There's something about marriage that is not as intensely romantic or interesting as a couple's first meeting.Collection: Romantic
When you're building a character, or at least when I'm building a character, you start saying, 'How am I going to make people like him?'
Just go outside and look at something and write it down and you'll find it is a very nice piece of writing.
Most people who are trying to write kind of sit in their basements and pull it out of their imaginations.
I've always been sort of interested in the rural countryside. Things happen out there that are very strange to city dwellers.
They don't have a lot of crime in the countryside other than theft. But every once in a while, things turn ugly, and when they turn ugly, they turn very ugly.
Well, I am becoming doddering and old but I have - I'm writing two books a year now. It's like 220,000 words or something like finished, and, honest to God, I can't do that. I really do need the help of, you know, other people working with me.
With most of my books, I'll actually go out and look at the setting. If you describe things carefully, it kind of makes the scene pop.
Books set in Brooklyn and L.A. are often about people who are rootless, who want to go somewhere else. In the Midwest, though, the stories are about people who want to stay where they are - who like where they are.
When I was reporting crime... I never had the sense of clockwork conspiracies or some kind of imposing order of evil. What I sensed was things just sort of falling apart.
That's my sense of how crime works: that it's not any kind of calculated evil driven by the devil, but just control disintegrating.
The difference is this: If you write a good book, it'll get published. If you have a great screenplay, there is no guarantee.
I spend a lot of time wandering around the countryside just looking at people, seeing how everything fits together.
A lot of journalists are talented enough to write a mystery novel, and I would say that most of the top-end mystery writers actually started out as reporters. But there is more to it than just the writing; there's a learning process, and most journalists aren't willing to do it.
I'm just trying to normalize my life and get ready for the last 20 years or whatever I've got. It's a lot to take care of.
There are two worldviews in thriller writing: the paranoid view, like Chuck Logan's, that everything is inside a large clockwork. I like those books; they're intricate and thought out, but my view is that everything is chaotic and stupid. Chaos reigns, and civilized people do what they can to hold it back.
People ought to be slapped up side of the head, not always get what they expect. That's why sometimes the bad guy gets away.
A lot of cops in fiction are very depressive and are kind of downbeat, and they've got all kinds of existential angst that they're dealing with.
A lot of my friends were retiring from the newspaper business, and the newspaper pensions are not enormous.
Working for the 'Miami Herald' in 1972, I covered street action for both the Republican and Democratic national conventions in Miami and saw probably the most violent conventions ever - more violent than even 1968 in Chicago.
I'm not saying that photographers are dumber than other people, but they are the folks who walk around with brilliant white lights in nighttime riots.
Combat stress isn't the only problem for soldiers isolated in Iraq - there are family issues, re-integration issues when soldiers go home on leave, loneliness.
I've always had a fascination with the technical and small-scale aspects of life - the national media seem to have more interest in the sweeping political views.
My kids, who are grown now and living in L.A., are used to me packing up and taking off to somewhere weird.
When you're writing two books a year, you really need some time off and don't want to use that down time for touring. I do like talking with readers, though; they can tell you important stuff.
Before the Internet became so powerful, I toured extensively. With the rise of the Internet, touring apparently has become less important.
If readers tell you that stretches of dialogue or narrative were too long, that they couldn't tell who was talking, that's something that can be fixed.
As a journalist, I interviewed people, and you begin to feel different rhythms in speech, and you can use those things to help carve out a character.
Nuts don’t come in bunches. Only grapes do.Collection: Nuts
Women had been on the verge of taking over the world-the Western world, anyway. Then some sexist pig in Silicon Valley invented the cell phone and women took a sidetrack on which all four billion of them would soon be happily talking to each other twenty-four hours a day, getting nothing else done, and Men Would Be Back.Collection: Men
I'm so horny the crack of dawn isn't safe.Collection: Horny