Interview With Robert Crais, Author of The Watchman
Published February 28, 2007
Robert Crais is one of the best crime writers around and his new book, The Watchman, is further evidence of that fact. The book comes out on March 1. I have been reading Crais for several years and telling others to check him out too.
He is part of a younger generation of crime writers - that also includes Dennis Lehane, George Pelecanos, and Michael Connelly - who are more hip and sound less phony when talking about music and cultural issues than some of the veterans. In recent months I have been lucky enough to interview Connelly and Pelecanos via email and now I’ve had the pleasure of interviewing Crais, albeit for a short time.
I may have annoyed him, but hopefully not, by asking about critics of one element of his books - the characters. In doing research for this interview I read a bunch of reviews, the most intriguing of which was at a site called The Brothers Judd. The site made two points, one of which I agree with and one with which I disagree. Crais and I disagree with them about the quality and importance of the characters.
The point I agree with is that the dialogue of Crais and some other good, young writers – though not so much Pelecanos and Connelly – reminds one of the fun banter of Robert Parker’s novels. This means that we seem to have gone from a writer like Robert Parker, who was clearly influenced by Raymond Chandler, even having been authorized to complete one of his unfinished manuscripts, to writers who seem to have more in common with Parker than Chandler. Now whether that is good or bad depends on how you think Parker compares to Chandler.
I like Parker, and praised Small Vices and Blue Screen, but I think he’s gotten more predictable in recent years. Fortunately, the same can’t be said for Crais. His plots are interesting and his characters fascinating. Just as I like to pretend I’m a young pacifist version of Robert Parker’s protagonist, Spenser – okay, maybe not so much – I also like to think I’m as sharp and witty as Robert Crais’ protagonist, Elvis Cole.
This book is focused on Cole’s partner, Joe Pike, who is more of the strong, silent type. But I’ll let Crais explain why he did that.
Why a novel about Joe Pike? Will there be others?
I’m as intrigued about Pike as my readers. Like them, I’ve wanted to know more about him, so I set about planning this book when I wrote The Last Detective. I needed the right kind of story — a story that would set Joe apart from Elvis Cole — so I set the stage by having Pike make a promise to a man named Jon Stone in The Last Detective, a promise that Elvis doesn’t know about. That promise set the stage perfectly for The Watchman.
- Interview With Robert Crais, Author of The Watchman
- Published: February 28, 2007
- Type: Interview
- Section: Books
- Filed Under: Books: Literature and Fiction, Books: Crime, Books: Thriller, Interviews
- Writer: Scott Butki
- Scott Butki's BC Writer page
- Scott Butki's personal site
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Comments
Thanks for the identification of not being THE blowhard, though some people would say that I am one!
Oh, sorry this was anawsome review!
Thanks, Bill.
Three good Robert Crais links:
A review in today's Washington Post on Crais' new book
An article in the L.A. Times about him
and Robert Crais on Hammett, definitely one of the greats of the genre
Entertainment Weekly has a good, concise review of this book.





This article has been selected for syndication to Advance.net, which is affiliated with newspapers around the United States. Nice work!