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Interview With Michael Connelly
Michael Connelly became a novelist after
several years of covering the crime beat
at newspapers in Daytona Beach
and Fort Lauderdale, Florida and as a crime
reporter for the Los Angeles Times.
After three years at the Times, Connelly
began writing his first novel, The Black Echo, featuring LAPD
Detective Hieronymus Bosch. The Black Echo was
published in 1992, and won the Edgar
Award for best first novel by the Mystery
Writers of America. Since The Blach Echo,
Connelly has written several more
thrillers featuring Bosch that became bestsellers including
The Black Ice, The Concrete Blonde, Trunk Music,
Angels Flight, A Darkness More Than Night and City of Bones.
In Connelly's latest novel,
Chasing the Dime,
a computer entrepreneur is led into a nighttime world of escort services, websites, sex, and
secret identities, when he pursues messages left on his phone line
for a woman named Lilly -- who seems to be in some
very serious trouble.
Chasing the Dime is a unique book for you because
the idea for it stems from an experience you had with a new
telephone number. What can you tell us about this? What parts
of Henry Pierce are Michael Connelly?
Henry and I don't really share a lot in common. We look at
the world differently. But we do share this same telephone
experience. Sort of. I moved last year and when I put in a new
phone in my office I started getting calls and messages for the
woman who formerly had the phone number. The calls were from her
mother, friends and other family members. They were trying to locate
her and were very worried. It was a sad situation but I couldn't do anything
but tell them that I had the number now and I didn't know anything about the
woman who had it before me. This sparked the story that became Chasing the
Dime. In it Henry has the same sort of experience with a new phone number.
But unlike me, he becomes obsessed with the missing woman and tries to find
out what happened.
In addition to investigating a strange crime, Henry Pierce
also runs a successful technology company and is "chasing the dime,"
seeking to make a supercomputer smaller than a dime. What can you
tell us about the research that went into writing this book for
both the technology aspect and the world of escort services?
I have been fascinated with this technology for a long time and gathering
reports on it for years. When it came time to actually write a book in which
it plays a significant part I took the easy way out. I hired a researcher and
she was able to pull together much more information on this fascinating
research and get me a visit with one of the leaders in the field in his lap
at UCLA. It was wonderful. As for the internet sex aspect, it is again
something that i have been fascinated with because I believe there is always
going to be a dark or underground side to the great advances of our time. The
internet is an example of this. Getting to know something about this world
was pretty easy. You let your fingers do the work. I went online and started
surfing. This stuff is not that hard to find. The people behind it are not
that hard to find.
Henry Pierce has good intentions for the technology that he
seeks, but there are obviously ways to use this kind of technology
for sinister purposes. Have you thought about this at all? What
are the real-life ramifications for this technology?
Sure, that's what makes it fascinating and what makes it share a kinship
with the underground internet. Technological advances are as good as the
people who make them and handle them. For every good use there can also be a
bad use. The technology in the book is real and it is coming. It will change
the world for good and probably for bad in some ways. But I think the good
things will outweigh the bad. Just the medical applications--in which
diseases can possibly be attacked and cured from within--seem to make it
worth it, let alone all the applications it will have to computing and
electronics.
In the book, a number of websites are mentioned,
including
www.la-darlings.com,
www.pinkmink.com and
www.fetishcastle.net.
Do these sites actually exist? What would happen if we went to them?
They exist because websites are sort of the proprietary
addresses on the internet. I couldn't make use of sites without
permission. Check them out.
I hear that the film rights to this extremely cinematic
book have been snapped up by MGM. What can you tell us about
the film? Does it have a director or writer attached to it?
How do you envision the film? How do you feel about having your
books turned into movies having gone through the process with
Blood Work?
I am not very involved in the film aspects of this book. The deal
was just made recently and so the project is in its infancy. There
is a screenwriter attached to it and once the producers have a
script they will try to attract directors and actors. I think it
is a cinematic story. The science aspect and the lab and so forth
could be very interesting and then of course there is an erotic
element to it that would probably be better served in a movie
than in a book.
My experience with Blood Work was all good. The movie is
different from the book but I am accepting of that and knew that
would be the way it would be when I made the deal five years ago.
What was important to me was that the character of Terry McCaleb
remain intact in the transfer from page to screen.
I think that happened and so I am happy.
Two characters in Chasing the Dime are reading, one is
reading Hell to Pay by George Pelecanos and Henry's
ex-girlfriend, Nicole, is reading Iguana Love by Vicki
Hendricks. Why did you mention these specific books and authors?
It's been a long practice of mine to mention books I have read and
enjoyed, or that might have a significance to my story. I don't like
answering questions about who my favorite authors are because there are too
many and I would leave people I might know and respect out. So I don't
usually answer that question. I just put my recommendations into
my own books.
There's also a Hieronymous Bosch poster in the Amedeo
Technologies office. What can we infer from that?
All of my books are moving on the same canvas. So I look for little ways
of tying them together hear and there. I think the coolest tie-in in this
book is that Henry Pierce is the brother of a woman who was the victim of a
killer called The Dollmaker. That killer is referenced in my first book.
Harry Bosch killed the Dollmaker, so there is a link there between Henry and
Harry. But you'd have to be reading along all these years to know that.
What's next for Michael Connelly? And will Henry Pierce
ever meet Harry Bosch or Terry McCaleb?
I'm finishing a Harry Bosch book now for next year. It's written in the
first person, which is new for Harry. And because, as I said before, these
stories are all part of the same big canvas, it is entirely possible they
could all meet someday. In fact, Harry and Henry already met once, about 12
years ago when Harry was on the Dollmaker case and he had to deliver bad news
to Henry's family.
Posted with permission of TWBookmark.com.
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