{"id":279,"date":"2011-11-14T22:43:40","date_gmt":"2011-11-14T22:43:40","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.crimeculture.com\/wordpress\/?page_id=279"},"modified":"2012-06-09T11:03:43","modified_gmt":"2012-06-09T11:03:43","slug":"charles-rzepka-interviews-elmore-leonard-part-2","status":"publish","type":"page","link":"https:\/\/www.crimeculture.com\/?page_id=279","title":{"rendered":"The Elmore Leonard Interviews, Part 2"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><em>Crimeculture is delighted to be able to offer substantial extracts from a series of interviews that Professor Charles Rzepka conducted with Elmore Leonard in 2009-10. There were four separate interviews, arranged here in nine parts. <a title=\"The Elmore Leonard Interviews\" href=\"http:\/\/www.crimeculture.com\/?page_id=3435\">Read the Introduction to the Elmore Leonard Interviews.<\/a><\/em><\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-top: 4px; padding-right: 8px; padding-bottom: 8px; padding-left: 8px; color: #555555; background-color: #eeeeee; text-align: center; border-width: 2px; border-color: #dddddd; border-style: solid;\"><em><span style=\"color: #800000;\">Parts: \u00a0Aug 2009<\/span>\u00a0\u00a0<a title=\"The Elmore Leonard Interviews, Part 1\" href=\"http:\/\/www.crimeculture.com\/?page_id=283\">1<\/a> \u00a0 \u00a0\u00a0<a title=\"The Elmore Leonard Interviews, Part 2\" href=\"http:\/\/www.crimeculture.com\/?page_id=279\">2<\/a> \u00a0 \u00a0 <a title=\"The Elmore Leonard Interviews, Part 3\" href=\"http:\/\/www.crimeculture.com\/?page_id=3463\">3<\/a>\u00a0 \u00a0 <span style=\"color: #800000;\">Sept 2009<\/span>\u00a0\u00a0<a title=\"The Elmore Leonard Interviews, Part 4\" href=\"http:\/\/www.crimeculture.com\/?page_id=275\">4<\/a> \u00a0 \u00a0 <a title=\"The Elmore Leonard Interviews, Part 5\" href=\"http:\/\/www.crimeculture.com\/?page_id=1283\">5<\/a>\u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0<span style=\"color: #800000;\">Jan<\/span>\u00a0<span style=\"color: #800000;\">2010<\/span>\u00a0\u00a0<a title=\"The Elmore Leonard Interviews, Part 6\" href=\"http:\/\/www.crimeculture.com\/?page_id=3467\">6<\/a>\u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0<a title=\"The Elmore Leonard Interviews, Part 7\" href=\"http:\/\/www.crimeculture.com\/?page_id=3471\">7<\/a> \u00a0 \u00a0 <span style=\"color: #800000;\">June 2010<\/span>\u00a0\u00a0<a title=\"The Elmore Leonard Interviews, Part 8\" href=\"http:\/\/www.crimeculture.com\/?page_id=3475\">8<\/a> \u00a0 \u00a0 <a title=\"The Elmore Leonard Interviews, Part 9\" href=\"http:\/\/www.crimeculture.com\/?page_id=3479\">9<\/a><\/em><\/p>\n<p><em><span style=\"color: #800000;\">This is the second part of the interview that took place in Bloomfield Village, MI, 12th August 2009.<\/span><\/em><\/p>\n<p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" style=\"margin-top: 2px; margin-bottom: 2px; margin-left: 12px; margin-right: 12px;\" src=\"..\/..\/Images\/11_leonard_cubalibra.jpg\" alt=\"cuba_libra\" width=\"158\" height=\"244\" align=\"left\" hspace=\"8\" vspace=\"2\" \/>CR: There are books that you\u2019ve written that are not immediately in series, but that sort of hook onto books that come before, and that seem to be autobiographical in the sense in which you\u2019re going back to times in history that are important to you, personally. Like the series where you take Virgil Webster from <span style=\"font-style: italic;\">Cuba Libre<\/span>, and spin him into the father of Carl in <span style=\"font-style: italic;\">The Hot Kid<\/span>, and then, in the novel that you serialized in <span style=\"font-style: italic;\">The New York Times<\/span> as <span style=\"font-style: italic;\">Comfort to the Enemy<\/span>, you follow Carl as he\u2019s trying to capture World War II spies. The series ends with <span style=\"font-style: italic;\">Up in Honey\u2019s Room<\/span>. Those last three books trace a kind of a trajectory that corresponds to your early childhood and your teen years, and your war experiences, too, in the Seabees.<\/p>\n<p>EL: Yeah. I did the war experience with the Seabees, but of course elaborated on it and made [Carl] a hero with the Japanese still on the island.<\/p>\n<p>CR: Is there any motivation there to want to revisit these scenes, [a sense] that they\u2019re important to you, or that there [is] anything in that period of your life that you\u2019re trying to process, or reexamine? Because it does make a kind of coherent arc.<\/p>\n<p>EL: Yeah. Well, I didn\u2019t think my participation in the war was very exciting at all. I was with a Seabee outfit on an island, and for part of it, I worked in the store and I sold them shaving cream, and stuff, and a native would come in and he\u2019d want to some \u201clap lap,\u201d which is just a mattress cover. I\u2019d give him a mattress cover and he\u2019d give me a couple of, what were they called, \u201ccat eyes\u201d which they got out of the ocean. I don\u2019t know what a cat eye is. It\u2019s like a half a marble. But I think I\u2019ve only written a couple of scenes where a character was part of that Seabee experience, but then gets involved in combat action.<\/p>\n<p>CR: Doesn\u2019t Carl say they told him the island was safe and then he shows up and he gets shot in the rear end or something?<\/p>\n<p>EL: Yeah. Supposed to have been secured and it wasn\u2019t.<\/p>\n<p>CR: Is Carl important to you as a character, or are your characters all equally important?<\/p>\n<p>EL: He became important, and I would have changed his name if I had known [that] when I wrote \u201cCarl.\u201d I would have given him a different name.<\/p>\n<p>CR: &#8220;Carl&#8221; doesn\u2019t appeal to you?<\/p>\n<p>EL: \u201cCarl,\u201d I don\u2019t know why.<\/p>\n<p>CR: I read that Raylan Givens is going to be a character in a TV series coming up [<span style=\"font-style: italic;\">Justified<\/span>]. They\u2019re very similar.<\/p>\n<p>EL: Yeah. They are.<\/p>\n<p>CR: But they\u2019re also distinct, I think. I see Raylan as much more accessible, and he\u2019s got better manners. In fact, he\u2019s the one who says at one point something about his mother teaching him, when he was a boy and his family was being terrorized by the mining goons, the thugs, his mother says to them, \u201cYou can\u2019t come in my house without my permission.\u201d Which struck me particularly, because that\u2019s what really ticks Carmen off in <span style=\"font-style: italic;\">Killshot<\/span>, when Armand and Richie walk into her house without permission. Is that something that you remember from when you were a kid?<\/p>\n<p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"..\/..\/Images\/11_leonard_fireinthehole.jpg\" alt=\"fire_in_the_hole\" width=\"198\" height=\"254\" align=\"right\" hspace=\"8\" vspace=\"2\" \/>EL: I must. It seemed important certainly when I was writing [<span style=\"font-style: italic;\">Fire in the Hole<\/span>], and they beat him up, they knock him down, and they walk in, they don\u2019t find anybody. In <span style=\"font-style: italic;\">Fire in the Hole<\/span> Raylan goes to Kentucky, Hazard, I think, to investigate a white supremacist who he used to dig coal with at one time, an old buddy who has gone the wrong way. And I had fun with that one, and so the first episode is Fire in the Hole and what happens in that story. I said [to the producers], I think they should call the whole series <span style=\"font-style: italic;\">Fire in the Hole<\/span>: it\u2019s something that\u2019s unexpected that\u2019s going to happen. They want to call it <span style=\"font-style: italic;\">Law Man<\/span>. Well that\u2019s pretty thin, that\u2019s pretty weak.<\/p>\n<p>CR: Kind of prosaic. Talk about a vanilla title.<\/p>\n<p>EL: Yes. It\u2019s terrible. Sony came up with that, and they\u2019re just &#8212; they\u2019re timid. I think a lot of TV people are timid: they don\u2019t want to really expose themselves.<\/p>\n<p>CR: Well they\u2019re worried about the bottom line aren\u2019t they?<\/p>\n<p>EL: Well they have to be worried about that, but the titles don\u2019t mean anything. <span style=\"font-style: italic;\">The Wire<\/span>, what does <span style=\"font-style: italic;\">The Wire<\/span> mean?<\/p>\n<p>CR: I think it means the listening devices, right?<\/p>\n<p>EL: Well that\u2019s what I thought, but I have friends working on that and they\u2019re good writers, too.<\/p>\n<p>CR: As long as we\u2019re talking about characters like Carl and Raylan, to get back to Jack Ryan: there\u2019s an introduction to the edition [of <span style=\"font-style: italic;\">The Big Bounce<\/span>] I have where you say, all of your male leads, even in the Westerns, resemble Jack Ryan in that \u201cthey have much the same basic attitude about their own existence what\u2019s important and what isn\u2019t.\u201d Is that still true?<\/p>\n<p>EL: Probably.<\/p>\n<p>[. . .]<\/p>\n<p>CR: You use the word \u201cexistence\u201d in that description, \u201cthe same basic attitude about their own existence,\u201d and \u201cexistence\u201d is a kind of weighty word.<\/p>\n<p>EL: Yeah. It\u2019s a simple word and yet it does have weight to it, doesn\u2019t it?<\/p>\n<p>CR: It does. I mean it\u2019s not like \u201cthe same attitude towards themselves\u201d or \u201csame attitude towards their life.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>EL: It\u2019s Being.<\/p>\n<p>CR: Yeah. It leads me to want to go back again to this question of your education and Catholicism. When you were at the University of Detroit you majored in English and philosophy: were there particular writers or philosophers that influenced you?<\/p>\n<p>EL: No.<\/p>\n<p>CR: Or a school of philosophy?<\/p>\n<p>EL: I took a metaphysics course, about Being, and what else? not Being.<\/p>\n<p>CR: <span style=\"font-style: italic;\">Being and Nothingness<\/span>?<\/p>\n<p>EL: Yeah.<\/p>\n<p>CR: Well [Jean-Paul] Sartre wrote <span style=\"font-style: italic;\">Being and Nothingness<\/span>. Did you read anything by Sartre?<\/p>\n<p>EL: Yeah. I read a couple books at least, and I liked him a lot.<\/p>\n<p>CR: Did you read any Heidegger?<\/p>\n<p>EL: No.<\/p>\n<p>CR: Well I focused on the word \u201cexistence\u201d because so much of what you write resonates with existentialism, and I was curious.<\/p>\n<p>EL: I\u2019ve never understood that word. I said, \u201cWhat does \u2018existentialism\u2019 mean?\u201d And I\u2019ve never gotten a clear understanding of it, I don\u2019t know why.<\/p>\n<p>CR: I think so much of what you write indicates that you understand it at a level that\u2019s so fundamental you don\u2019t even think about it. Just to take an example: everyone who writes about you points out that <span style=\"font-style: italic;\">For Whom the Bell Tolls<\/span> is a really important book, and you even say Hemingway is one of the most important influences on your writing.<\/p>\n<p>EL: Yes.<\/p>\n<p>CR: People interested in existentialism point to someone like Hemingway, or someone like Robert Jordan as an existential hero. I think what they mean is that these are heroes that don\u2019t first sign up for some kind of metaphysical doctrine, or some kind of belief system, and then behave in a way that conforms to these rules or this belief system. Rather they look at how they behave and discover what they believe. [. . .] This is where I think we get to that [notion of] the person inside as opposed to the person outside. The person outside is constantly conforming to some standard or rule that isn\u2019t part of him or her. Does that . . . ?<\/p>\n<p>EL: That makes sense. Yeah.<\/p>\n<p>CR: It seems to me that all your heroes are that kind of person, that is, very unhappy [when] conforming to some sense of duty that is imposed from without, [that] doesn\u2019t correspond to the way they feel or the way they even take pleasure in their own existence.<\/p>\n<p>EL: Well, the cop who might cut corners, say.<\/p>\n<p>CR: Right. Or take Robert Jordan in <span style=\"font-style: italic;\">For Whom the Bell Tolls<\/span>. Hemingway makes the point that both sides do horrible things. There\u2019s that long extended story that Pilar tells about the villagers who killed &#8212;<\/p>\n<p>EL: Went off the cliff.<\/p>\n<p>CR: &#8212; I mean it\u2019s horrifying, and at the same time you have the Fascists doing the same kinds of things with their bombings in Guernica and so forth, but all Robert Jordan wants to do is blow up the fucking bridge, [. . .] that is his whole existence. He\u2019s tied up with what he knows he\u2019s good at doing, and that comes out for me&#8211;I\u2019m talking too much here, but &#8212;<\/p>\n<p>EL: That\u2019s, no, that\u2019s good.<\/p>\n<p>CR: &#8212; I\u2019m responding to that over and over again in your work. To the degree that I could label it philosophically, I\u2019d say it\u2019s existential.<\/p>\n<p>EL: Yeah. But I don\u2019t even know why I do, why I write him a certain way.<\/p>\n<p>CR: All the better for me.<\/p>\n<p>EL: Yes. Right. But also, Richard Bissell was a major influence in the \u201850s, a bigger influence than Hemingway, although there are parts of Hemingway\u2019s short stories that I read that I, oh God, he nails it.<\/p>\n<p>CR: I agree. Hemingway\u2019s short stories are phenomenal. Do you have any favorites?<\/p>\n<p>EL: In <span style=\"font-style: italic;\">Up in Michigan<\/span> this woman who works in a little joint, a restaurant maybe, is kind of attracted to this guy, and finally lets him take her out onto the wharf somewhere at night and he makes love to her in a very rough way. She remembers \u201cit,\u201d he [Hemingway] used the construction \u201cit\u201d like, the hair on his arms, I forget how the \u201cit\u201d goes in it, but the hair on his arms, she was attracted to that in some way, but it was the \u201cit\u201d that made it all, in a string of maybe three of those things, made it sound like something sexual.<\/p>\n<p>CR: And at the same time it sounds like it\u2019s something impersonal, like something happening to them. \u201cIt\u201d rather than she\u2019s doing this or he\u2019s doing that. Do you know that story from <span style=\"font-style: italic;\">In Our Time<\/span> called \u201cSoldier\u2019s Home\u201d?<\/p>\n<p>EL: I remember that name yeah.<\/p>\n<p>CR: The soldier, I think his name is Krebs.<\/p>\n<p>EL: Yes.<\/p>\n<p>CR: He comes back from the first World War, and he\u2019s terribly depressed because he\u2019s not allowed to tell anyone the truth. All they want to hear are these glory tales about heroism and the noble cause and all of that. And that\u2019s all the story\u2019s about, how he comes home and finds himself a stranger in his own country. <span style=\"font-style: italic;\">The Killers<\/span> is another of his stories that I really enjoy.<\/p>\n<p>EL: Where it\u2019s all the point of view of the kid who\u2019s sitting in the diner and doesn\u2019t understand what\u2019s going on.<\/p>\n<p>CR: Doesn\u2019t understand, and the fighter is in his room lying on the bed just waiting for it to happen.<\/p>\n<p>EL: They found him, yeah.<\/p>\n<p>CR: And the gangsters, they\u2019re like Abbott and Costello, they\u2019re like vaudevillians.<\/p>\n<p>EL: I thought they were great, though. I\u2019m talking about the guy [who]\u2019s going to serve them. What they don\u2019t have, because they\u2019re not open yet.<\/p>\n<p>CR: Yeah. Then there\u2019s a shot of, I\u2019m using film terms, I\u2019m not a film person at all, but there\u2019s a point of view moment, isn\u2019t there? where you\u2019re looking at them through the serving door?<\/p>\n<p>EL: Yes. Right. The cook&#8217;s back there.<\/p>\n<p>CR: Like it\u2019s framed. The cook\u2019s looking at them.<\/p>\n<p>EL: Yeah. [. . .] That was a movie. Burt Lancaster.<\/p>\n<p>CR: One of my favorite actors. Another is Robert Mitchum, whom I think if he were still alive should have been cast as Armand Degas.<\/p>\n<p>EL: Oh, of course, rather than Mickey Rourke.<\/p>\n<p>CR: A hefty Robert Mitchum with slick black hair and slightly tight suit, I think he\u2019d be great. Could we continue this conversation about existentialism a little bit?<\/p>\n<p>EL: Yeah.<\/p>\n<p>CR: Because it seems to me that part of what\u2019s existential about your heroes is that they have a certain kind of talent, but they also manage to cultivate it [. . .], and they take pleasure in doing the things they\u2019re good at and getting better at doing them so that it\u2019s not that they\u2019re just natural&#8211;what\u2019s natural becomes like second nature to them. [. . .] It reminds me of an interview you had, with Lawrence Grobel. You were talking about your writing and I think you said, \u201cI\u2019m serious about writing, but I know what it is. I\u2019m a serious writer, but I don\u2019t take it seriously. I don\u2019t stew over it, I try and relax and swing with it.\u201d Which is jazz talk; I mean it\u2019s what jazz musicians do after they\u2019ve been in the shed. They come out with this acquired skill.<\/p>\n<p>EL: Yeah. I didn\u2019t make that relationship. Huh.<\/p>\n<p>CR: But it seems to me, that that\u2019s all over [your work]. What I want to make is a big grand statement and say all your books are about writing. They\u2019re all about folks who want to get better at what they\u2019re naturally talented at doing, and they don\u2019t want to be interfered with. They don\u2019t want to think about what other people think about what they\u2019re doing, they want to just get in the groove and swing, become better and better at what they\u2019re natural at. That, to me, is existential.<\/p>\n<p>EL: Hmm. Wow. When I sit down to write, I didn\u2019t this morning, but ordinarily I\u2019ll look at it in an older book just to get the sound of it, just the feel of it, and then that\u2019ll help me start instead of just starting to write, because I can waste an awful lot of time just writing down without a point of view just what is going on in the scene, instead of taking somebody with maybe an attitude, but at least take a point of view and get us into it that way. Because I did learn from George Higgins, in <span style=\"font-style: italic;\">The Friends of Eddie Coyle<\/span>, how to get in right away, get in and then tell the reader where they are and so on. I had an editor who was, well he ran the company, and he really made me, he\u2019s the one who really got me first in front of the readers, and he\u2019d say, \u201cWell where are they? I don\u2019t even know where they are and they\u2019re talking.\u201d I said, \u201cWell take it easy, you know it\u2019ll be revealed.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>CR: Be patient.<\/p>\n<p>EL: Yeah. Be patient.<\/p>\n<p>CR: So you sometimes find yourself just moving into a work not really latched onto a point of view yet, you\u2019re just trying to get the stuff out.<\/p>\n<p>EL: It\u2019s always a point of view, but whose point of view is the important thing.<\/p>\n<p>CR: Do you find yourself writing and then falling into a point of view and saying, this must be a character?<\/p>\n<p>EL: Well it\u2019s always a character, but sometimes I start writing not knowing, not realizing, this is not the way I write, I got to get a point of view here and I\u2019ll start over from a point of view, an angle, an attitude.<\/p>\n<p>CR: Right.<\/p>\n<p>EL: Attitudes to me are so important, you\u2019ve got to give your characters attitudes, or else who are they, they\u2019re just sitting there.<\/p>\n<p>CR: So the personality has something to do with attitude?<\/p>\n<p>EL: Yes. Yeah. A real personality or one that he likes to play with, one that he likes to show people, to give people an idea of who he is which isn\u2019t right. I mean which isn\u2019t true.<\/p>\n<p>CR: But sometimes your characters seem more preoccupied with how other people see their attitude than with just being\u2026<\/p>\n<p>EL: Really?<\/p>\n<p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"..\/..\/Images\/11_leonard-killshot.jpg\" alt=\"killshot\" width=\"198\" height=\"308\" align=\"left\" hspace=\"8\" vspace=\"2\" \/>CR: Well take Richie Nix for instance; there\u2019s a guy who is preoccupied with, you know, he wants to rob a bank in every state of the union, but fuck Alaska, it\u2019s the 49th, so he can outdo Billy the Kid. He\u2019s got this conscious preoccupation with himself, and when I\u2019m reading your books there\u2019s always a warning flag that goes up when that happens, where a character\u2019s too busy thinking himself into movie scenes, or thinking himself into another role and not swinging with it, not just sort of being there in the moment doing what he does best and what he\u2019s trained and worked at to make himself that way. This seems to come up over and over again.<\/p>\n<p>EL: Well, if it\u2019s true, I hope I don\u2019t start thinking about that, you know?<\/p>\n<p>CR: Pretend I\u2019m not here.<\/p>\n<p>EL: Yeah.<\/p>\n<p>CR: I wanted to ask you about plot, getting back to the sort of technical aspects. You say you hate plots, or you\u2019re not interested in them, per se.<\/p>\n<p>EL: Yeah.<\/p>\n<p>CR: But to get back to Jack Ryan and <span style=\"font-style: italic;\">The Big Bounce<\/span>, there was an introduction to the 1989 edition where you described [receiving] 84 rejections in three months [for that book]. How did you survive that? Eight-four rejections, three months\u2026<\/p>\n<p>EL: Well, it was, I hadn\u2019t read the book again. And this guy, my agent\u2026<\/p>\n<p>CR: On the wall there?<\/p>\n<p>EL: Yeah, Swanny. He\u2019s, I forgot what it says, it\u2019s up &#8212; what did he say? Oh, \u201cI\u2019m going to make you rich, kiddo.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>CR: It sounds like a line from a movie.<\/p>\n<p>EL: Well, it could be, yeah. But he had been handling me indirectly. My New York agent, and the first time I spoke to him, he sold all the Westerns and some of the Western movies up to that time, and then he called me up and he said, \u201cDid you write this, kiddo?\u201d It was <span style=\"font-style: italic;\">The Big Bounce<\/span>, and I said, \u201cYes, of course I wrote it.\u201d And he says, \u201cWell, kiddo, I\u2019m going to make you rich.\u201d And he got the 84 rejections.<\/p>\n<p>CR: So he\u2019s busy sending it out. You weren\u2019t sitting here taking it out of one envelope and sticking it in another?<\/p>\n<p>EL: No. And he was showing most of them to filmmakers, so that\u2019s where the 84 comes in. Maybe there were a dozen publishers, you know, and he did get 105 rejections for &#8212; he didn\u2019t list them all, but he said 105 for the one Hitchcock finally bought, I forgot which one it was. And then he decided, as he wrote the screenplay, no, it wasn\u2019t going to work for him. [. . .]<\/p>\n<p>CR: In your introduction to the \u201989 edition [of <span style=\"font-style: italic;\">The Big Bounce<\/span>], you say that you think it was rejected because it needed a plot, so there\u2019s an example where &#8212; you often say that you\u2019re not concerned with plot, but here\u2019s an example where you weren\u2019t concerned enough with the plot. I mean, how did that get away from you? Was it just\u2026<\/p>\n<p>EL: I\u2019m never that concerned with plot. I think, God, if I ever had a great idea, you know, for a plot, I\u2019m hoping it\u2019s this one, <span style=\"font-style: italic;\">Djibouti<\/span>.<\/p>\n<p>CR: The one you\u2019re working on now?<\/p>\n<p>EL: Yeah.<\/p>\n<p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"..\/..\/Images\/11_leonard_glitz.jpg\" alt=\"glitz\" width=\"198\" height=\"304\" align=\"right\" hspace=\"8\" vspace=\"2\" \/>CR: I just want to ask you, if you\u2019re not thinking about plot, how come your books have such great symmetries? For instance, in <span style=\"font-style: italic;\">Glitz<\/span> you\u2019ve got Vincent Mora mugged coming out of the grocery store, and a bottle of wine breaks and he\u2019s covered with wine and, in the end, he\u2019s mugged again coming out of a grocery store. Or in <span style=\"font-style: italic;\">Killshot<\/span>, Armand gets the drop on Richie because he left his Browning automatic under the front seat. Then at the end of <span style=\"font-style: italic;\">Killshot<\/span>, Carmen gets the drop on Armand because Wayne left the shotgun under the bed by accident.<\/p>\n<p>EL: Right.<\/p>\n<p>CR: So there\u2019s some kind of symmetry there, right?<\/p>\n<p>EL: Well, evidently, I thought of that as I was writing. I might have had to put the shotgun under the bed, later. I don\u2019t remember\u2026<\/p>\n<p>CR: You mean you were trying to think of how to get her out of the situation?<\/p>\n<p>EL: Yeah. Yeah.<\/p>\n<p>CR: So you back up and say, \u201cLet\u2019s have a moment here where Wayne leaves the shotgun, or moves it under the bed\u201d?<\/p>\n<p>EL: I might have. I don\u2019t remember. But that\u2019s how you make the plot work. You take a little from here or you take from back here and put it up in the front so that you\u2019ve got a setup now. [. . .] I never worry about the book. When I\u2019m writing the book, I know I\u2019ll think of an ending. I\u2019ll have a choice of endings the way I finally get into page 300, approaching the end, and then I may have to go back just a little bit to set something up and so on. But I know it\u2019s going to work. I\u2019m confident, always, that my book\u2019s going to work.<\/p>\n<p>CR: And does that come with experience?<\/p>\n<p>EL: Yeah. Exactly.<\/p>\n<p>CR: Because it\u2019s worked so many times before?<\/p>\n<p>EL: Because 40 years ago I was probably outlining a whole book. Now, I don\u2019t want to know what\u2019s going to happen. It\u2019s only in the page 100 to page 200 is the tough part of the book, how you keep it moving and moving ahead with characters that you like, getting them to do certain things, that\u2019ll be entertaining, and then in that last part, kind of get it going a little faster and then have a big finish.<\/p>\n<p>CR: Yeah, I can see that. So, the middle part is the toughest?<\/p>\n<p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"..\/..\/Images\/11_leonard_bandits.jpg\" alt=\"bandits\" width=\"198\" height=\"270\" align=\"left\" hspace=\"8\" vspace=\"2\" \/>EL: Yeah. Definitely. Sub-plots are perhaps introduced and you might come up with another character, too, who is going to save your day, who\u2019s very important. And that\u2019s the best kind to have. There was a guy in <span style=\"font-style: italic;\">Bandits<\/span>&#8211;he\u2019s just a dumb guy that was hired by the bad guys&#8211;Franklin de Dios.<\/p>\n<p>CR: The Miskito Indian?<\/p>\n<p>EL: Yes. And he has a strange name and he talks kind of funny and he meets, Jack Delaney, runs into him in the bathroom, and Franklin thinks he\u2019s going to be shot. And he says, \u201cYou want my shoes?\u201d Do you remember? Because he always takes the other guy\u2019s shoes if he&#8217;s going to shoot them. And then Delaney uses the guy and turns him, he tells him, \u201cYou\u2019re being wasted by these people. What is this?\u201d And finally, Franklin shoots the bad guy in the end.<\/p>\n<p>CR: He must have been an important character to you because you remember him so vividly.<\/p>\n<p>EL: And he came out of nowhere.<\/p>\n<p>CR: So he was just there sort of hanging on, lurking, he was lurking and then\u2026<\/p>\n<p>EL: I gave him a name. Once you give the character a name, because maybe he was just talking before, he was by his car in front of a restaurant talking to somebody else and then you finally at the end of that scene you say, \u201cAnd his name was Franklin de Dios,\u201d which means, \u201cRemember this guy.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>[. . .]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Crimeculture is delighted to be able to offer substantial extracts from a series of interviews that Professor Charles Rzepka conducted<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"https:\/\/www.crimeculture.com\/?page_id=279\" class=\"more-link\">Continue reading<span class=\"screen-reader-text\">The Elmore Leonard Interviews, Part 2<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":779,"featured_media":0,"parent":83,"menu_order":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","template":"","meta":{"footnotes":""},"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.crimeculture.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/pages\/279"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.crimeculture.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/pages"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.crimeculture.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/types\/page"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.crimeculture.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/users\/779"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.crimeculture.com\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcomments&post=279"}],"version-history":[{"count":18,"href":"https:\/\/www.crimeculture.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/pages\/279\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":3591,"href":"https:\/\/www.crimeculture.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/pages\/279\/revisions\/3591"}],"up":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.crimeculture.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/pages\/83"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.crimeculture.com\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fmedia&parent=279"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}