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Lightning Strikes Twice > A New Novel on the American Mormon Religion + A New Series on Showtime

READ AN EXCERPT →

Truly Like Lightning

A Novel

David Duchovny

Farrar, Straus and Giroux

From the New York Times–bestselling author David Duchovny, an epic adventure that asks how we make sense of right and wrong in a world of extremes

For the past twenty years, Bronson Powers, former Hollywood stuntman and converted Mormon, has been homesteading deep in the uninhabited desert outside Joshua Tree with his three wives and ten children. Bronson and his wives, Yalulah, Mary, and Jackie, have been raising their family away from the corruption and evil of the modern world.

Their insular existence—controversial, difficult, but Edenic—is upended when the ambitious young developer Maya Abbadessa stumbles upon their land. Hoping to make a profit, she crafts a wager with the family that sets in motion a deadly chain of events.

Maya, threatening to report the family to social services, convinces them to enter three of their children into a nearby public school. Bronson and his wives agree that if Maya can prove that the kids do better in town than in their desert oasis, they will sell her a chunk of their priceless plot of land. Suddenly confronted with all the complications of the twenty-first century that they tried to keep out of their lives, the Powerses must reckon with their lifestyle as they try to save it.

READ AN EXCERPT →Truly Like Lightning, David Duchovny’s fourth novel, is a heartbreaking meditation on family, religion, sex, greed, human nature, and the vanishing environment of an ancient desert

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Here's a subReddit post about the book
 Duchovny Central : David Duchovny 'Truly Like Lightning' reveals its  connection to 'The X-Files'
submitted by mysteriousPerson 
 
 
The relevant portion, from the Wall Street Journal, is here:
 How David Duchovny Became an Accomplished Novelist - WSJ

His latest, “Truly Like Lightning,” out Feb. 2, concerns a large family of devout Mormons—three wives, 10 children and one zealous patriarch, a former pill-popping Hollywood stunt man—who must defend their unconventional, off-the-grid lifestyle and valuable land in the California desert against the rapacious schemes of a young developer. Part family drama, part corporate satire, part philosophical inquiry into the appeal and limits of faith, the novel considers the challenges of reconciling religious belief with the vices and depredations of the 21st century. Kirkus Reviews praised his “characteristically nimble prose” and “the complicated humanity of his multifarious cast.”

‘I don’t want to be falsely humble. This is an ambitious novel for me.’

“I don’t want to be falsely humble. This is an ambitious novel for me,” says Mr. Duchovny. Although he isn’t religious himself (his Jewish father and Scottish mother raised him in Manhattan to believe mainly in books), he writes compellingly about theism and sympathetically about Mormonism, which he finds fascinating for being so “quintessentially American.” He quotes the late Harold Bloom, his former professor at Yale, who famously described Joseph Smith, the 19th-century founder of Mormonism, as “an authentic religious genius” for his blend of Christian scripture and American can-do spirit.

“It couldn’t be more American for someone to get up there and say, ‘As man now is, God once was; as God now is, man may be,’” says Mr. Duchovny, citing Mormon doctrine. He says that writing about a religion that believes in the potential for miracles in our time was a way to write about the pluck and hubris of the U.S. itself.

Looks like there's an excerpt from the book here: Truly Like Lightning | David Duchovny | Macmillan

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Real Life History Fiction Mystery: X-Files Actor David Duchovny Writes A New Novel / Starring As A Mormon - on TV

   On the Shelf: "Truly Like Lightning" | Free | emporiagazette.com
"I had a thread of a story I wanted to tell based on some Mormon precepts and I only knew them because I wrote an ‘X-File’ in, like, 2000, where I made a fictional character out of a Mormon forger named Mark Hofmann, who—it’s an amazing story,”
 
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David Duchovny's New Book 'Truly Like Lightning' Started As An 'X-Files'
Episode05:52
David Duchovny. (Tim Palen)
David Duchovny. (Tim Palen)

David Duchovny is best known for portraying Fox Mulder, a believer in all things supernatural, in the long-running TV series “The X Files.”

But Duchovny also has a master's in English literature. And in the last few years, he's turned his talents to writing novels. The most recent one, “Truly Like Lightning,” came out last month.

Here & Now producer Emiko Tamagawa interviewed David Duchovny about his book for a virtual event held by the Massachusetts-based Brookline Booksmith. A Zoom crowd eagerly awaited Duchovny as assistant events director Bryana Tribuna spoke for many of the fans in her introduction: “David Duchovny has been a constant in my life since ‘The X-Files’ first aired, and I was just a weird little kid obsessed with bigfoot, werewolves and aliens.”

When Tamagawa started reading Duchovny’s new book, she immediately leapt to the acknowledgments in search of where the book came from. Two things stood out to her: the writings of Harold Bloom, a professor Duchovny had when he attended graduate school at Yale University, and a connection to an episode the actor wrote for “The X-Files.”

After six years of starring in the hit science fiction series, Duchovny says he wrote and directed one episode per year. He took inspiration from the case of a man named Mark Hofmann, a forger of Joseph Smith, the founder of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.

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“The thing about Mark Hofmann is when he was writing in the hand of Joseph Smith, he said they weren’t forgeries because he was channeling Joseph Smith,” Duchovny says. “And so that’s what I kind of used, you know, it intrigued me as an actor because we talk about becoming a character.”

In Duchovny’s “Hollywood A.D.,” episode 19 of “The X-Files” season 7, an old hippie named Micah Hoffman, played by Paul Lieber, forges ancient texts about Jesus Christ to fool a Catholic cardinal. But then Micah Hoffman has a conversion: “One day I was just not impersonating Jesus Christ, I had become him.”

Fast forward about two decades. Duchovny is working on "Truly Like Lightning," which centers around Bronson Powers, a former Hollywood stuntman who is disillusioned by the business and finds solace in religion.

“There is something about the Mormon sense of ‘we are not belated, we are now, and now is when miracles are happening,’ ” Duchovny says, “that struck me as: If you had somebody like Powers, who feels it’s hard for him to have an authentic life, he would glom on to this religion.”

Like the texts in the “X-Files” episode, Powers’ brand of Mormonism is something he made up — and yes, it involves polygamy.

Powers and his two wives live on an isolated settlement near California’s Joshua Tree National Park. They homeschool their 10 children, raising them free from technology and what they view as the evils of society.

But then a real estate developer, who covets Powers’ land, bets him that his children would benefit by attending public school. Despite his misgivings, Power agrees to enroll three of his kids and let them live in a city along with one of the mothers.

The children get to experience everything from cellphones to pizza to Michael Jackson for the first time, Duchovny says. The book explores what happens when a 19th-century person enters a 21st-century world.

What follows will cause patriarch Powers to question the faith that has sustained him and served as “the ground beneath his feet,” Duchovny says.

“I envy people that have strong faith in many ways. I envy the idea of really believing that there’s a bedrock of, not just morality, but a spiritual truth,” he says.

That envy inspired him to write such a character — and he plans to take on the role of Powers in a TV adaptation of the book. Think along the lines of a "Big Love” meets “Saved By The Bell" with a Duchovny spin.

The first season of the show would cover the events of the book, he says. Then, Duchovny hopes people get invested in the world and the characters’ stories for a few more seasons.

 
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How “The X-Files” Sparked David Duchovny’s Writing Career

". . .Duchovny went on to write and direct more episodes of the X-Files, usually at a rate of one per year, and later in his career dove deeper into writing, becoming a New York Times-bestselling author, currently with his fourth novel, Truly like Lightning, being recently released.

Truly Like Lightning, rich in plot and character development, centers around former Hollywood stuntman and converted Mormon Bronson Powers and his family as they are forced to battle with the type of modern world temptations and complications they were living in the uninhabited desert outside of Joshua Tree to avoid.

On Wednesday, Deadline reported that Duchovny will co-write and star as Powers in a series adaption of the book for Showtime.

“This is a guy who is kind of a cowboy, a stuntman, but feels somewhat if not insignificant ... a sense like (he’s) a shadow, he's a double,” Duchovny told Forbes on Monday of the character. “He's looking for the sense in which he hasn't come too late on the scene. Like if he had been born 100 years earlier, he would have been an actual cowboy. This is a way, through Mormonism, through his reading of Joseph Smith, he starts to feel that authenticity.

“I related to that. I related to not just being an actor, which kind of sometimes feels inauthentic or like being a double, or like being a shadow in a way, playing at life... But also, we're coming to the 21st century, all the great thoughts have been had, all the great discoveries have been made, all the great battles have been fought. It's like, what can a person do to feel authentic, relevant, present, in the thick of history in a way?”

More
 
 
 
 
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RELATED

Get to Know the Story Behind Netflix’s ‘Murder Among the Mormons’

More than three decades ago, in October 1985, the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints suffered one of the darkest chapters in hits history when a Mormon missionary named Mark Hofmann killed two others and injured himself with three bomb blasts in and around Salt Lake City, Utah. Netflix

Though they made national news at the time, the bombings have faded from memory—even in Utah, where more than half the population identifies as Mormon. “It’s kind of lived in this weird, semi-mythological space,” filmmaker Jared Hess said in a recent interview. “And it was such an isolated, regional story. It ran the news cycle nationally and then it kind of came and went.”

Hoffman’s horrific crime is back in the headlines thanks to Hess and Tyler Measom, co-directors of the Netflix docuseries Murder Among the Mormons, premiering on March 3. Over the gripping three episodes, they detail how document dealer Hoffman grew desperate as his forging business began to unravel.Latest from Mormon Land: David Duchovny to play a Mormon; temple  predictions; more on the church's $100B reserve fund

 Coincidentally, Hofmann’s story has another TV connection: It piqued the interest of The X-Files alum David Duchovny, who tells a tale of Mormonism his new novel, Truly Like Lightning. “I had a thread of a story I wanted to tell based on some Mormon precepts and I only knew them because I wrote an ‘X-File’ in, like, 2000, where I made a fictional character out of a Mormon forger named Mark Hofmann, who—it’s an amazing story, . .

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Latest from Mormon Land: ‘X-Files’ star David Duchovny to become a Mormon —
on screen
 
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Who Does David Duchovny Think He Is?

The ex-“X-Files” star, publishing his fourth novel this month, visits his old haunts in the East Village and extolls the virtues of rising early and blooming late.
Two of David Duchovny’s biggest pet peeves, in coverage of his work as an actor and a novelist, are bad puns referencing “The X-Files” and any suggestion that his fancy education—Princeton (undergrad) and Yale (M.A. in English lit)—accounts for his aptitude as a writer.
Duchovny finds both defaults lame. The emphasis on alma maters is a corollary of the kind of thinking that prompts people to say, on hearing that an actor has published a novel, “Who does he think he is?”
Who does anyone think they are?” Who Does David Duchovny Think He Is? | The New Yorker 
Duchovny asked the other night, in his familiar gentle deadpan. “You have to have an ego to think you have the right to publish anything. It’s a fine question to ask: Who the fuck do you think you are?”
He was in the midst of revealing a little bit about who he is, or thinks he is, by way of a sentimental meander through the East Village, the neighborhood of his youth. He’d just gone to see his mother, who is ninety-one, in her apartment on Ninth Street: a rare visit, in this Covid year. He’d brought her a copy of his new novel, “Truly Like Lightning,” out this month. It is his fourth, all of them published by Farrar, Straus & Giroux. Does she read them?
“No. She just feels the weight of them.”
He had on white Adidas Superstars, skinny gray jeans, a black down jacket, and a blue N95 over a salt-and-pepper beard. He’s sixty—trim of build, sly of manner, youthful of spirit. He’d been living during the pandemic on the Upper West Side with his son, a senior in high school. He got Covid in October. . ."
 

 

 
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