Showing posts with label Craig Johnson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Craig Johnson. Show all posts

Saturday, January 8, 2011

Just a Reader by Patty Andersen

Patty Andersen is Library Director at the Devereaux Library which is located on the campus of the South Dakota School of Mines and Technology in Rapid City, South Dakota



















Just A Reader
by Patty Andersen


Last year, when Kaye asked me to contribute to her blog, I took on the topic of “not fitting in” with many in my peer group. Now, this year I need to come up with a new topic. And, to add to the pressure she has me posting immediately behind one of my all-time favorite authors, Craig Johnson. Sheesh, talk about making things tough on a non-writer!

Because I am following a favorite author it got me thinking about what it means to be a fan (or author groupie). I’ve been reading since I was four or so and have had “favorite” authors at all the stages of my reading life (okay, getting close to 50 years). Until I started interacting with various authors I would always have referred to myself as “just a reader”, which I now understand boggles the authors mind. JUST a reader they say, no one is more important. I never in my life thought I would be chatting online with my heroes, let alone actually meeting any of them! I’ve not met many in person and the two that stand out both live close to me (by South Dakota and Wyoming standards), the aforementioned Craig Johnson and Kathleen Taylor. I invited Kathi to be a speaker at one of our SD Library Association meetings and she kindly agreed, thus I met her as professional to professional. We now share weather from the middle of the state, where she lives, to the western edge, where I live. My meeting with Craig was different, I entered a contest to try and win a t-shirt.  I won (and still own) a shirt that proclaims me Sheriff, Absaroka County, Wyoming. Not long after that Craig was going to be speaking at a small library about 50 miles from my home and I decided to attend, of course wearing my t-shirt. I forgot about the season in western SD – construction – so was a few minutes late. As I walked in the door he turned and interrupted his talk to say “nice shirt”. The crowd loved it and it put me instantly at ease and made me even more of a fan.

With all that, I still hold authors in high regard. I still consider myself just a reader, and it boggles my mind that they consider people like me so important. The brave new world of the Internet has bridged many gaps but I think the bridges that authors are making with their fans through social networking are the most impressive. I haven’t and probably never will meet Stephen King or Nora Roberts, but the authors who I read the most, those who are newly published, the mid-listers or those just above that have become “real people” to me and I’m loving’ it.

Many thanks, Kaye, for allowing those of us who read to share your playground with those who write. It is a great place to get to know each other.



and now - Patty's Pups!

Browser, miniature Schnauzer, rescue dog 


Kirby, Pembroke Welsh Corgi (our "troll")


Mocha, Havanese (King of the house at 9.3 lbs)


Orbit, standard Schnauzer, rescue dog



Spice, Pembroke Welsh Corgi mix (Spice Girl is busy, busy, busy), rescue dog



Trooper, standard Schnauzer, Cindy's Hearing Dog, (the family "boss" although Spice is trying to challenge him for the title)

Wednesday, January 5, 2011

Post-It: The Face in my Head by Craig Johnson


Craig Johnson has received high praise for his Sheriff Walt Longmire novels The Cold Dish, Death Without Company, Kindness Goes Unpunished, Another Man's Moccasins, and The Dark Horse, which received a superfecta of starred reviews from Kirkus, Booklist, Publishers Weekly, and Library Journal, and was named one of Publisher's Weekly's best books of the year (2009). Each has been a Booksense/IndieNext pick with The Cold Dish and The Dark Horse both DILYS award finalists and Death Without Company the Wyoming Historical Association's Book of the Year. Another Man's Moccasins received the Western Writer's of America Spur Award for best novel of 2008 as well as the Mountains and Plains award for fiction book of the year. The latest Walt Longmire novel, Junkyard Dogs, was released by Viking on June 1, 2010. 

The Cold Dish was translated into French in 2008 as Little Bird and is in competition for Le Prix du Polar Nouvel Observateur/Bibliobs. It was also selected for Le Grand Prix des Litteratures Policieres and was a finalist for Le Prix 813. Death Without Company, Le Camp des Morts in French, was just released in April of this year. The Dark Horse will be translated into Czechoslovakian in 2010. 

Craig is a board member of the MWA, having been elected as a member at large. 

He lives in Ucross, WY, population 25. 




Post-It: The Face in my Head
by Craig Johnson


Since A&E green lighted, (green lit, green illuminated?) the pilot for Longmire, I’ve been inundated with questions and advice from folks with sometimes very strong opinions about the actors who should play the venerable sheriff. I’ve pretty much dodged the question about who should play Walt by answering Gary Cooper, but I’ve gotten about as much mileage out of that as I’m going to… In all honesty, I’ve heard other authors describe their characters as ‘an older Daniel Craig’ or ‘a brunette Reese Witherspoon’. I’m always surprised by that because I just don’t use actors as models for my characters for the simple reason that I don’t know any of them.

I once handed Reese Witherspoon a toothpick at the California Pizza Kitchen in Brentwood and she was very nice, but I don’t think that counts.

I tend to use people I know as characters in my books, simply because they are people I know. Sometimes it’s something in their physical appearance, but more likely it’s a gesture, a phrase, or some kind of telling character trait. Appearance doesn’t mean all that much to me, I have to confess, and with an actor you get that and the character of whomever they might be playing.

I guess I find it confusing when assembling a character from someone who’s already assembled their own.

For me, the outside of a person is under the direct influence of the inside person. There are an awful lot of inferences that tell me about a person when I’m looking at them, and very few of them have to do with whether the person is good or bad looking, and I’m pretty sure that the guy Warner Brothers Horizon and A&E come up with will probably be better looking than the Walt I’ve got in my head.

And probably shorter, since Walt’s 6’5” and everybody in Hollywood is 5’8”.

The casting directors are starting with Walt, and rightly so since he’s the linchpin for the series. Whichever actor they get for that roll will have a direct effect on whom they get to play Henry, Vic, Ruby, and all the others. Hell, it might even affect who plays Dog.

I’m seeing a Rin-Tin-Tin with just a touch of Buck in Call of the Wild--the seminal, Clark Gable version.

Even though I’m a ‘creative consultant’ to the series, the producers don’t have to ask me much, so I’ve been amazed at how extraordinarily responsive the team has been to any input I’ve had. I’m careful though, realizing that this is an entirely different medium and that they have to do things for certain reasons that I might not at first understand because of my limited experience in film and television production. When the producers told me they were most likely going to make Walt a little younger than in the books, I immediately wanted to know why. They patiently explained that they were hoping that this might be a long-lived series on A&E and they’d just as soon not have Walt on a walker by season six.

I had a hard time arguing that one.

It’s all a learning experience for me, along with the realization that the TV series won’t be exactly like the books. I think when you find yourself in a collaborative artistic effort (i.e., producers, directors, casting directors, screen writers, and actors), you either have faith in their connection to the material or you don’t. I’ve got a lot of confidence in these people, because of their conviction in the novels. They love the characters in these books and are remarkably talented, with extended track records of fine work—so most of the time I spend keeping my nose out of it until asked.

So, who’s going to play Walt in the A&E pilot of Longmire?

I don’t know yet—but I bet he’ll be different from the one in our heads—and I bet’cha he’ll be good.



Happy Trails,

Craig Johnson