We are pleased to welcome a new critic, Howard Shrier, to our group.
When Elmore Leonard died in August, shortly
after suffering a stroke at age 87, tributes flowed fast and furious in
newspapers, on blogs and other media. Some were from writers you would expect
to love Leonard (Robert Crais, Michael Connelly); others came from those on
whom he would seem to have had little or no influence (Jackie Collins).
I suppose I fall somewhere in between. My crime novels, save for one, have
been first-person private eye stories. With the exception of his classic
Western, Hombre, Leonard never wrote
in the first person. Nor did he ever feature a private eye as a protagonist. My
first loves and most direct influences were Ross Macdonald and Raymond
Chandler, and, later on, Robert B. Parker, Crais and Dennis Lehane, all of whom
featured first-person private eyes who mixed humour and action in a blend I
found satisfying and inspiring.
He began his writing career in the
early fifties, penning Western stories for the magazines that flourished in
those years. Available now in various collections, the stories developed themes
he would build on throughout his career: decent men in trouble, whose character
is revealed through the action they take to get out of it. His Western heroes
often appeared quiet and unassuming on the surface and were easily
underestimated by their enemies; a good example is the story “3:10 to Yuma,”
which was filmed in 1957 with Glenn Ford and Van Heflin, and again in 2007 with
Russell Crowe and Christian Bale. Ford and Crowe played the bad guy; Heflin and
Bale the quiet, decent good guy.
As good as his Westerns were, the world
of crime beckoned and in 1969, Leonard published The Big Bounce, a caper set in rural Michigan. It was not
particularly successful as a book or film (starring Ryan O’Neal) but it paved
the way for more crime books and out they poured.
Like his Westerns, the first few novels
(Mr. Majestyk, The Moonshine War)
were set largely in rural areas. It wasn’t until he began to exploit the urban
jungle of Detroit that he came into his own. Between 1974 and 1980, he
published Fifty-Two Pickup, Unknown Man
No. 89, Swag, The Switch, City Primeval: High Noon in Detroit and Split Images, each one better than the
last. He avoided using a series
character, in part because he didn’t want film studios to be able to option
more than one book at a time. Not until City
Primeval did he introduce a cop hero. The protagonists of the other books
include a car thief, a process server and a Detroit housewife and her kidnappers.
From the start, he showed a great
talent for bad guys. Their dialogue, their inner voices, their rhythms became
more intricate, more colourful, more musical over time. It was like watching a
great jazz player develop his chops. His villains are greedy, impulsive,
fearless—classic sociopaths determined to take exactly what they want. They
share a lot with the gunslingers of his Westerns; as long as they have a gun
they can stick in someone’s mouth, they feel empowered and impervious.
In the early eighties, he began setting
stories in Miami, bringing new colours and flavours into books like Gold Coast, Cat Chaser, Stick and LaBrava. Again, the heroes are an
unusual bunch. Cat Chaser, for
example, features the owner of a small seaside motel who falls in love with the
wife of a powerful Dominican expatriate and finds there’s a price to pay.
Joseph LaBrava is trying to make it as a photographer in South Beach; he winds
up in the middle of an intricate plot to kidnap a former film star.
(Photo: Paul Sancya/AP Photo) |
Throughout the 80s and 90s, his output
and acclaim grew. Critics across the globe routinely hailed him as the greatest
living writer of crime fiction. Many a literary writer confessed to being fans.
When Glitz—my all-time favourite of
his novels—was published in 1985, Newsweek
put him on its cover. He continued to mine his settings in Detroit and Miami in
books like Freaky Deaky, Maximum Bob, Out of Sight, Rum Punch and
Mr. Paradiso, while exploring new
territory, including New Orleans (Bandits), Italy (Pronto), Los Angeles (Get Shorty, Be Cool), Rwanda (Pagan Babies) and Harlan County (the
story “Fire in the Hole,” adapted into the hit FX series Justified).
He began to fare better in movie adaptations
of his work. Some of his best novels were never filmed or turned into stinkers,
like the 1985 version of Stick
directed by and starring an overmatched Burt Reynolds. But Get Shorty and Out of Sight
were both extremely well done and faithful to the novels, as was Jackie Brown, Quentin Tarantino’s
adaptation of Rum Punch.
In his later years, he began a series
of stories featuring the U.S. Marshal Carl Webster, also known as the Hot Kid (Comfort to the Enemy, Up in Honey’s Room);
published his first children’s book (A
Coyote’s in the House); set a book among the pirates of Somalia (Djibouti); went back in time to the
Spanish-American war (Cuba Libre); and in his last book, Raylan, interwove three stories about U.S. Marshal, Raylan Givens
and his friend and sometimes nemesis Boyd Crowder.
Coincidentally, Raylan came out the same day in January, 2012, as my third Jonah
Geller novel, Boston Cream. Both
featured plots involving organ theft. Just my luck, I thought. I have to
compete with the all-time master of crime, like a mosquito flying into the
windshield of an oncoming truck.
I had the pleasure of meeting Leonard
in 1987, when he came to Toronto for the International Festival of Authors. I
had managed to track down his unlisted phone number at his home in a suburb of
Detroit and had a long phone conversation with him about his characters and his
use of point of view. A few weeks later, we met for ninety minutes at his
Toronto hotel and continued the discussion. I’ll never forget some of the
things he told me, including this primer on point of view.
Elmore Leonard in 1983 (Photo: Rob Kozloff/AP Photos) |
If you have never seen the rules, they
are well worth reading and remembering. You can find them here. The one I try to abide by the most is
number ten, which he always claimed was the secret to his success: “Try to
leave out the parts that readers tend to skip.” It’s a brilliant summation of
his approach to his craft and he was, above all, a master craftsman.
And a musician at heart. And a
romantic, whose characters often fall quickly and deeply in love, like Vincent
and Linda Moon in Glitz, or escaped
convict Jack Foley and Marshal Karen Cisco in Out of Sight. Above all, he was a true original. One
can argue there would have been no Raymond Chandler without Dashiell Hammett
before him; no Ross Macdonald without Chandler; and no Parker, Crais or Lehane
without that first great triumvirate before them. But Leonard owed nothing to anyone. He
forged his own path from the harsh Western landscapes of the Arizona Territory
to Detroit and beyond. He created his own brand of hero and a fantastic
collection of bad guys.
“Wonderful things can happen when you
plant seeds of distrust in a garden of assholes,” says Vincent Mora in Glitz. It would be hard to come up with a
better description of what Elmore Leonard did for more than 40 years. His
garden of assholes is Babylonian in nature. It pains me to know there will be
no more books forthcoming. No more good guys like Vincent, no more bad guys
like Boyd Crowder. But I do have a shelf full of his books that have given me
enormous pleasure since I first picked up a copy of Swag in a used bookstore in 1984, read the first page, and was
instantly hooked. And they will keep giving me pleasure until the last one
crumbles from overuse.
- Howard Shrier is the author of four
novels featuring private investigator Jonah Geller—Buffalo Jump, High Chicago, Boston Cream and Miss Montreal—and one standalone thriller, Lostport.
Here’s a situation that arises continually in the Lew Archer novels: someone Archer is investigating is surprised to learn how much he knows about them. In Black Money Kitty Hendricks voices this surprise in virtually those very words –“How do you know so much about me?” Usually, though, the knowledge Archer has obtained when this question comes up turns out to be peripheral – that is, it doesn’t bear directly on the solution to the case but is just a part of the hopelessly tangled morass of action and information Archer is working his way through. In the novels that most critics and scholars seem to feel comprise the mature Macdonald style – The Galton Case through The Blue Hammer – the reader is constantly being thrown off the scent this way.
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