Sunday, April 19, 2009

Christopher G. Moore

Christopher G. Moore is the author of the Vincent Calvino crime fiction series which January Magazine has said "recalls the international ‘entertainments’ of Graham Greene or John le CarrĂ©, but the hard-bitten worldview and the cynical, bruised idealism of his battered hero is right out of Chandler."

From his Q & A with Matt Beynon Rees:

How much of what you do is: a) formula dictated by the genre within which you write?

I am told there are quite a few rules. But I never bothered to learn what they are. The private eye novel is mainly thought of as the creation of American authors; notably Raymond Chandler and Dashiell Hammett. It is an American invention based on crime in American cities and the social and class structure within which the private eye, police, victims and villains live and die. If there is an American location formula, I broke it in 1992 by setting Spirit House, the first of the Vincent Calvino novels set in a foreign location.

b) formula you developed yourself and stuck with?

To bring the reader into a different culture, different rules, expectations, language, and make it meaningful without overwhelming him/her with obscure references or incidents. The goal is to make Asia accessible without losing the vitality and history of the place.

c) as close to complete originality as it’s possible to get each time?

I am... [read on]
Visit Matt Beynon Rees' website and blog.

--Marshal Zeringue