
Hungry Dogs with James Patterson How Viola Davis and James Patterson Wrote a Novel Together
Mar 25, 2026
Viola Davis, Academy Award–winning actress and author, reflects on turning life and theater instincts into fiction. Sarah Lyall, New York Times critic, steers the conversation with sharp questions. They discuss how the collaboration began, shaping Nova and Judge Mary Stone, balancing trauma and voice, courtroom drama in a small town, and the moral stakes that drive the story.
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How The Collaboration Began With A Provocative Premise
- Viola first worried collaborating with James Patterson meant a mystery thriller, then agreed after he described the premise about a 13-year-old pregnant girl in Alabama and a doctor charged with murder.
- Viola called the premise her "way in" and said the project felt like winning the lottery because it restored the collaborative process she missed from theater.
Voice Over Chapter Length Defines Character
- James and Viola emphasized finding the right voice and interior life for characters rather than relying on short chapters alone.
- They iterated on Nova's voice repeatedly, shifting scenes toward inner thought when dialogue felt unrealistic for a 13-year-old.
Viola Poured Childhood Memory Into Nova
- Viola placed much of her childhood into Nova: caring for siblings, being adultified and sometimes disappearing into 'nothing' after trauma.
- She described trauma as disassociation, saying parts of Nova are purposely left 'standing there and there's nothing' to honor that experience.





