The Korea Herald

Don Winslow wraps up crime trilogy, writing career with ‘City In Ruins’

- By Peter Larsen The Orange County Register

For three decades, crime novelist Don Winslow followed a simple routine: He’d rise at dawn each day to begin writing by 5:30 a.m. Twenty-five books later, most of them crime novels, many of them acclaimed, Winslow announced he was done. “City In Ruins,” the justpublis­hed final book in his Danny Ryan trilogy, is his final book, period.

Not that the old changed overnight.

“Well, it was strange, I’ll tell you,” Winslow says, laughing, when asked about those first weeks after he turned in his final draft about a year and a half ago.

“Because I’ve been a full-time writer probably for the last 25 years, I guess,” he says. “That was my routine. I was just in that harness.

“I’ve tried not to get up at five in the morning — without a lot of success,” Winslow says. “The other morning, I forget, it was a Sunday or something, I slept till 7:30 a.m. My wife was like, ‘Yay, congratula­tions. I’m so proud of you.’”

But she probably shouldn’t get used to that. The 70-year-old writer — or former writer, it seems — still has work he plans to do as an activist speaking out and producing films and videos about the tender state of democracy in the United States and the threat to it that Winslow sees in Donald Trump and the MAGA movement.

“I’m up early reading the newspapers now; I read at least five newspapers a day,” Winslow says. “I want to get an early start on that. And then I’ll, you know, these days, I go back to the papers, probably more than I did when I was a writer.

“But yeah, it felt weird, you know,” he says. “I mean, I spent 30 years with freaking Danny Ryan. There’s another character of mine, Art Keller. I did these three big, fat, drug books, and he’s in all three of them. And between him and Danny, I have spent more time with people who don’t exist than people who do.”

Winslow’s got a bit more time to spend with Danny Ryan, the protagonis­t of the trilogy that began with “City On Fire,” continued in “City Of Dreams,” and now wraps with “City In Ruins.” (The first book is being developed as a movie with Austin Butler signed on to play Danny.)

The novels emerged from Winslow’s long-simmering dream of writing modern crime stories inspired by such classical works as the Roman poet Virgil’s “Aeneid” and

habits

have the Greek playwright Aeschylus’ “Oresteia” trilogy. Danny Ryan, like Aeneas in the original, moves from foot soldier to leader in the books, with some plotlines and characters drawn from their antecedent­s. Themes of power, betrayal, revenge and grief also reflect clearly back and forth across the centuries.

In an interview edited for clarity and length, Winslow talked about the classic parallels between “City In Ruins” and Aeschylus and Virgil’s works, the political work he’s involved in today, and why he doesn’t believe feelings matter when democracy is threatened.

Q: How satisfying was it to take your contempora­ry crime story and prove to yourself and readers that it could work using the inspiratio­n of the classics and things like power, revenge and betrayal — all that good stuff. A:

All that good stuff, yeah. Listen, man, it took me 30 years to figure this out. I wrote the first sentence of the first book — which by the way, hasn’t changed — almost 30 years ago. So it was a challenge to find those modern equivalenc­ies. Because what I really wanted was a book you could read as a modern crime novel, you know, with no reference to the classics at all, and yet still take from those characters and those themes and those stories.

I really wanted to follow through their lives, all those characters, not just Danny — although Danny, of course, is the spine of the story. But I also wanted to follow through on those classical characters. “The Iliad” leaves you right in the middle of everything, you know, it starts in the middle and ends in the middle. And so it was satisfying to go through and find out what happened to these people afterward.

And that’s covered, as you alluded to, in “Eumenides” and the Furies and mythology and “The Odyssey” and all of these things. I wanted to tie all those characters together both the modern and the classical ones.

So yeah, to have finished it was, frankly, really satisfying. And I’d be the last person to be able to judge if I pulled it off or not. That’s up to the reader. But it was satisfying to finally figure it out.

Q: In terms of the characters in this one, we have the casino world and we have this really nasty mobster Allie Boy from Detroit. We get more on some of the Rhode Island characters. How do you decide how to add new people into an ongoing narrative? A:

I know exactly. I mean, the Danny string in that novel really very closely follows the Aeneid. There’s a really nasty character, Turnus, in the “Aeneid,” that does some of the things that Allie Boy does in that book. The characters of Josh and Abe, you know, are drawn very closely from the Aeneid.

So I was just looking at those characters and trying to figure out, OK, what are the modern equivalent­s? And that’s always tricky. You don’t want to create cartoonish characters to fill in the plot, right? And so the issue is to make them real, as nasty as they may be, to give them a unique point of view so that they become real to the reader and not just sort of stand-ins.

Q: So now that it’s been a year and a half, do your characters still turn up in your mind from time to time? A:

Every once in a while. Art (Keller, from “The Cartel” series) not so much, because it’s been a bit since I wrote a book called “The Border.” But yeah, anytime there’s like a headline or a newspaper article about the Mexican drug world all of that comes back. In fact, sometimes it’s about characters who were the prototypes for characters in my books.

Danny keeps popping back up because, look, the book is just coming out, and I’m talking a lot about it. But again, I’ve known the real-life Dannys my whole life, those guys I played hockey with and surfed with, hung out in bars with. So Danny’s kind of always with me.

Q: What kind of reaction have you been getting to your decision to stop writing? A:

A lot of people don’t believe me. A lot of my close friends don’t believe me. I’m not sure my wife believes me. I should start taking bets. Start saying, “Lay 100 bucks down and we’ll talk in a year.” Get your money. Do you want to put any money down, Peter?

 ?? Courtesy of Jacopo Raule ?? Don Winslow
Courtesy of Jacopo Raule Don Winslow

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