Philly Daily ran my Crime Beat column with my interview with Longmire author Craig Johnson.
You can read the
column via the link below or the following text:
Davis: ‘Longmire’ author Craig Johnson’s Philly connections - Philly Daily
I watched and enjoyed the TV crime series Longmire on A&E back in 2012, and I went on to read Craig Johnson’s crime novels, which the TV series was based on.
Although the TV
series and the novels about Sheriff Walt Longmire take place in Wyoming, there
is a strong Philadelphia connection.
I reached out to
Craig Jonson and asked him about his popular character, his latest Longmire
novel, Return To Sender, and his Philadelphia connections.
Davis: How would you
describe your latest Walt Longmire crime novel Return to Sender?
Johnson: It’s
no secret that my novels tend to come from newspaper articles and Return To
Sender is no exception. I was reading about this woman that has the longest
postal route in the country, over three hundred miles and with the nefarious
mind of the crime fiction writer I thought - if she went missing, where would
you look for her? This led to my sheriff, Walt Longmire taking on the third
undercover operation of his twenty-one-novel career, something at which he’s
not particularly good.
I centered the book outside of Walt’s home county down
in the Red Desert portion of Wyoming, home of the largest living sand dune in
the US, which came as a surprise even to me. I would’ve guessed Texas, New
Mexico, Arizona or some place like that, but it’s actually Wyoming.
Davis: How would you
describe Walt Longmire?
Johnson: Walt
is the sheriff of the least populated county in the least populated state,
which makes for some unique situations. He’s a regular guy with a few
superpowers, he reads, he reads everything and that makes him formidable, and
he has a sense of humor. I have a lot of folks in law-enforcement and the thing
they say differentiates the books from most crime fiction is the humor, and
that it just seems real.
Davis: Although your
series takes place in Wyoming, there are several Philadelphia connections in
your novels, especially in one of your reoccurring characters, Vic Morettti. So,
what’s a nice South Philly Italian girl doing in Wyoming? How would you
describe Vic Moretti?
Johnson: With
a high-context environment like Wyoming, a place that most people aren’t
familiar with, the ninth largest state in America with only a third of the
population of Philadelphia, I needed an outsider. I needed someone who would
ask the questions that a lot of readers might otherwise ask. Victoria “Vic”
Moretti is a street cop from Philly with four brothers who are police officers
and a father who’s the Chief Detective for Philadelphia South and a graduate of
the sixth largest police academy in the country - she’s forgotten more about
subjects such as ballistics and forensics than Walt will ever know. She’s also
had to be twice as smart and twice as tough as her brothers to be noticed half
as much, but when her husband in the energy industry moves to Wyoming she goes
along, gets bored and puts an application in with the local sheriff’s
department.
Davis: What are your
personal connections to Philadelphia?
Johnson: I
did my graduate work in Philadelphia and met my wife there and we’ve still got
family in the city so that I can get back and do research, IE: cheesesteaks and
an ice-cold Yuengling.
Davis: In your third novel
Kindness Goes Unpunished Wal Longmire travels to Philadelphia and
becomes involved in a murder investigation. Will he return to Philadelphia in a
future novel?
Johnson: You
never can tell; Philadelphia is my go-to in big cities and gives me the
opportunity to write about things I don’t normally get the opportunity to write
about. Never say never…
Davis: Like many
people, I came to your novels after watching the Longmire TV series
first on A&A and then Netflix. Are there any plans to resurrect the
Longmire TV series?
Johnson: The first
broadcaster we were with was A&E where we were the highest-rated scripted
drama in their network history, and after three seasons they tried to buy
Longmire off of the producing studio Warner Brothers. Warner wouldn’t sell, so
A&E dropped Longmire after three seasons even though it was their highest
rated show. We ended up getting picked up by a fledgling streaming service at
the time, Netflix, and became a hit for them and once again, after three
seasons they approached Warner about buying Longmire. Warner said no
again, so Netflix stopped the show about seven years ago, but it continued
garnering an audience in reruns.
Now it looks like
Netflix is in the process of buying Warner Brothers and it’ll be interesting to
see what they do with Longmire when they actually own it.
Davis: Are you tired of
writing about your character in the way that Sir Arthur Conan Doyle tired of
Sherlock Holmes and Ian Fleming tired of James Bond? Will you be writing more
Sheriff Walt Longmire novels?
Johnson: Well, I have an
advantage in that my character isn’t a cocaine-addicted-sociopath… No, I think
I enjoy writing the books for the same reason readers enjoy reading about
him—he’s a good guy. In time of uncertainty, we have a tendency to gravitate
toward an honest to goodness good guy and I think that’s who Walt is. He’s not
perfect, but if my truck slides off the road in a blizzard in Wyoming late on a
January night—that’s the guy I want pulling over to help me.
Paul Davis’ Crime Beat column appears here each week. He is also a frequent contributor to Broad + liberty and Counterterrorism magazine. He can be reached via pauldavisoncrime.com.
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