Best-selling author David Grann on the creative process behind his greatest works

David Grann on the importance of history and research

This week on 60 Minutes, Jon Wertheim profiled New York Times bestselling author David Grann, whose latest book, "The Wager: A Tale of Shipwreck, Mutiny and Murder," comes out Tuesday.

Ahead of its release, Grann spoke to 60 Minutes about how he researches and writes these wildly popular and immersive pieces of narrative non-fiction. He keeps his faithful readers hanging with a page-turning mix of history, journalism and true crime and has also become a darling of Hollywood developers. 

His last book, "Killers of the Flower Moon," is being adapted into a movie by Martin Scorsese, and has a star-studded cast including Leonardo DiCaprio, Brendan Fraser and Robert De Niro. The movie is set to premiere at Cannes, will hit screens in October and is poised to become a serious contender in the film award season. This Sunday, 60 Minutes sat down with Grann and spoke with him about what it takes to create these captivating books.

Why David Grann's office looks like a research archive itself

Grann writes on topics ranging from British explorers in the Amazon to the systematic murders of Native Americans, escaped prisoners to shipwreck mutinies. The one constant: exhaustive investigation. Each of his books is based on true events and is a culmination of years of research both in archives and on the ground. His dedication to his craft borders on obsession, something he believes is necessary in reconstructing history's forgotten tales. 

Grann walked 60 Minutes through his office, which houses thousands of records, journals and various other documents for reference while he writes, before storing them away.

"There are so many buried, hidden stories, secrets, evidence, voices in archives," Grann explained. "So much of American history is scattered about."

David Grann uncovers a historical secret in archival documents

Though spending years in an archive meticulously searching through old texts might seem tiresome to some, Grann told 60 Minutes it's well worth the trouble. The difficulty and beauty in searching for something unknown, he said, is that "quality of serendipity" that can change everything. He spoke with 60 Minutes correspondent Jon Wertheim about one such moment at the National Archives in Fort Worth, Texas, when he found a ledger that uncovered a historical secret that shaped his novel, "Killers of the Flower Moon."

"So I'm pulling boxes…and in one of these boxes I see, it looked like a ledger almost," Grann explained of his findings. "To be honest it was one of the most important documents I found over five years, and it was completely accidental."

David Grann's research takes him out of the office and into the world

Though painstaking research is the foundation of any good piece of narrative non-fiction, Grann explained that in order to take his work a step further and create something special, he needs to cultivate meaningful relationships with sources and live realistic experiences similar to those of his characters.

"You develop relationships and friendships and things that change you," Grann said. "And so for me…that is really the secret reward. And those parts aren't always in the books or the stories you tell, but they are the things that enrich your life." 

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