BOOKMONGER A Northwest thriller ‘Cut by Cut’ offers a twisting take on a fictional film scene grip Steve Olin have outsized ambitions. Restaurateur Susan Kauffman is the self-styled faux mama of the local film industry. And who is Sollie Berg – a media mogul, or a shrink? If you’re looking for a noir thriller to match the wintry mood of the season, you need look no further than Patricia Vaccarino’s take on the This week’s book unsavory side of commercial film and video production in her latest ‘Cut by Cut’ by Patricia Vaccarino novel, “Cut by Cut.” Modus Operandi Books – 292 pp — $14.95 The author, who splits her time between Manzanita and Seattle, chose the latter as the setting for this dark tale of sex, violence, power, Before 24 hours is up, two of betrayal and incessant rain. these players will be murdered, and Taking place over the course of most of the others will become sus- one stormy Thursday in November, pects – at least in the reader’s mind. the circadian novel unfolds over a The novel toys with our concep- tions of reality. As we see through set of chapters and scenes told out the warped lens of each charac- of sequence, though each chapter is marked by time code, a system used ter’s experience, can there really be such a thing as a reliable narrator? by filmmakers to synchronize coor- dination of time-based media. So as Whose version of the story can we Vaccarino delivers this story in dis- trust? And as we get pulled into the jointed fragments, told from differ- lives of these people, who traffic in ent viewpoints over the course of 24 the business of advertising and psy- hours, the careful reader can use the chological manipulation, might we extrapolate caution- time codes to piece ary lessons for our together a chronol- THIS IS A ogy of the machi- own lives? CUTTHROAT nations of Seattle’s Vaccarino also BUSINESS. ‘CUT plays with the chaotic film com- munity, and the BY CUT’ IS BOTH ambiguity of the crime that occurs “Cut by Cut” title. A GRUESOME within it. Who is doing the AND AN Here are some of cutting, and what is ENGROSSING the puzzle pieces: getting cut? There WHODUNIT. Mia Hill has are haircuts, film repeating night- cuts, cutting edge mares of her abusive husband’s styles, self-harm cutting – and the murder, but no one she can really cutting short of lives. talk to except her housekeeper. There is graphic seduction and Commercial director Harry Hill, sex in this novel, as well as graphic who cuts a larger-than-life swath violence. There is coarse language. through Seattle’s film community, And, as the author tells it, while the has no time for Mia’s nonsense, no film industry may deliver a nice and time for his kids, no time for his shiny final product, the behind-the- neurotic producer, and not enough scenes story is not for the faint of time for sleep. heart. This is a cutthroat business. Editor Kenny Kix has no love for “Cut by Cut” is both a gruesome egotistical directors. and an engrossing whodunit. Ad agency owner Ray Wachtel The Bookmonger is Barbara has no love for his neurotic wife. Lloyd McMichael, who writes this Producer Wendy Wachtel has weekly column focusing on the both a faithless business partner and books, authors and publishers of the a faithless husband to contend with. Pacific Northwest. Contact her at Film stylist Jewell Cleary and ‘Cut by Cut’ is by Patricia Vaccarino. barbaralmcm@gmail.com. 10 // COASTWEEKEND.COM