: Print

One book youโ€™ve read multiple times: โ€œThe Great Gatsbyโ€

Other than writing utensils, one thing you must have within reach when you write: Water bottle

Best antidote for writerโ€™s block: Keep in mind that, at first, youโ€™re only writing for yourself, so donโ€™t worry about what others might think: be free, playful, and let writing flow, whether you end up โ€œusingโ€ it or not.

Type of Story: Q&A

An interview to provide a relevant perspective, edited for clarity and not fully fact-checked.

This byline is used for articles and guides written collaboratively by The Colorado Sun reporters, editors and producers.