Please
welcome Dietrich Kalteis to the blog today. In
addition to the guest post on the blog today, Dietrich will be back on the blog
this Sunday with an excerpt from his new book.
Under an Outlaw Moon follows
the true story of Bennie and Stella Mae Dickson. He’s reckless and she’s an
outsider longing to fit in. When they pull off a bank robbery to celebrate her
sixteenth birthday, their lives take a turn that they never could have
imagined.
While researching for my novel Under an Outlaw Moon, also set in the 1930s, I came upon the story of Bennie and Stella in
an old news story, and I was intrigued. They were newlyweds when they committed their
first bank robbery in Elkton, South Dakota, right around Stella Mae’s sixteenth
birthday. Once in the bank, they drew guns and were faced with the vault’s time
lock, having to wait it out for twenty minutes.
Without a shot being fired, they ended up getting away with just over
twenty-one hundred dollars, driving across the state border hiding out at
Bennie’s family farm in Tyler, Minnesota.
A couple of quiet months and Bennie was thinking about a bigger heist,
promising Stella the good life was coming. Walking into the bank in Brookings,
South Dakota, only a few miles from the Elkton robbery, they were faced with another time
lock, having to wait this one out for an hour and a half before the vault
popped open. Refusing to take off empty handed, Bennie posed as a bank
inspector, his shotgun and pistol kept out of sight below the
counter, compelling the bank staff to deal with the customers as if nothing was
wrong, promising nobody would get hurt. Stella stood like a sentry by the door
as over fifty customers came and went, doing their banking. The couple walked out of there with over seventeen thousand in cash, plus another
sixteen thousand in stocks. Keeping their cool a second time, they pulled it
off without a soul being harmed.
The media dubbed them ‘the time lock bandits’. And although they
committed just two robberies, and did it without a shot being fired — a far cry
from more notorious criminals of the era like Dillinger and the Barrows — the Dicksons ended up at the top of the FBIs most-wanted
list. J. Edgar Hoover considered them Bonnie-and-Clyde copycats, and he wanted
to stop them from gaining the folk-hero status that other criminals had gained.
With considerable influence on the media, he
wanted them stopped, putting his agency, resources and manpower behind a
coast-to-coast manhunt, wanting the Dicksons brought down dead or alive.
In getting to know the couple, I found two beings clinging to each
other, one wounded and one misguided, dealing with something they got caught up in. In spite of his past scrape with the law, there was a sense of
fairness about Bennie in the way he dealt with people that crossed his path.
And in spite of her naivety, there was a growing depth to Stella that went well
beyond her years. She came from an abusive home,
her father walking out on the family at an early age. After she met Bennie, she
saw her way out of her hometown and her past life, looking to a brighter
future.
Through my research, I came to understand how the hard times shaped
them and their choices. In spite of having to run from the law, they remained
devoted to each other and there were close ties to both their
families. How they were depicted in the media was in sharp contrast to who they
really were; and how they were hunted down was brutal and unjust. And that’s
what inspired me to want to tell their story.
I found out everything I could about the Dicksons, and the way of life
during those hard times in the midwest. There were numerous texts, plenty of FBI files
from those times, daily newspapers, along with personal accounts and photos. I
compiled the details I wanted to include, laying out the sequence of events
before I started the first draft. Adding some
color and fleshing out the characters, I worked to bring the scenes to life.
This was a departure from my usual approach to writing fiction, in which I
start with a single idea and grow it into a chapter, researching as I go, and
moving on from scene to scene.
The story shifts from her POV to his, then back again. As I have in
other novels, I used a lot of dialogue to carry the scenes forward and paint the world around
them. That was my favorite part of writing the book, getting to know them and
writing their words, letting the characters come to life and do their own
talking. At times, I felt like I was just typing
their words and following their actions.
I hope anyone who picks up the novel enjoys it as much as I did while writing it.
Dietrich Kalteis is the award-winning author of Ride the Lightning (bronze medal winner, 2015 Independent Publisher Book Awards, for best regional fiction), The Deadbeat Club, Triggerfish, House of Blazes (silver medal winner, 2017 Independent Publisher Book Awards, for best historical fiction), Zero Avenue, Poughkeepsie Shuffle, Call Down the Thunder, Cradle of the Deep, and Under an Outlaw Moon. His novel The Deadbeat Club has been translated to German, entitled Shootout, and 50 of his short stories have also been published internationally. He lives with his family on Canada’s West Coast. More info at https://dietrichkalteis.com/
Bonnie and Clyde, another bandit couple, who robbed banks in the Midwest stayed near my hometown in Joplin, MO. In 1933 there was a shoot out. I always wondered what attracted the couple to each other and their criminal activity. I can't wait to read your book.
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