Cooper is often asked if his work is autobiographical. In response to this, he has said, "I am definitely asked that a lot, but I did it intentionally. It's another way I am having fun with the writing. Most first novels are autobiographical or are written as memoirs. Although some of the events are similar to those in my life, everything that happens in
Outside In is there for a reason and has many layers of meaning. I decided to put in some details from my own life and let people run with it. If they want to read it as my life story, that's up to them. I'm not saying a lot of things in the book never happened, but I'll never say which did and did not. (Laughs.) But that's what the whole book is about—the duality of all things. Much of what appears on the surface of "Outside In" is a mask concealing a much deeper and sometimes opposite meaning.
Outside In is more about the beliefs and experiences the reader brings. One reader may perceive a quote as a kernel of wisdom and another view it as hackneyed. This is all done purposely and very much figures in to how the ending is interpreted." Cooper has appeared at the West Hollywood Book Fair, appearing on a drug fiction panel with
Jerry Stahl and
Mark Haskell Smith, the Vegas Valley Book Festival, and the Books by the Banks in
Cincinnati, Ohio. He does book signings and readings at stores and cafes and appears on podcasts and radio shows. ==Bibliography==