Published February 26th, 2014
Local Author:An Orinda Author's ObsessionNew novel melds fact and fiction, shines light on silent film star
By Lou Fancher
Orinda author Robert Murillo Photo provided
Long before former stock broker and first time author Robert Murillo penned his debut book, "The Vanity," he was a 9-year-old boy, curling up with a radio. His imagination set aflame by sci-fi broadcasts and tales of quirky time travel, his childhood fever for fiction never diminished. Murillo will read from and discuss his novel at 1 p.m. Saturday, March 1 at Orinda Books. Joining him will be Thomas Gladysz, founder/director of the Louise Brooks Society - and several ghosts.
Yes, ghosts. Because Murillo has been haunted by Louise Brooks, a real-life silent film star, ever since he retired from his job as a Wells Fargo financial advisor in 2009.
"My original retirement plan was to learn to play golf and the piano. I also wanted to travel and write," he said.
Murillo had been a high school English teacher in Richmond for 11 years, prior to moving into the finance sector, so thoughts of writing didn't arrive out of the blue. Suzanne, his wife of 43 years, encouraged his ambition, suggesting a short story he'd written might have legs for a longer journey. Neither of them knew that Brooks, whose films and bobbed haircut inspired a moderate, but rabid fan base that continues to this day, would soon consume Murillo's thoughts.
"I got hooked," Murillo said. "I began to think, what if she wins the negatives back (the real life Brooks sued a photographer to retrieve risquÇ photos he threatened to release) and doesn't destroy them? And then, what if someone steals them from her?"
Murillo's dreams of shooting par faded to occasional outings with buddies; the antique upright piano became a dust bunny haven; travel meant descending their Orinda home's staircase to write for up to ten hours a day in "the dungeon." Murillo said he writes "until I lose my muse," which seemed quaint and even laughable, until he insisted she's real to him. "I call her Molly, because the name seemed to flow. When she takes off, I quit for the day,' he said.
"The Vanity" is a blend of fact and fiction. Brooks' allure, jumping out of a 1927 snapshot Murillo saw, amplified itself into the story of Mike Lundy, a writer living in Brooks' former home - but in the year 2011. Time travel allows their lives to overlap and Lundy considers whether or not he should intercept the scandalous images and thus, alter destiny.
Murillo said he loves films, but if given a choice between a stack of DVDs and a stack of books, he'd chose the latter. "When you read, things happen in your imagination," he explained. "It's less the director's point of view and more your own interpretation."
He also chose to self-publish using CreateSpace, because of its close connection with Amazon. "They promote it and make it possible to have the book on your Kindle, your phone, or in your hand," he said. "The ease of buying a book on Amazon led me." It's a statement putting him in an awkward position, he admitted, because of his great devotion to independent bookstores. "As a book buyer, I go to Orinda Books all the time. I think there's room for both."
At Orinda Books, Murillo will speak about his writing process and Gladysz - who Murillo calls "the world expert on Louise Brooks" - will bring information about a movie Brooks made in Berkeley. A Q&A will follow, accompanied by "unbelievable refreshments" Murillo said will arrive courtesy of Suzanne.
After promoting "The Vanity," he plans to return to the dungeon. He'll be listening to Molly and working on "The Thirty-Third Floor," a collection of short stories based on his life as a stockbroker.





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