INTERVIEW

Interview with Michael Connelly, Author of The Overlook

Written by Scott Butki
Published May 21, 2007

Michael Connelly was kind enough to agree to let me interview him again, this time for his new book, The Overlook, which comes out May 22. He previously let me interview him about his book, Crime Beat.

In book reviews I've raved  and raved about Connelly as a journalist, as a crime writer — my favorite remains The Poet — and as an inspiration for many journalists, myself included, who aspire to write best-selling crime novels. Rather than repeat myself I'll just include those links to past reviews.

Simply put, Connelly is one of the best crime writers around, with intricately-plotted storylines and characters of enormous depth. It is no wonder that The New York Times asked him to serialize his new novel. Furthermore, in an unusual move, four excerpts from his new novel have been acted out on videos at YouTube.

The Overlook is Connelly's 18th book. You can read more about him at his Web page.

Scott Butki: How did you come to write a book that was serialized in The New York Times Magazine?

Michael Connelly: The Times approached me and asked if I wanted to do it. They had started running serials the year before and I was happy to give it a try.

What did you have to do different to write a serialized book versus a regular novel?

The biggest challenge I didn't see until I started writing. And that was the constraints the series puts on the writer. I had to write each installment to fit a 3,000 word hole. That is not how I normally write. When I am writing a novel I don't care about the length of a chapter. I concentrate on its content only. So I end up with a chapter that could be three pages or twenty. It doesn't matter to me.

Were you sending out chapters before you finished the book? Did you ever wish you could change something in a chapter that had already been published?

I wrote the whole story before handing it over to The New York Times. So the whole thing was done and then it was published in the magazine. Then my book publisher and I decided not to publish it as it existed in The Times. So I had the opportunity to rewrite something that sort of already had a public existence. So that was kind of fun. I was able to add a lot that I held back on, add another level of plot intrigue and a little more characterization. The one thing I wanted to preserve, however, was the momentum of the story. It takes place in about 12 hours and it’s about a fast moving investigation. I wanted to keep that so I ultimately added about 20,000 words to the story but it still is not as long as any of my previous novels.

Your book jacket says you originally created this as a 16-part serial for The New York Times Magazine but “this edition has been expanded and revised substantially beyond that initial serialization.” Can you elaborate on that? What changed? Major plot points? If someone read it when it was serialized what would they gain by reading the book?

Without giving too much away, I think there are two main additions. One is a new character who is an LAPD captain in charge of their own department of Homeland Security. I wanted this character to sort of embody the fear and even borderline paranoia you see in society these days. I think the guy is a bit over the top at times but that is intentional. I was also able to add in some Harry Bosch history. This is a 12-hour story but it also moves backward in time, even going back to a scene with Harry in Vietnam.

What is the best part about being a best-selling author? What is the worst part?

It gives me a lot of freedom. I don't need to tell anyone what I am planning or writing. I have a lot of latitude and trust from my editors in this regard. I am not sure there is a worst part. I guess the part that is most difficult to deal with is the demands on my time. There is a sense of duty to kind of keep the fire burning, so that often entails more travel on book tours, more interviews, more things that take me away from what brought the success in the first place.

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Scott Butki was a newspaper reporter for more than 10 years before making a career change into education. He is an in-house media critic, a recovering Tetris addict and a proud uncle.
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Interview with Michael Connelly, Author of The Overlook
Published: May 21, 2007
Type: Interview
Section: Books
Filed Under: Books: Literature and Fiction, Books: Crime, Books: Mystery
Part of a feature: Scott Butki's Book Time: Interviews with Authors
Writer: Scott Butki
Scott Butki's BC Writer page
Scott Butki's personal site
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Comments

#1 — May 22, 2007 @ 03:12AM — Gordon Hauptfleisch [URL]

Another good interview--thanks, Scott.

#2 — May 24, 2007 @ 12:14PM — Scott Butki

You're welcome. Thanks for the compliment, Gordon.

#3 — July 17, 2007 @ 14:33PM — renee

Good work, Scott. I read everything there is to read about MC. He is one of the best writers around.

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