“I
love the fact that you collaborate with your readers when you write a book.”
– Robert Crais
Born on this day in 1953, Crais is
one of America’s best-selling authors of crime fiction, but he didn’t start to
create novels in the genre until long after he already had made a name for
himself as the writer of scripts for television shows. After graduating from LSU, he moved to
Hollywood and jumped right into writing for shows like Hill Street Blues and Cagney
and Lacey.
But in the late 1980s he tested the
waters with his first novel, The Monkey’s Raincoat, an instant hit with readers
and critics alike – earning everything from “best first novel” to “best mystery.” Since then, he’s had over 20 novels, published in
62 countries.
In 2006 he received the Ross Macdonald Literary Award (for crime
fiction) and in 2014 he was named a Grand Master by the Mystery Writers of
America.
“My books come to me in images,” he
said about his inspiration. “Sometimes
the image is at the beginning of the book, and sometimes it's simply a flash
somewhere in the middle.” Whatever and
whenever, it definitely works, built around his two memorable main characters –
Elvis Cole and Joe Pike.
Perhaps his best-known novel, also
made into a movie, is Hostage, cited
for the great character development throughout. “I write characters and stories that move
me,” he said, “and I write from the heart.”
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