Showing posts with label City Primeval High Noon in Detroit. Show all posts
Showing posts with label City Primeval High Noon in Detroit. Show all posts

Thursday, October 11, 2018

Happy Birthday, Dutch: A Look Back At Elmore Leonard's Greatest Opening Lines


The late, great Elmore “Dutch” Leonard is one of my favorite writers.

As today is his birthday, the good people at CrimeReads.com offer his best opening lines from his crime novels.

Elmore Leonard was “the Dickens of Detroit,” “the poet laureate of wild assholes with revolvers,” and above all a master craftsman. Ever a writer’s writer, Leonard honed his craft meticulously over a career that spanned sixty years and nearly as many books, from westerns to era-defining crime novels like Get Shorty and Out of Sight to short story collections that still infuse the pop and mystery culture to this day. Leonard’s “Ten Rules of Writing,” published in the New York Times in 2001, has become gospel for many a writer, including such timeless gems as “[t]ry to leave out the part that readers tend to skip” and, most famously, “[i]f it sounds like writing, I rewrite it.” Leonard was also renowned for his opening lines. (In his “Rules,” he warns writers to skip prologues and never to start by describing the weather.) Rightly, he’s now remembered as one of the greatest lead writers in the history of crime fiction, able to engage a reader, capture a mood, and establish a world in a few brief words.

In honor of Leonard’s birthday—he was born on October 11th, 1925—we’ve assembled 25 of his greatest opening lines. They’re ranked here (in descending order) but that’s a matter of taste, mood, and whimsy. Let these words be an inspiration, an entertainment, or just a good kick in the ass. Warning: the temptation to keep on reading Leonard’s books will be strong, and you should follow that temptation where it leads.
25. Pronto (1993)

“One evening, it was toward the end of October, Harry Arno said to the woman he’d been seeing on and off the past few years, ‘I’ve made a decision. I’m going to tell you something I’ve never told anyone before in my life.'”

24. Cuba Libre (1998)

“Tyler arrived with the horses, February eighteenth, three days after the battleship Maine blew up in Havana harbor.”

23. Split Images (1981)

“In the winter of 1981 a multimillionaire by the name of Robinson Daniels shot a Haitian refugee who had broken into his home in Palm Beach.”
You can read the rest of the piece via the below link:
You can also read my Crime Beat column on Elmore Leonard via the below link:

Tuesday, September 1, 2015

Elmore Leonard: Four Novels Of the 1980s


I've been a huge admirer of the late, great Elmore Leonard since the early 1980s and the first two Leonard crime novels I read - City Primeval and LaBrava - appear in the new collection of four of his novels from the 1980s.

Veteran journalist and author Joseph C. Goulden offers a good review of Elmore Leonard: Four Novels of the 1980s in the Washington Times.


Library of America is performing a stellar service to the legions of readers who admire the crime-thriller writer Elmore Leonard (and include me in those ranks). At hand is the second volume of a planned trilogy that brings back four of the master’s best novels. And they vividly display Leonard’s talent for sparkling stories — ranging from an elaborate scam involving an aging movie star to the search for an assassin in glitzy Atlantic City. Leonard, who died in 2013, created a legacy that surpasses even such masters as Dashiell Hammett and Raymond Chandler.
Ah, and Leonard (aka “Dutch”) remains the master of the tells-it-all sentence. A character relates driving through a section of town that was so rough that when he put his arm out the window to signal a turn, “some low-life took the can of beer out of my hand.”
Leonard began writing when he lived in Detroit, and his first novels delved into the underworld of that gritty, tortured city. My first exposure to Leonard convinced me that he must be an ex-convict, given his mastery of thug-speak (“Jack City” for the Michigan state prison) and a seeming insider-knowledge of how to rob a liquor store and roar away on a motorcycle.
Wrong. In “real life” Leonard toiled as a copywriter for an advertising agency, and — very importantly — he had the work ethic essential to anyone serious about becoming a writer. He would arise at 5 a.m. and write for two hours before making breakfast for his two kids. As he once put it, “I had a rule that I had to write a page before I put the water on for the coffee.” At work, he kept a legal pad in his middle desk drawer on which he would write in longhand when alone. His first works were Westerns, when that genre was still popular with magazine and book publishers. When he wished to describe a desert or canyon he turned to a magazine, Arizona Highways, for guidance.
Then he shifted to crime, in a city where the cops were tough and the criminals even tougher.  

You can read the rest of the review via the below link:

http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2015/aug/31/book-review-elmore-leonard-fourn-novels-of-the-198/

You can also read my Crime Beat column on Elmore Leonard via the below link:

http://www.pauldavisoncrime.com/2009/05/return-to-elmoreland-elmore-leonards.html

Friday, October 11, 2013

Happy Birthday To Elmore Leonard


As Biography.com notes, today is the birthday of one of my favorite crime writers, the late Elmore Leonard.

Born in Louisiana in 1925, Elmore Leonard was inspired by Remarque's All Quiet on the Western Front.

Leonard's determination to be a writer stayed with him through a stint in the U.S. Navy and a job in advertising. His early credits include mostly Westerns, including 3:10 to Yuma.

When that genre became less popular, Leonard turned to crime novels set in Detroit, Michigan, including Get Shorty, Jackie Brown and Out of Sight.

The prolific writer died in Detroit on August 20, 2013, at age 87.

You can read the rest of the piece and watch a short video of Elmore Leonard's life via the below link:

http://www.biography.com/people/elmore-leonard-575754

You can also read my Crime Beat column on Elmore Leonard via the below link:

http://www.pauldavisoncrime.com/2009/05/return-to-elmoreland-elmore-leonards.html

Below are the jacket covers of some of his crime novels: