Elmore John Leonard
was born in New Orleans on October 11, 1925, the son of a General
Motors location scout who moved from Dallas to Oklahoma City
and Memphis before settling in Detroit in late 1934, when Elmore
was 10. In Detroit, Elmore attended Catholic grade school, and
received a Jesuit
education at the University of Detroit High School. Elmore graduated
from high school in 1944 and joined the Seabees. He was stationed
in the Admiralty Islands near New Guinea. After the war, he went
to college at the University of Detroit where he became interested
in Ernest Hemingway and the idea of being a writer. After college,
He married and took a job at Campbell-Ewald advertising agency
as a copy boy, graduating to writing advertising copy for Chevrolet.
His goal was to be a commercial fiction writer so he chose the
western as his initial subject matter, because he liked Westerns
and because the demand was high for Western short stories. His
first published story was Trail of the Apache for
Argosy Magazine in December 1951. Through the 1950s, Elmore would
get up at 5:00 AM, two hours before leaving for work, and write
thirty pulp westerns, and five western novels. Two of his stories
were made into films during the 50s: 3:10 To Yuma The Tall T,
both good films. Elmores big breakthrough came in 1984
with La Brava, followed by the best-seller Glitz, which landed
him on the cover of Newsweek: 'THE BIG THRILL. Mystery Writers
Are Making A Killing.' The same year, Time magazine labeled him
'the Dickens of Detroit.' Since then, Elmore has written about
a book a year and has received widespread attention thanks in
part to the success of movies made from his work such as
Get Shorty, Jackie
Brown and Out of Sight. Today, at 76, Elmore
is going strong and very involved in his book and movie projects.
His latest novel, Tishomingo Blues, demonstrates that his is
at the top of his game and then some. He still lives in the Detroit
area, in Bloomfield Township, Michigan, with his wife, Christine.
He enjoys being close to his children and grandchildren, most
of whom live nearby. Elmore is frequently asked why he lives
in Detroit when he could live anywhere. His answer, like his
prose, is to the point. I live in Detroit because I like
it, and he adds, because I know the names of all
the streets.