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Richard Price explores second chances, and rising from the rubble in 'Lazarus Man'

TERRY GROSS, HOST:

This is FRESH AIR. I'm Terry Gross. I always look forward to a new Richard Price novel, and after nearly 10 years of waiting, he has a new one called "Lazarus Man." During those 10 years, he cocreated and wrote for the HBO series "The Night Of" and "The Outsider" and wrote for the HBO series "The Deuce." Before that, he wrote for "The Wire," one of the best TV series ever. Several of his earlier novels were adapted into films, including "Clockers," "Freedomland" and "The Wanderers." He also wrote the screenplay for the film Al Pacino considers his comeback film, "Sea Of Love." Price is considered one of the best writers of urban fiction and one of the best writers of dialogue. And I think that's true of his new novel, which is set in Harlem, where Price has lived since 2008, the same year that the novel is set.

The story revolves around the collapse of a five-story building whose impact is like a very small-scale 9/11. It's devastating for the people in the neighborhood, including the survivors and the people grieving for loved ones who've died. The collapse changes the lives of each of the main characters, including a young street photographer, a police community affairs officer, a funeral director who can't keep up with the quota of bodies he needs to stay in business and a 42-year-old man who has been feeling like he's lost everything and has little to live for and is found buried in the rubble. It's remarkable that he's still alive, which is why the novel is called "Lazarus Man." Reviewing the novel in The Washington Post, Ron Charles wrote, for a nation riven and terrified, "Lazarus Man" is the strangest of urban thrillers - a thoughtful, even peaceful story about stumbling into new life.

Richard Price, welcome back to FRESH AIR. Because I love your writing, I want to start with a reading from the very beginning of the book.

RICHARD PRICE: All righty. (Reading) It was one of those nights for Anthony Carter - 42, two years unemployed, two years separated from his wife and stepdaughter, six months into cocaine sobriety and recently moved into his late parents' apartment on Frederick Douglass Boulevard - went to be alone with his thoughts, alone with his losses.

(Reading) It was not survivable, so he did what he always did - hit the streets, meaning hit the bars on Lenox one after the other, finding this one too ghetto, that one too Scandinavian tourist, this one too loud, that one too quiet - on and on, taking just a few sips of his drink in each one, dropping dollars and heading out for the next establishment, like an 80-proof Goldilocks, thinking maybe this next place, this next random conversation would be the trigger for some kind of epiphany that would show him a new way to be. But it was all part of a routine that never led him anywhere but back to the apartment. This he knew. This he had learned over and over. But maybe this time is a drug. You never know is a drug. So out the door he went.

GROSS: When we spoke in 1986 after your novel "The Breaks," you said something that reminds me of something that you wrote in the paragraph that you read, this whole kind of, like, maybe this time, the whole idea of maybe this time can be a drug. You were talking about your feeling of discontent when you were, you know, younger, and feeling like you're over here but it's over there. And the minute you're over there, it's over here.

PRICE: Yeah.

GROSS: This feeling of restlessness and discontent and maybe wanting to be someone else.

PRICE: Well, you know, it's just some people have, like, this constant state of lowkey agitation - that the thing, the very thing that's going to make you whole, is like one microdot outside your fingertips. And then you can't find it at all and repeat if necessary. It was a level of dissatisfaction I felt, but I don't feel that anymore. I grew out of it, and now I'm kind of - I wouldn't say chill. I'll never be chill. But, you know, at least I'm, you know, more relaxed and settled than I've ever been.

GROSS: You wrote this novel during the COVID shutdown, at least part of it during the COVID shutdown. And I'm wondering if you were feeling more vulnerable at that time. I mean, you live in Manhattan, which was a city that had, like, trucks that had been turned into morgues. Were you thinking a lot about mortality and the unpredictability of life?

PRICE: Well, everybody was, you know, the first wave. But on a writing level, what happened to me is - I love to go out on the street, talk to people. It's a lot more fun than writing. And I couldn't do that. I couldn't get fed. And it's called fiction, you know, you make things up. But I'm so addicted to that type of interaction in the service of a novel. You know, just because it happened doesn't make it art. But the trick is to go home and make it art. And I couldn't go out for years. I mean, I could, but not to, like, meet people - hi, how you doing, what's your name, shake my hand - and that sort of messed me up.

GROSS: So you go out and talk to strangers.

PRICE: Just being on the street. Just the random things that you overhear or the conversations you get into, because so many people - Harlem is, like, a little different than the rest of New York in terms of people make eye contact, people nod, even if they don't know you. If you say something, they're going to say something back. And next thing you know, you're standing there on the corner and you're talking. And I've never met a person who hasn't come up at least with one thunderbolt of offhand observation or commentary.

GROSS: You know, the book is called "Lazarus Man." I'm wondering what the role of religion was in your life growing up.

PRICE: I knew not to curse on Yom Kippur, so God wouldn't put me in the book of death.

GROSS: (Laughter) Did you fast?

PRICE: I don't know. I went to Hebrew school until I was bar mitzvahed. And then after that, my relationship with being Jewish was pretty much - the only time I really felt Jewish is, besides Sandy Koufax not pitching, is when there was an antisemitic moment, an incident. Then I felt very, you know, tight with my religion. Other than that, I was pretty much a humanist. I didn't raise my children to be - I made a deal with my wife. I won't circumcise them if you don't christen them. I mean, it was sort of like a humanistic relationship.

GROSS: Did you both keep that deal?

PRICE: Yeah, I think.

GROSS: (Laughter).

PRICE: How would I know? Oh, I'm taking the kids out for a walk. I'll be back. Why are they all dressed up in white? Oh, it's a nice day. White looks good in April. Who knows? But I'd imagine that we kept to that, yes.

GROSS: Your character of Anthony says this later. When things go good, we say God is good. But when things go south that's apparently on us. Do you find a lot of truth in that?

PRICE: It was just my feeling. But it's a very complicated thing that he's setting up here, which is to say - you know, it'd be easiest for me if I could find in the book what he says.

GROSS: Sure, yeah, no, absolutely.

PRICE: Yeah. He's a little bit of a celebrity because he is the Lazarus Man. He has survived 36 hours in the rubble when no one detected any kind of sign of life, and yet he was miraculously found. This is what he's saying to people to give them hope you know, at this funeral for a young kid who was shot trying to get in between two gangs to calm people down. (Reading) As I said before, I never been a deeply religious individual, and I still don't consider myself one. But I feel guided now. And my purpose in being here today is to deliver to you a message that just might make it possible to accept your aching hearts and continue to live the life that He has given you. *****

PRICE: *** For a brief moment, he stood there speechless, amazed at what he was about to say. What I have learned since that day in the rubble is that whatever befalls you in life, whatever appears to you as an impossible burden, an unbearable weight, in the end, if you persevere, if you hold fast, will turn out to be a gift. Whatever befalls you, no matter how heartbreaking or onerous, will turn out to be the best thing, the perfect thing because of what is to come out of it. In fact, it will be the best thing that could possibly happen to you.

GROSS: There is a fair amount of gratitude in the novel. And I think, you know, gratitude and a gratitude practice has sometimes come to seem like a cliche. On the other hand, gratitude is a really important thing to have in your life and to be able to find gratitude in life. And I'm wondering. For you as a writer, how do you take something that could be a cliche and turn it into something that's not?

PRICE: When I read my reviews and they say what has resonated with them, they'll use words like gratitude. But I wasn't thinking, oh, I'm going to really use gratitude as a theme. I mean, the guy just survived a miraculous thing. And you got to be grateful for that. And all of a sudden, in that gratefulness, you see how precious life is because you almost were not here anymore. And if you're inspired, you want to spread that message - the getting of grace. He just says at some point, every minute of every day, everything is precious. When I was pulled out of that rubble and I could take my first un-dirt-caked breath, all I wanted to do was to live and live and live.

It just happened to me in a way - very low-key. I feel like I am the person I was when I talked to you the last time, but I'm not the person I was when I talked to you the last time. And I'm not religious. Believe me. It's happiness. I just somehow discovered peace in my life. Like, my earlier books - there was always this propelling anxiety in me that I have to make it, like, dazzling and spectacular and blow people away. And it was very high-pitched in me and not healthy. But I've settled down. You know, my heart has lowered the volume and deepened the bass, it feels like. And so I write a book like this, where, you know, other than this calamitous event of a five-story tenement pancaking on itself, everything else is people's lives with that in the background of their experience on that day. That's all I need now.

GROSS: Well, let's take a short break here, and then we'll talk some more. If you're just joining us, my guest is Richard Price. His new novel is called "Lazarus Man." We'll be right back. This is FRESH AIR.

(SOUNDBITE OF RED HEART THE TICKER'S "SLIGHTLY UNDER WATER")

GROSS: This is FRESH AIR. Let's get back to my interview with Richard Price. His new novel is called "Lazarus Man." It's set in Harlem in 2008, and it's about how the lives of several people are changed after the collapse of a five-story building, including the life of one man found in the rubble.

I want to talk with you a little bit about race, writing about race and race in this novel. Anthony, the character who was found under the rubble after the five-story building collapsed - he's biracial. His white father was kind of a race man. He taught African American history. And you write, (reading) what his father could never understand was how all of his righteous defiance in the end had cost him nothing because he could come and go in his angry white skin as he pleased. Despite marrying a Black woman and having mixed-race kids, there was no such thing as an honorary brother no matter how many times you raised your fist in solidarity or how many prison writing workshops you conducted or how many times you got up in some cop's face.

GROSS: And I'm wondering, like, when you write about biracial or Black characters or Latino characters, as you've done, like, throughout your career, have you faced any pushback by people saying, you're appropriating other people's stories, and you have no right to tell them?

PRICE: No, I haven't. But even with "Clockers," which I wrote in 1990, '89, '91, I was really aware of the whole notion of cultural piracy. And, like, how dare I write about someone who, quote-unquote, "you have no idea what it's like to be me?" And my responsibility is to create a character that is as fully three-dimensional as I can make that character. And in terms of racial sensitivity, well, listen. If you're writing to the stereotype of a person of that race, then you deserve to be pilloried.

GROSS: You've always, to my knowledge, lived in multi-ethnic, multiracial communities, including when you were growing up in the projects in the Bronx.

PRICE: I did. Yeah.

GROSS: So that must be helpful in writing.

PRICE: No. You know, I said that to somebody. Well, somebody - when I was writing "Clockers" and I - and somebody said, well, how can you write about African Americans when you're not African American yourself? And when I said, well, I grew up in, you know, like, a housing project that was very mixed, schools that were very mixed, etc., she said, you sound like a Southerner, you know, who's saying, I was very close to those people, you know, trying to say, like, I know those people. And that struck me. I mean, the fact that you grow up with somebody - just because it happened, like I said, doesn't make it art. Just because someone exists doesn't make them an artist. And it just all comes back to - just do the best you can. Do the best you can. You're not just hatched from an egg. You know, make everybody equally human, and then let it go.

GROSS: One of the characters founded a group called Put The Guns Down - this is, like, an anti-youth-violence group...

PRICE: Yeah.

GROSS: ...And also founded a youth mentorship program, Young Scholars for the Future. And these are all former, you know, gang members, many of them who'd been in prison, who now want to be of service to young people and convince them they don't want that life. So, you know, when they're in the park, they're there and giving, you know, inspirational speeches from former gang members. And I just want to quote a little bit of it.

PRICE: Sure.

GROSS: So the founder of the group says, in terms of, you know, mentoring young people, (reading) we'll become their surrogate fathers because that's what they need because in my experience - and no disrespect to you ladies. But in my experience, it takes a man to raise a man. I'm not leaving out the young girls. We also have females in our organization who will work directly with the young girls to teach them mannerisms, etiquette and how to be classy young ladies.

You know, I have such respect for the people who - this is me talking, no longer quoting the book. I have such respect for people who do this kind of work. But there was this inherent sexism...

PRICE: Sure. I mean...

GROSS: ...In the talk.

PRICE: That's the whole point.

GROSS: Yeah.

PRICE: That's one of the points.

GROSS: Yeah. So talk about that a little bit.

PRICE: Well, you know, people can be for social justice. People could, you know, put their lives on the line. They can put in the hours to save, you know, youth from going down the wrong path. But that doesn't mean they're saints. That doesn't mean they get the whole picture. They could still be sexists. They can still be man-comes-first. Women - and the priorities of those guys - he imagines these women. But he's, like, a woman, like, in the 1950s, let alone, you know, the 1250s. He's saying it in goodwill, but, you know, he's revealing where his enlightenment comes to a dead stop.

GROSS: Also, I know you love malaprops, like, words used inappropriately. And this character says that we'll work directly with the young girls to teach them mannerisms, etiquette and how to be classy young ladies. I think he means manners. But he's saying mannerisms.

PRICE: See; but this is the thing. You know, I mean, that's the importance of dialogue to me. People say stuff, and it's like a fingerprint for that character. And you got to hear it. You can't - it's - I mean, to correct it would be to kill it. I mean, this is the way people speak. This is the way people think. And that's gold because it tells you so much more than the information that's coming out of their mouth.

GROSS: This is just a small thing from the book. I just wanted to ask you. I'll read the sentence. (Reading) The good thing about hooking up in a chain hotel as opposed to a one-off was that once you got over the sterile layout of the appointments, you weren't as preoccupied with catching something that would permanently alter your biology.

I have often wondered in hotels, how many people have had affairs? How many people have had sex on this blanket that may or may not have been washed since or the bedspread that may or may not have been washed since? Do you wonder about that when you're in hotels?

PRICE: Not if I can help it. I mean, I don't go to, like, you know, hot-sheet motels. But what you don't know probably could - would stun you and horrify you. I mean, the character in the book - it's an affairs that Mary, the detective, is having with another detective. And, you know, they go to, like, cheap hotels - motels before they went to change. And this guy gets a ultra light - I forgot what it's called - luminol. It's something - casts a blue light that brings out things that you can't see with the naked eye. And they usually use it at crime scenes, you know, to pick up blood patterns or, you know, body fluids or God knows what.

And the first time, he brought it to their motel and put it on the bedroom. It was like a psychedelic circus. And that's when, you know, it's just - God knows who's been here doing what. And, you know, there's stuff here, you know, that could kill a horse that you can't see. And that's why they went to chain hotels, but who knows if they were any better?

GROSS: Let's take another break here, and then we'll talk some more. If you're just joining us, my guess is Richard Price. His new novel is called "Lazarus Man." We'll be right back after a short break. I'm Terry Gross, and this is FRESH AIR.

(SOUNDBITE OF TERENCE BLANCHARD'S "CLOCKERS")

GROSS: This is FRESH AIR. ***

GROSS: *** This is FRESH AIR. I'm Terry Gross. Let's get back to my interview with Richard Price. His new novel "Lazarus Man" is set in Harlem, where he lives, and follows the lives of several people whose lives are changed after the collapse of a five-story building, including one man who was found in the rubble. Price is the author of several novels that have been adapted into movies, including "Clockers," "Freedomland" and "The Wanderers." He cocreated and wrote for the HBO series "The Night Of" and "The Outsider" and wrote for the HBO series "The Wire" and "The Deuce."

There's a story in your book that I really love. It's the woman who's a postal worker and her son was shot in the calf. He wasn't the target, but he was...

PRICE: No.

GROSS: ...Collateral damage. And she's sure of who did it, and he's a really large guy. And she goes up to him with her son and says, I have no idea who did this to him, but if you know, can you tell him that my son's a really decent kid. And he runs with some troublemakers, but he's a really good kid.

PRICE: Yes. Yeah. I mean, basically, you know, when the kid is in the hospital, he just had a graze. And the detectives - he won't talk because he knows better. And the detectives turn to her. And she says, Mommy, can you do your Mommy thing, get him to talk? And she doesn't. She says, I'll take care of this myself. And her strategy, which is great, I think...

GROSS: Oh, I loved it, yeah.

PRICE: Go right up to the guy who shot him and just introduce yourself, have your son there, and talk to him indirectly. If you happen to know who did this, can you communicate to that person and, you know, just unman him? And then make sure you give him your name, your son's name and you have his name, just so it all becomes personalized. I mean, the cops say the best way of community policing is know the people on the block. Know their names, let them know your name. You know, and it's much harder to pop off when somebody has a name that you know.

GROSS: And, you know, so she introduces herself. She tells him what floor she lives on. And she says, look, like, now we know each other. If we pass each other, like, we should say hello and talk to each other.

PRICE: Right. And then she sort of makes him shake her hand. And, I mean, that's, like, brilliant.

GROSS: I think so, too. I so admire people who have that ability to, instead of, like, confronting somebody in anger, just kind of disarm them with humanity.

PRICE: You have to have that confidence.

GROSS: Yeah.

PRICE: And you have to have grown out of being a 5-year-old in a 40-year-old body emotionally. You have to not be a victim of arrested development. So you have your wits about you. You don't fly off the handle. You look at this and say how am I going to peel this onion? You know, and there are people who do that. There are other people, you know, who'll shoot you in the back because you wrote a drill rap lyric that's offensive to them and it's worth getting killed over. It's a whole world out there, you know?

GROSS: So there's a con in your book. And I'm wondering what are some of the most interesting street cons you've come across in your life?

PRICE: Well, that's, you know - I'll tell you one. It's like you're walking the street, and these couple of guys are walking the other way. And all of a sudden, it seems they went out of their way to bump into you. And all of a sudden, you see a paper bag, and it's dropped. And he says, hey, man. You know, you made me drop this. And it turns out - what is it? - it's a bottle of vodka, and you broke it. And, you know, they try to get you to pay them. When it's a novelty, you can't think straight, so you believe it. And I said to the guy, well, what brand of vodka was it? Of course, the guy has to come back and say Grey Goose, you know?

GROSS: (Laughter).

PRICE: So here's 40 bucks. And the minute I paid him off, I just felt like smacking myself in the forehead - d'oh (ph). Anyway, that was - you know, you have this delayed reaction to the con. But the second time somebody tried to pull that off on me, he turned to me and I just said, listen, man, somebody just pulled this on me two weeks ago. And the guy just smiled and he said, all right, I get it. You know, like, I tried, you know? But he was kind of, like, cool about it. And I said, well, hell, here's five bucks just for - you know, you're just trying to make ends meet.

And next to me was three young women. And this is up in Harlem. And they were so furious that I gave him money. They said, he's trying to rob you. Why'd you give him that money for, you know? And then it's like it's another type of shock. Like, people in that area, you don't toss around money to somebody who, you know, you don't know and is actually kind of do something. And it was more of an education for me, their reaction.

GROSS: Let's take a short break here, and then we'll talk some more. If you're just joining us, my guest is Richard Price. His new novel is called "Lazarus Man." We'll be right back. This is FRESH AIR.

(SOUNDBITE OF RATATAT'S "TACOBEL CANON")

GROSS: This is FRESH AIR. Let's get back to my interview with Richard Price. Price is the author of several novels that have been adapted into movies, including "Clockers," "Freedomland" and "The Wanderers." He cocreated and wrote for the HBO series "The Night Of" and "The Outsider" and wrote for the HBO series "The Wire" and "The Deuce."

You got an award in 2020 and said that screenwriting saved your life. You said, I was so ripe with despair, you could smell it on me. Screenwriting saved my life - my mental life, my spiritual life, my financial life and actually my physical life. So how did it change your life? Like, what changed about your spiritual life from screenwriting?

PRICE: I don't know what I meant by spiritual, but I just felt lost because my first four novels were so self-referential that I had nothing else to say. I mean, I have four novels at 32 years old, and they were all variations of me and my life. You know, I mean, my throat was parched. I couldn't go on. The books were being written with more and more desperation, trying to find a spark. But when "The Wanderers" was published, a lot of people in Hollywood, because of the good dialogue, thought I'd be great writing screenplays, which is ridiculous because dialogue - the actors will give you good dialogue. What a screenwriter needs to give you is shape. The shape of the story has to go like a pyramid from the base at minute one to the tip of it in 120 minutes. I mean, it's more about architecture than a good ear.

But what it gave me - it forced me out of myself. To write "The Color Of Money," I had to - you know, I had to learn this stuff. I had to hang out with pool hustlers. And, you know, for "Sea Of Love," you know, I had to do ride-alongs with cops. And I realized - you know, they always say, write about what you know. But if what you know is not enough, learn something more. Then that becomes what you know. And keep learning, and what you know keeps expanding and expanding.

And it's also - the success of what I wrote showed me that I could work with not all that much information that's, you know, journalistically accurate. I can make stuff up. All I need is a little bit of Hamburger Helper, a little bit of face to face, a little bit of observation, and I could bring it home. And I can shape it up in a plausible way.

The other thing that happened - so I felt so lost as a novelist. And then I started having success as a screenwriter. I started making money for the first time. I got married. I had two children - have two children. And all of this happened because of screenwriting. I'm not - you know, screenwriting is like typing. You know, it's speed chess. It's not - a screenplay is nothing. It's a bunch of Post-It notes to the director. There's no narrator. There's no voice. There's no sentences.

But it was proof to me that I could be so much more. I could know so much more in the world. I'm not trapped in a corner with myself in a one-room apartment. And that gave me a - it felt great. It felt great and was not - for eight years, that's what I did. And then something - you know, the circumstances of "Clockers" came about, and that resonated with me in such a way as - I have to write this as a novel, knowing I can go out there and learn and feel reinforced and not insecure. Of course you're insecure 'cause you're writing. But that's how screenplay writing saved me.

GROSS: When you say the circumstances around "Clockers" changed or something along those lines, what do you mean?

PRICE: Well, what happened was I was doing research for "Sea Of Love," and I was in Jersey City.

GROSS: That was about cops.

PRICE: Yeah. And I was with these cops, and they had to go into this housing project to, you know, find either a witness to a homicide. And I was shocked by the housing projects. But there - it was madness. It was so chaotic and bedlam-like and felt dangerous. And cocaine was destroying - not cocaine, sniffing cocaine, but rock, crack. And I had a cocaine problem for two years with sniffing coke. And I had three books under my belt. And I was doing, like, crappy coke. It was probably half-dandruff. And it still ruined my life for that time.

And it wasn't until my wife - we went to a trip to Italy for a month, and I felt like, I am going to stop now because I don't know how to get it. And I stopped, and it was great. You know, it was like - in AA, they call it the pink cloud, you know, the euphoria of sobriety before the work gets hard. And I was terrified that when we got back to the city, I know how to get cocaine again. All I got to do is punch these numbers on the telephone, and I'm back as a cokehead. And my wife came back with me, obviously, and said two words that changed everything. And those two words were - well, it's three words but, you know, constricted - I'm pregnant. And right there, it was like, that's it. That's it for coke. And that was the case.

So when I went into this project, not only did I grow up in a housing project like this at a more - when it was more functional working class. But I was so haunted. I'm still haunted by my cocaine abuse, you know, in the early '80s that it all came together for me. And I just wanted to understand what happened. What is it like to be in the projects this time, written by a guy who still had cocaine nightmares and still does?

I had so much personal stuff going into the desire to write that book that I didn't want to, like, give it - make a screenplay, you know, and let Hollywood, you know, say, oh, well, this is too bummery (ph). This is - you know, can this character be a little more heroic? Finally, I found something after eight years that made me feel like, OK, this is a novel. I'm back. You know, I'm not writing - I kept myself out of the book. I didn't need to be there. I just wanted to be the eye that wrote the book.

GROSS: You're 75 now. Is there anything surprising you about getting older?

PRICE: It hurts. You know, all of a sudden, it's like, ouch this, ouch that. But not really - I feel like I'm still me. I look in the mirror, and I - there I am - probably not as good a shape as I want to be. But, you know, I mean, my heart works. You know, I don't mean heart like cardiac heart. I mean, you know, everything that's important is there. ***

PRICE: *** is there.

GROSS: This is the kind of age where you start having friends who are getting sick or dying or, you know, having signs of dementia. And what's it like, assuming that's happening in your life - that you have friends to whom that's happening? How are you handling that?

PRICE: It's not easy. But most of the people I know or I knew who have passed in my life I was not that close to. I just - you know, I feel like within a week of reading the obits in the New York Times, there's five people that I knew or I interacted with or I had history with. And that's kind of scary. It's like Whac-A-Mole. You know, when's that mallet going to come down on your head? They're dropping like flies. But it's not that much so far. I don't even want to jinx it, so I'm not even going to continue talking about this stuff. But, yeah, I mean, the older you get - some people, you know, go manically the other direction. I'm as spry - (vocalizing). You know, I just - you know, I know I'm getting older. It doesn't stop me from anything, but it doesn't leave my consciousness as much as I would like it to.

GROSS: Right. In your acknowledgments, you thank your children, who raised you. What do you mean by that?

PRICE: I just feel having children molded me, remolded me. It wasn't all about myself. To finally have people in your life that you're more scared for than you're scared of anything for yourself, to finally have people in your life that you just surrender to and just - and educate you by just being who they are and evolving from year to year to year - they made me. They - you know, I was - before my kids, you know, I was just a guy. And they just reawakened something in me that I didn't really know, this profound keenness and tenderness towards them where it wasn't all about me anymore. In fact, you know, I'm not saying I became, like, not - you know, I surrendered to them. But it was such a rich and profound thing that they pulled up in me that was just so different. They raised me. They changed me.

GROSS: Did it relieve the burden of being trapped in yourself since you were responsible for others?

PRICE: Yeah. I love that not because it helped me escape from myself, because it was just natural. I mean, it's like Anthony comes out, and, you know, he just wants to be of service. You know, I've never made these connections to my life in the book before this interview. But, I mean, the joy of thinking about somebody - and they come out. They drop into your arms, and God says, go, you know? And you go. And it's a lifetime thing, and it's - I mean, before that, I think I was my own baby.

GROSS: Richard Price, it's always great to talk with you. Thank you so much, and congratulations on the novel.

PRICE: You're welcome.

GROSS: Richard Price's new novel is called "Lazarus Man." Coming up, Maureen Corrigan reviews what she describes as two much-needed books. This is FRESH AIR.

(SOUNDBITE OF MILES DAVIS' "BYE BYE BLACKBIRD") Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.

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Terry Gross
Combine an intelligent interviewer with a roster of guests that, according to the Chicago Tribune, would be prized by any talk-show host, and you're bound to get an interesting conversation. Fresh Air interviews, though, are in a category by themselves, distinguished by the unique approach of host and executive producer Terry Gross. "A remarkable blend of empathy and warmth, genuine curiosity and sharp intelligence," says the San Francisco Chronicle.
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