When I met Harlan Coben, he looked exhausted, as he
has been on the road promoting his new thriller Gone for Good
for the last month. Since being nominated for an Edgar Award for Tell
No One in New York at the start of the month, he has been
traversing the US, and has reached the end of the twisting tour road
here in Manchester. His books are likewise full of twists and turns
and plotted to make you burn through the pages late into the night.
The endings are always complete ambushes, with no warning, just 'wham'
and surprise.
Harlan started his career with two standalone
mystery novels Play Dead and Mystery Cure, now out of
print. He hit his stride with his Myron Bolitar series featuring the
eponymous wise-cracking sports agent P.I. and his team. The supporting
characters such as Esperanza, Big Cindi and the Psycho Side-kick
Windsor Horne Lockwood III (aka 'Win' for short) have become a legend
among his fans.
His early books in the US had the now infamous
covers featuring footballs landing in puddles of blood, tennis balls
bouncing across a blood wound or the famous skeleton on the bench. He
is at pains to explain that although the Myron novels use the
landscape of sports, they are not based on sport; in fact Harlan is
not even a sports fan. Thus the US editions were later marketed with
strange sketches on them, but momentum had soon gathered and they
became highly fashionable, with Myron's sidekick Win now entering
modern crime fiction mythology.
The Myron series however really didn't dent the
British crime scene when they first crossed the Atlantic. Harlan first
came over to the UK when his former publishers Hodder & Stoughton
released the Myron Series here. His award-winning book One False
Move was the springboard for the re-launch with Harlan (with a
shortlived 'goatee' beard) being included in the W H Smith 'Fresh
Talent' awards. The covers made no reference to sports and were
endorsed by heavy hitters like Michael Connelly and Val McDermid
across some strikingly enigmatic cover designs. They sold well, but
not to the level that many crime fans like myself expected.
Harlan's Myron Bolitar series are amazing feats of
plotting. They have more twists and turns than the M62 around Leeds.
They also feature an amazing array of characters, and probe the
darkness in the souls of us all, but they do so with a wise-cracking
and really (and I mean really) funny style. Comedy and crime can
rarely work, unless the writer is a master of both genres. Harlan's
books are 'laugh-out-loud' funny. They are also very moving, and he
traverses that tight rope extremely well, just keeping the right
balance, and not falling off into broad farce, which can easily
happen.
So despite Harlan having a slow growing core of
cult fans ('cult' can also mean 'very small') he never really hit the
charts in the UK. This all changed last year, when Harlan unleashed
the standalone thriller Tell No One, concerning Dr David
Beck's hunt for his murdered wife Elizabeth, who mysteriously appears
as an .mpg on his PC years later. The story was what Hollywood would
describe as 'high concept' and is currently in development at Columbia
Sony. Tell No One stormed the charts both in the US as well as
the UK, reaching #4 in The Times. The paperback was also a huge
success, just flying off the shelves as word of mouth spread - perhaps
it should have been re-titled 'Tell Everyone'.
He now returns to the UK to promote Gone For
Good, another standalone which has even more twists and turns
than I have seen in any other thriller. The plot zings like a bullet
ricochet and concerns the hunt for a vanished brother, a dead
girlfriend, a missing woman and child, and some pretty menacing folk
who creep out of the past and make Will Klein's life a nightmare.
Will's sidekick Squares is a masterful creation, and almost to the
level of Win in confused contradictions. There is one stand out
sequence when Will and Squares visit an ex-Pimp held hostage by one of
his former girls. This scene is masterfully played and stills hangs in
my mind as crafted from a surreal nightmare. The book has also the
trademark humour that one would expect from Harlan, but he keeps it in
check, using it as a way of diffusing the tension, which is as taut as
I've seen in contemporary mystery fiction.
Harlan Coben is now published by Orion in the UK,
and they have used rather melancholic and moody cover art for these
last two books which conveys the themes of both books admirably. Orion
have also re-released the Myron novels with new artwork, and I feel
readers of Tell No One and Gone for Good are in for a
rather pleasant surprise when they investigate the back catalogue.
Although I enjoyed the two recent standalones thoroughly, my heart
remains with Myron, Win, Esperanza and Big Cindi.
Harlan was tired at the close of his month long
tour, but he remained as funny, charming and quick-witted as ever and
he contrasted well with the classical background of newcomer David
Benioff who he was teamed with.
With the long and twisting road of the tour coming
to a close, Harlan has finally reached the height of his powers and
popularity in the UK - and deservedly so. The journey has had plenty
of twists, just like the thrillers he writes.
If you've not read Harlan Coben's Tell No One -
where have you been? A word of advice if you intend to read it, or
Gone for Good - start early in the evening, as you will have a
long night ahead of you.
If you've not met Myron and Win
.Win is
Myron's dark side, and Myron is a little like all of us, except that
in Win, he has a partner unique in the Mystery Genre, one that will be
remembered long after the book finishes.

Welcome to Deansgate Manchester and thanks for
taking time out to talk to SHOTS Magazine.
Gee, thanks Ali, it's great to see you again, and
thank you for asking me.
Firstly were you surprised at the success of
Tell No One in the UK as it stormed the charts last year? What
do you put the success down to?
Well, every time you write a book you hope it's
something that people will like, and it's always fun when anything
good happens to me. Quite frankly I'm stunned that people are here to
see me tonight. I'm stunned that people want my autograph. I'm stunned
that people want to send me emails.
Is it true that Tell No One was
originally titled Big Tears Must Fall and if so why was it
changed?
The original title was actually Big Tears Fall
and I changed the title at the suggestion of my publisher. I haven't
used a title that I came up with since Fade Away and the
reason I changed it was simply that Tell No One was a better
title. Gone for Good wasn't my title either. Malcolm Edwards
Editor-in-Chief at Orion (my British Publisher) came up with that
title. You have to know your strengths and weakness, so if someone
comes up with a better title - more power to them. My American
publisher thought Big Tears Fall sounded too much like a
Native American Indian Name, like 'Me - Big Tears Fall'.
We see that Orion are re-launching the
Myron/Win series in the UK - do you have any details? Will they
feature footballs covered in blood?
{Laughs} The books are out already and the covers
are on my website (www.harlancoben.com). The first four have been
released and there's an omnibus to go with the series, and the
remaining Myron books (with a second omnibus) will be out by the end
of the year. I believe Darkest Fear, the last of the series,
will be out in hardcover also.
Would you care to tell some of our readers a
little about the Myron Bolitar series and why non-sports fans should
explore them?
Well, sports are almost irrelevant, as it's just a
setting. I dont like sports myself and I don't follow any teams,
but I find it a great setting for murder and mayhem. Myron Bolitar is
a sports agent but he really could be an agent for a dancer, or a
writer or anything else. The Myron Series - he's a Private Eye, he's a
wise-cracking guy and I would also add that for the series I've always
tried to concentrate more on the plotting than on the character, but
the character ends up being more important. I have always worked very
hard to bring what I know about suspense and thrillers to the books
like Tell No One and Gone for Good but I also
brought it to the Myron series.
I feel, having met you a couple of times, that
Myron Bolitar is very much like you as a person - and I read that Win
is based loosely on an old college roommate. Would you care to comment
on how these two characters appeared in your mind?
Well, authors very rarely like to admit this, but
Myron is basically me with a lot of wish-fulfilment. He is however a
far better basketball player, a better friend, more loyal, he's
funnier, but I have him beat in two areas - firstly I'm a better
dancer (I'll show you later if you want!) and secondly I'm wiser in
the way of women. This is not a great rave, it's sort of like saying
'gonorrhoea is better than syphilis'. I've been with the same woman
since I was 20 years old, while Myron falters in the ways of love.
As
you find out in the series
.
Right.
What about Big Cindi and Esperanza? Were they
also room-mates? And if so have you their current addresses?
{Laughs}
..No. Writers sometimes give
complicated ways that they came upon their characters, but sometimes
the character is just there. When I wrote Deal Breaker, Myron
walked into his office, and in the very first scene Big Cindi was just
there. I didn't work on creating her, I didn't think about her, she
was just there. However an early reader - an agent, who incidentally
was female, said 'No, no, no, you need a babe in the office, somebody
more attractive', so I got rid of Big Cindi and I created Esperanza.
Then, two books later when they needed somebody else in the office,
Big Cindi said 'Hey I've been sitting here patiently, now gimme my
turn.' So I just brought her back out.
To many of your fans, Win is a very, very
intriguing character. Have you ever considered writing a novel from
either Wins perspective or a story with Win as the central
character?
Considered it - yes. Will do it
.probably
no. I felt that Backspin contains a lot about Win's
background. It was the first time I had seen that one of those dark
sidekicks could become more of a human being. I think however that
with a good sidekick - 'less is more'. If an entire book came from
Win's perspective I think it would end up being a bit like the
short-lived TV show 'A Man Called Hawk' which was just about the
character of Hawk from Robert B. Parker's Spenser series. It was just
terrible.
So although I never say never, I have no plans to
do a 'Win' solo adventure at the moment.
Continuing the theme of sidekicks, in the
standalones Tell No One and most recently Gone For Good
the main characters at the heart of the mystery Will Klein and
David Beck - call on the resources of their tough sidekicks Squares
and Tyrese the Drug Dealer respectively. Both these characters mirror
Win, in so far as they are (now) decent(-ish) men, but have had some
Bad Stuff going on. Would you care to comment on the role of the tough
sidekick?
I love the idea of the sidekick, as it goes way
back to Holmes and Watson, Captain America and Bucky, Batman and
Robin, and to the present day 'buddy/buddy' movies. I love the idea of
these types of friendships that I don't think really exist too often
in real life. That's the aspect I like, you get the friendship angle
as well as the strain. Some people criticise the psychotic side-kick
and list Walter Mosely, Dennis Lehane, Robert Parker as the main
proponents of the 'Psychotic Sidekick' - and these are really great
authors, and so if I've hooked up with them, then that's fine by me.
Even Lawrence Block gave Matt Scudder a bottle
of Bourbon as his side kick
.
{Laughs}
yes I guess.
Can you tell us a little about some of your
short stories and where we can pick them up like the Anthony Nominated
A Simple Philosophy? and if you plan to release a collection
of short stories any time soon?
I dont plan on releasing a collection of
short stories because I've only written three. The first one was The
Imposter published in Mary Higgins Clark Magazine, and it has just
been reprinted in Opening Shots II by Lawrence Block, which is
a collection of people's first published short stories. The second one
A Simple Philosophy which you mentioned, was published in the
Malice Domestic series, number 6, I think. It was edited by Sharon
McCrumb, and I did that because she's a friend of mine and she asked
me to. The third short story features Myron and Win in an Otto Penzler
anthology.
Hey
when's that out?
I'm not sure, I'll have to contact Otto. It's
called The Life and Death of Bobby D and Myron and Win are
both in it.
Excellent news for Myron and Win fans.
I read that your parents were an inspiration,
especially your mother being the book-ish one. One False Move
was dedicated to them, and I feel one of your most moving books. Would
you care to talk about you parents and also the writing of One
False Move?
Sure. My parents both died at a fairly young age,
and I still miss them a great deal. So when I started the Myron
series, I realised that practically every detective either had no
parents, or a terrible relationship, or had even suffered some form of
abuse or something similar. I thought that in reality many people
actually loved their parents, so when I started the Myron series, I
created his parents to be similar to my own, had mine lived. I sort of
live through them, and sometimes I know as I'm writing about them I
get a little too corny. But I say 'tough', as it's what I want to do.
It's surprising how many readers relate to that, and how many readers
have the same kind of relationship with their own parents. This is
especially true for people who have lost their parents, or are
watching them age - they really appreciate that angle.
I also like the way that Myron's parents bicker
with each other and we see Myron sat in the middle, which mirrors
reality I guess.
Exactly, and that was just how my parents were.
Would you care to talk about your first two
novels (now out of print) and how you emerged as a writer?
I wrote Play Dead and Miracle Cure
in my early/mid twenties. In my mind they are not great novels. It's
sort of like
.have you ever re-read that old college paper that
you wrote and thought at the time was brilliant?
Yes...
You find it now and you think it's atrocious, and
that's not really fair to your college paper, but thats how you
kinda feel about older
novels. When I reach a stage that I am more comfortable and more
secure in my career, I'll probably re-release them. It's not that I
haven't had offers to have them reprinted, and some readers feel that
Play Dead is the best novel I ever wrote. Even in Deal
Breaker, even in Drop Shot (the first two Myron novels) I
can see the themes and the scenes in my older novels that perhaps I
would do differently now, so perhaps I will go back and re-write Play
Dead and Miracle Cure - Who knows?
You have referred to your writing style in the
Myron series as cheating third person, as the narrative is
very close to first person. This progressed in Gone for Good
as alternate first person and third person. Would you care to talk
about the style in your writing perspective?
Well, in both Tell No One and Gone for
Good I started in first person, then somewhere around page 50 or
60 in Tell No One I realised I wanted to leave and go into
another body. One of the rules in writing is that you can't do that.
You either write first person or you write in third person. But the
most important rule about writing is that once you know all the rules
on writing, you can break them. So I tried it, and it worked. I dont
alternate between first and third person. In Gone for Good Id
say 75% is written in first person and 25% in third person. I wrote it
back and forth between first and third as I saw fit, I didn't do like
'ten pages this' and 'ten pages that' - I just told the story the best
way that I could and thats how it worked out.
I have been to some of your book launches and
find you very funny. Have you ever considered doing Stand-Up or even
writing a pure comedy novel?
Oh God, no
.{laughing}
that's
harder than writing.
Since I spoke with you last year, you now have
four children. How has that affected your writing both psychologically
as well as in a practical sense?
Well, in a practical sense, it means there's one
more mouth to feed and send to college as well as another set of
braces
{laughing} .but seriously I dont think it has much
effect on the writing, other than the fact that having another baby in
the house means another distraction. Children work 'for' and 'against'
me in writing. The 'against' is obvious, they take up a lot of time,
they take up a lot of energy, they make me tired because I dont
sleep as well at night. The 'for', is that when I do have time, I know
I have to concentrate that much harder, and I have to focus that much
more, so it's a balance. They also keep me grounded, when good things
happen to me in my writing career, like the success of Tell No One
and Gone For Good they remind me that I'm a regular guy and
that helps keep my feet firmly grounded.
Your books have translated into 22 languages.
Do you have any involvement in the translation process?
Only in so far that I get questions which are
regarding something that is very 'Americana' that they could never
translate in a million years. My Japanese translator once sent me a
copy of a book and said 'I hope you like my translation, and that if
there's any problems with the translation please let me know'
..like
I could read Japanese
.
I read about how your community was affected
deeply after 9/11, with some people close to your family being
directly affected. Would you care to comment on how 9/11 affected you
and your work?
Well
I think the essay sort of speaks for itself. I dont have much
more to add other than it was the most devastating thing to happen in
my lifetime, as well as for many people around the world. I live in a
suburb of New York which is really a commuter town and we lost many
people on that day. My daughter who is in second grade lost the
fathers of two class-mates in the incident. A guy who was a character
name in Tell No One, as well as his brother both died. It's
now part of our lives now.
In terms of writing, which is what I think you
mean, well I'm writing a new book now, and I think I am going to refer
to it (9/11) for the first time. I'm not going to write a book about
it or anything ; but I think it's kind of like trying to write a book
set in 1975 and not to mention the Vietnam War in America - September
11th is now part of our psyche, just like the Vietnam War, The Korean
War, World War II, it's part of our psyche. If you are writing in
present day it has to get mentioned.
Yes I agree, Michael Connelly did the same
thing in 'City of Bones' - delicately peppering references to 9/11 in
it - he explained that not to do so, would have been wrong.
That's right - it's now part our world.
Any update on the Progress of Tell No One
and Gone For Good on the Big Screen and TV ?
Always with the caveat that Hollywood is a funny
animal and you never really know what's going to happen. Tell No
One is supposed to start filming in the summer from Columbia Sony
Pictures with the British director Michael Apted at the helm. Gone
For Good is supposed to be a TV series to be filmed as six
episodes (each one hour) - that's all I can tell you at the moment.
I must tell you that I really enjoyed Gone
For Good - its speed caused friction burns on my fingers from
turning the pages. I was amazed at the revelations on each
chapter that changed the novels perspective continually. It felt like
walking on quicksand. Can you tell us a little about the genesis of
the story, and then the writing process - like how much pre-plotting
was required? How many re-write stages did you do? And how long did it
take to complete?
{Laughs}
..I suppose I write all my books the
same way, that is I come up with an idea. This process is surrounded
in a series of 'What Ifs'. In this case I wanted to write a story
about a family living in the suburbs, and also have the family
devastated in way that I had never seen done. So rather than come from
the victims' family, what about 'What if your brother was the one who
committed the murder?' Then I thought about the stories you read about
someone who commits a murder and then disappears. Then I thought, hey,
what if that was your brother who disappeared? Suppose he murders your
next door neighbour and then disappears, just runs off, and you dont
hear from him again. How's that going to affect you? Your community?
How's it going to affect the victim's family? How's it going to affect
your family?And of course what happens when he comes back
and
then I needed someone else disappearing because I like to keep things
moving along. You see when I write, I dont like to be bored,
even for a moment, because if I'm bored, I assume so is the reader, so
I always try and up the ante.
You certainly did that in Gone For Good.
Thank you.
Are you aware that both Jeff Deaver (in The
Stone Monkey) and yourself (in Gone For Good) named bad
guys as The Ghost. I spoke to him yesterday, and he was
quite taken aback.
Yeah ! - I heard that too!
Quite a coincidence! Anyway, I loved the
development and back-story to Kleins sidekick Squares. Can you
tell us how you came upon this character? I love your side-kicks and
supporting characters.
Thank you. Well, many writers give very complicated
answers on how they created their characters. My answers pretty simple
- I just dont know! But I suppose I was just thinking about this
guy, making him grungy, and I don't plan characters. I work very very
hard on my plots, I dont work at all hard on my characters; they
appear as an organic process in my writing. They may well be better
than my plots, that I dont know, but I dont work on them.
If I know how a book begins and ends, I will still have no idea how a
characters personal life will begin or end. I sort of start with a
core and go. I really wish I could explain it to you better, but I
can't.
You have mentioned that you like William
Goldman as a writer. Can you tell us what other writers you either
like, read, and what writers you would cite as influential in your own
development? Last year we talked at length about Lawrence Block's Matt
Scudder books, and I ended up reading the series back to back,
with When the Sacred Ginmill Closes being one of my
favourites.
Books to me inspire, not really influence. When I
read something really great, that inspires me in my own writing, but
my favourite authors are Philip Roth - another New Jersey boy, and
he's pretty popular over here too, right?
Yes, in fact he may be bigger here than back
home.
I'm not necessarily a student of mystery, although
I've read widely in the genre, Chandler, Hammett, Ross MacDonald but I
would not call any of them a major influence. Robert Parker however
certainly was an influence, Mary Higgins Clark was an influence,
especially in plotting. When I read Where are the Children? I
learned a lot about plotting. William Goldman's Marathon Man is
another one. It made me realise that 'This is what I want to do - I
want to make people stay up all night'. I want people to go on
vacation, and not leave their room as they want to know what happens
in the book.
Have you read Goldman's other books? Brothers,
Edged Weapons ?
Yes I've read all of his books, in fact I've just
finished Which Lie did I Tell? which is sort of the sequel to
Adventures in the Screen Trade.
So with Tell No One out in paperback,
the Myron series being re-issued in the UK by Orion in paperback, and
now Gone For Good hitting the hardcover charts -
Actually I just got word, it's only been out a few
days, but has hit #10 in the UK charts.
Hey - Congratulations!
Thanks and in the US it's in the New York Times
list for the third week.
So what's next for Harlan Coben ?
Another standalone, and I dont want to talk
much about it, as it's bad-luck to do so.
I must thank you for taking time out from the
end of your tour to talk with SHOTS and we wish you well with Gone
For Good.
No problem and a big thanks to all my fans in
Europe - you all have such great taste and are such a handsome bunch.
SHOTS Magazine wish to thank Harlan Coben,
Emily Furness of Orion Publishing, Jude and John of Waterstones
Deansgate for their co-operation and help in organising this
interview.
Gone for Good is available from Orion
in Hardcover priced £12.99
Tell No One is available from Orion in
Paperback priced £5.99
The first three Myron Bolitar Novels are
available as an omnibus edition from Orion at £10.99.
The first four novels Deal Breaker, Drop
Shot, Fade Away, Back Spin are also reprinted separately at £5.99
each.
The last three of the series One False
Move, The Final Detail and Darkest Fear will be released
by Orion later in the year.
An omnibus edition of Back Spin, One False
Move and The Final Detail with a hardcover release of Darkest
Fear will be released in Autumn.
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