Note publication is this Friday, 1 February.
I was so impressed with this first novel by 24 year old Roger Hobbs. His writing style is something of a cross between that of Lee Child and Elmore Leonard - fast, intriguing and suspenseful with great dialogue.
I am not surprised to learn that film rights have been acquired by Warner Brothers in a
very substantial deal. The producer, Kevin McCormick, is the former chief
executive for Warner Bros and has already hired an A-list screenwriter.
Here is a recent interview with the author which the publishers have kindly supplied. It serves to give you an idea of the story. I found the book hard to put down and read it in three long sessions. It runs to 324 pages. The story takes place over 48 hours.
Q: What exactly is a GHOSTMAN?
A: When a crew of criminals plans a heist, each person
has a different role to play. There are probably a couple of roles you know
already. The wheelman is the guy who drives the getaway car. The boxman knows
how to open locks and safes. The bagman carries the cash and takes
transportation risks. There are a couple you probably don’t know, either. The
guy who plans the heist is called the jugmarker. The thug who carries the guns
is called the buttonman.
A ghostman can be useful in a myriad of criminal
enterprises—identity theft, corporate espionage, armed robberies, bank fraud,
drug distribution—and is responsible for anything that requires a disappearing
act. In short, he’s an expert in the subtle and challenging art of getting away
with it. His job is to make sure nobody gets caught.
Q: When and how did you first get the idea for this
novel?
A: I first got this idea the summer between my
sophomore and junior years of college. I was walking home late one night after
a movie when I stumbled across an armoured car depot. Now, this doesn’t look
like you think it should—it doesn’t have thick brick walls, rows of security
cameras or a bunch of security guards sitting around playing poker. No, it
looks like an office building with a bunch of armoured cars parked out front.
Being naturally curious, I thought I’d have a look. I
walked around for a bit and after a while, finally worked up the nerve to touch
one. As soon as I did, I felt like I was struck by lightning. Instantly my
brain was full of different ideas about how I could rob it. I must have spent
an hour out there in the dark, examining every part of that car. I noted all
the features and considered all the weaknesses. That night I went home and
wrote the first chapter of GHOSTMAN.
Q: Tell us a little about Jack Delton and how you developed
his character?
A: Jack is a man with an extraordinary,
one-in-a-million talent: he is completely unmemorable. You could walk by him on
the street every day for a year and never remember his face. He doesn’t have a
name anyone knows, he doesn’t have a look, he doesn’t have a bank account. No
credit card, no social-security number, no web profile. He’s nobody, and he’s
anybody. If he needs to drive, he can be a driver. If he needs to fight, he can
be a fighter. He can become anyone he needs to be in the blink of an eye.
This talent—his unremarkablity—is the very first thing
I ever knew about his character. I developed him as a person around this idea.
What sort of things does a man with no identity do? What does he like? How does
he go about his day? Jack is a tough guy and a hardened criminal, but I wanted
my readers to sympathize with his unusual, and somewhat melancholy, existence.
Q: You wrote this novel while in college and in fact
sent it to your (now) agent on the day you graduated. When did you start
writing and were you always drawn to crime stories?
A: I’ve been writing since I was twelve. Since then
I’ve written seven full-length novels, two plays, a few screenplays and a pack
of spec scripts for television. I have been writing four hours a day, every
day, for ten years. I feel like I have to write or I’ll go crazy. It’s in my
blood. I didn’t start thinking about crime fiction, however, until I read
Robert Crais’s The Monkey's Raincoat when I was sixteen years old. The voice in
that book was so wonderful that I immediately started writing my own private
investigator novel. After that I moved on to other authors that I thought had
strong, dark writing styles. I ate up everything from Dashiell Hamett to James
Ellroy to Lee Child. I was most attracted to novels where the main characters
were criminals themselves, like Donald Westlake’s Parker novels. I loved the
idea of getting away with it, so I thought I’d try to write a book that could
share that incredible sense of fear and excitement I’d come to love
Q: Okay, you obviously know an awful lot about staging
a heist—starting with how the Fed prints money and transports and safe-guards
it in armoured trucks, to guns and explosives and how the person driving the
getaway car plots the best escape route. How did you learn about these things?
A: First things first, I should say that most of the
things you need to know to become a world class criminal mastermind are on the
Internet. It isn’t stuff you can just put into Google, but it’s there if you
know where to look. There are hidden sites on the deep web with forums on every
criminal topic you can imagine. Blow up a car? You got it. Bloodstain pattern
analysis? A whole course. Disable a silent alarm? Absolutely. Most of the
research I did for GHOSTMAN happened while I was sitting right here in front of
this pale blue glowing computer screen.
But not all of it. The Internet could only get me so
far, so I went on a lot of field trips. In order to study the monetary process,
I toured the Bureau of Engraving and Printing in Washington, where I was
allowed to walk around and observe hundreds of millions in new bills get ready
for circulation. I went to dive bars all around the country where I interviewed
active criminals and traded secrets for cigarettes. I did a two-week training
course with the NRA out in the mountains to learn the inner workings of
firearms. I taught myself to pick locks and hotwire cars in the parking lot of
my dorm block. I exchanged emails with a professional forger in the UK who
specialized in passports and Eastern European driver’s licenses. I talked
online with a working hitman. Of course not everything in GHOSTMAN is accurate,
but I did my best to make it all feel real.
Q: What did you learn in your research that surprised
you the most?
A: The most surprising thing I learned in the course
of my research was just how rare intelligently committed crimes really are. A
world-class crook might pull off two large-scale jobs in his or her entire
life, because anybody with the brains to plan a complicated, successful heist
could make twice as much money in half the time by dealing drugs instead. Also,
bank robberies have an astoundingly high chance of getting solved by the police
second in fact, only to murder.
Q: Are you really 24 or are you a really good ghostman
yourself?
A: Part of me wants to be a ghostman. I think
everyone, at one point or another, has wanted to do what Jack does. Everyone
has fantasized about getting up and leaving and never coming back. A ghostman
is a living incarnation of that fantasy. His identity is fluid, so he can
change himself to fit any situation. Whenever things get too hairy, or a little
boring, he can sever all ties, pack a few things in an overnight bag and fly
off to another part of the world. He can start over again as many times as he
wants without any consequences. Of course there is a high price for this
lifestyle. A ghostman can’t celebrate Christmas at home with his family, or
make friends, or fall in love. The ghostman wakes up every morning and chooses
who he wants to be, but as a result he can never become anything more than what
he already is.
Q: So what’s next for you? Without giving away the
ending of the book can you tell us if we’ll see any of the characters from
GHOSTMAN again?
A: I’m already hard
at work on a sequel to GHOSTMAN. This adventure finds Jack at odds with his old
mentor, with the biggest payday of their lives on the line. I can’t say much
about it, but I will say that the events of GHOSTMAN have big repercussions on
Jack’s world. He'll have to use every ounce of his wits to avoid getting caught
this time, especially when he has to choose between safety and loyalty
ABOUT
THE AUTHOR:
Roger Hobbs is 24 years old and completed the first draft of this novel while still
a senior at Reed College. He has worked as a radio host, a rifle range
instructor, a note-taker and a security guard. He is a recent graduate of Reed
College. He lives in Portland, Oregon.
No comments:
Post a Comment