Dallas Morning News – profile of Cook

Author keeps it close to home
Christopher Cook has a kinship with his characters

By Jerome Weeks / The Dallas Morning News

AUSTIN – The Stars Cafe on I-35 near the University of Texas campus is one of those battered roadside diners that seem to survive anything – economic booms, busts, even art on the walls. It’s open this Sunday morning, so Christopher Cook steers his hulking ’86 Dodge pickup into the parking lot.

With its worn vinyl booths and scuffed floor, the cafe looks like a setting from Mr. Cook’s new thriller, Robbers (Carroll & Graf, $24.95). The novel actually begins across town with a pair of shootings, one in a 7-Eleven on South Lamar and the other in the parking lot of Threadgill’s, the landmark, down-home restaurant.

But the Stars Cafe will do for a decent breakfast – and for setting the right funky Texas atmosphere.

Robbers has come out with high praise from authors such as James Ellroy, author of L.A. Confidential, and favorable comparisons to Elmore Leonard and James Lee Burke. The description that Mr. Cook has heard and likes best is “a chicken-fried Pulp Fiction.” The novel concerns a pair of killers on the lam in a stolen Caddy, the troubled single mother they hook up with in Houston and the Texas Ranger who doggedly tracks them around the state, from Austin to the Big Thicket. Readers will be surprised by Robbers, not only by the assurance and talent of this first-time novelist but, in terms of narrative, by at least one killing, a killing that twists the story in abrupt and surprising ways.

“It surprised the hell out of me, too,” Mr. Cook says over coffee. “Didn’t know it was going to happen until I wrote it. Keep in mind, I’ve lived inside this story for a while, but there were things about the characters I didn’t know until I discovered them in the writing.”

At 48, Mr. Cook would seem to be a little late to start in the fiction-writing game (he holds down a day job at a power cooperative in Austin). But he has actually been writing for years, gaining some attention – in France.

The oil refinery-Beaumont-Port Arthur area of East Texas, which has produced such musicians as Clifton Chenier and Janis Joplin, seems to have hit a small gusher of authors. Growing up there, Mr. Cook knew best-selling memoirist Mary Karr, author of The Liar’s Club. (When asked if he appears in Ms. Karr’s new book, Cherry, with its tales of junior high sex and drug arrests, he blushes and refuses to tell.)

Like Ms. Karr, Mr. Cook has a troubled family background. One uncle was killed in a prison knife fight.

“And one Easter,” he recalls, “we had our egg hunt on the county courthouse lawn. My stepfather was in jail.”

As a young man, Mr. Cook got “caught up in the counter-culture,” hitchhiked to San Francisco in 1971, studied pre med and psychology at Macalester College in St. Paul, Minn. He wound up working as a lay minister at halfway houses, and later as a crime reporter for the Birmingham Post-Herald in Alabama.

“Maybe because I had some training in journalism,” he says, “I was a bit idealistic about newspapering.” He laughs. In other words, he was a troublemaker. He was fired from one newspaper and quit another – after he ran a story the publisher didn’t agree with. More important, he discovered that although “journalism is an important place to learn to write on a daily basis, it didn’t satisfy my need to do literary work.”

For nine of these years, Mr. Cook was raising his daughter Athena by himself – he and his first wife broke up when the girl was 3. But when the 12-year-old Athena decided she wanted to live with her mother, Mr. Cook was at loose ends. So when he met photographer Corinne Dune in Austin and she invited Mr. Cook to Paris, “I sold everything and went. That was seven years ago.”

In France, while working for a human rights organization, monitoring conditions in the former Soviet Union, he wrote short stories for Paris Transcontinental and Pharos magazines. In 1996, he and Ms. Dune, now his wife, moved to Mexico, where he started two novels, abandoned them and started a third: Robbers. He wrote it in four months, he says, leaving the house only for food or cigarettes.

Robbers first caught the attention of the American book industry last year when Nat Sobel of Sobel Weber Associates, James Ellroy’s agent, put it up for auction. An auction is held when an agent believes he has a hot manuscript, something that publishers and Hollywood producers will bid against each other to acquire.

“We sent out 27 letters,” Mr. Cook recalls, “and got 25 back, all saying the same thing. They were highly complimentary, they enjoyed it, but they turned it down flat. Thought it was too dark.”

“This,” he says with a grin, “was a disturbing turn of events.”

But once again, he had an audience in France. Mr. Sobel found eager buyers there and in England – “the backdoor strategy,” Mr. Cook calls it. Sure enough, Robbers was picked up in America by Carroll & Graf and released last month. Barnes & Noble is promoting the novel in its bookstores as part of its “Discovery” program, and the warehouses, Mr. Cook reports, are already empty of the first-print run of 10,000 copies.

One reason that readers may find Robbers dark is the lack of any clear-cut, well-intentioned hero. Rule Hooks, the Texas Ranger and, at first, the most obvious candidate, turns out to be a hard-hearted heel, a skilled and professional manhunter but a failure as a human being.

“He’s the Law,” Mr. Cook says. “And the Law is not likable. The Law is not even human. I spent a year in law school, and that’s the first thing you learn. The Law is not about justice. It’s about who can win an argument.”

For its terse, ironic dialogue and its mix of tough and comic-oddball characters, Robbers is being called a Texas version of Mr. Leonard’s books, such as Get Shorty. But the following passage, including its eccentric spellings, is distinctly unlike anything Mr. Leonard would write. It’s why Mr. Cook is also being compared to James Lee Burke:

“Crossing the low bridge, he saw dawn splintering the eastern sky above the cypress and tupelo in the bayou bottom. Amber streaks over a dark green canopy strewn with old widows locks of Spanish moss, white spots of egrets perched low in the trees. The bayou running high, its coffeecolored waters spilling over cypress knees and dense bottom growth, spreading back into wet woods and tangled thicket. … An eerie brooding place, where beauty married death.”

Mr. Cook mixes his bad-boy urban crime drama with passages like that – “reflective of an intricate ecology,” as he says – because, “at heart, I’m a Southern writer more than a typical Texan writer.” It’s those East Texas piney woods. Growing up, he says, he knew more Cajuns than he did anyone else.

In fact, Mr. Cook cites Southern gothic mainstay Flannery O’Connor as a major literary influence. He hopes his second book will be a short-story collection, Screen Door Jesus and Other Tales – “even though it’ll probably ruin my reputation as a thriller writer.”

But then, that’s part of the problem he sees in American publishing and book marketing – the division of fiction into genre works and serious novels.

He hates the way American literature has been split into these “two polarized camps,” he says. “There are the pop-fiction entertainers, the Grishams and the Steeles, who appeal to a need for stories but lack any literary merit. And then there are the academics, who monopolize literary aesthetics and write things ordinary people can’t read. They’re technically experimental, even brilliant, but they’re weak in narrative. If they had to make a living, they’d starve to death.”

So this first-timer plans on bridging the chasm? A major ambition. But then, why not?

“Hell,” he says, “for me, it’s been a real accomplishment just making it to 48. And not being in jail.”

Christopher Cook will be signing books in Dallas at 8 p.m. on Feb. 8 at the Barnes & Noble in Lincoln Park, across Northwest Highway from NorthPark.

 

—Christopher

Texas Monthly review

TEXAS MONTHLY
December 2000

Vice Grip: Cook’s recipe for crime

By Anne Dingus

In one sense this earthy first novel by Austinite Christopher Cook is a feel-good book: Compared with the title character, you can’t help but feel good about your own relatively decent self. In ROBBERS, two aimless outlaws, Ray Bob and Eddie, hook up and, in a sort of quien-es-mas-macho contest, set out on a killing adventure that is far too casual to be called a spree. A surly Texas Ranger lopes after them in determined pursuit, a chance encounter with a wayward beautician causes even more tension for the gunning buddies.

The characters are hardly sympathetic, but Cook clearly has the suspense-building gene; his writing, fluid yet visceral, compels the reader to hang in there while the nerve-jangling plot tick-tick-ticks toward its explosive end.

The author especially excels in the laconic, cuss word-laced dialogue of Western menfolk (cuss word-laced? Hell, it’s filthy!) and in clever coinages all his own: For example, he dubs the West Coasters moving to Austin “cyberokies” and the brutish, red-headed Ray Bob is a “coppernob.” For such a writer, crime (fiction) can’t help but pay.

 

—Christopher

Houston Chronicle review

HOUSTON CHRONICLE
Feb. 18, 2001

Rednecks on the run

In debut novel, Christopher Cook has East Texas pegged

By FRITZ LANHAM

ROBBERS.
By Christopher Cook.
Otto Penzler Book/Carroll & Graf, $24.95.

 

You have to love a debut novel that begins with a screed about how Austin has gone to hell in a handbasket.

Austin, state capital, university town. Former counterculture magnet and slacker haven now balling the jack on a fulltilt bender. Sucking wind under the onslaught of money. … The mellow chilled out days mere mythic history. Silicon Gulch now, hightech hysteria and the California unflux, a city overrun by cyberokies on the rebound two generations after the dustbowled western plunge, returning flush, pockets stuffed with plundered gelt.

And so on for several more sentences.

Having gotten this gonzo riff off his chest, Austin-based Christopher Cook settles back to give us a lively, darkly comic, enormously entertaining crime novel about two ex-cons on the run, the young woman they hook up with and the Texas Ranger who pursues them like a force of nature.

You have suspense, gunplay and a couple of Final Reckonings, the essentials of genre fiction. But Robbers is most interesting as a gallery of Texas characters, mostly working-class, uneducated, redneck to one degree or another. And such is Cook’s skill in handling the vernacular of these people that we come to believe in them, even as we observe their doings with a measure of ironic detachment.

The whole sorry crime spree starts over the need for smokes and the lack of a penny.

Ray Bob and Eddie are cruising the streets of Austin in a Caddy convertible, two young guys with nothing to do and no place to go. They met a few days before in a South Dallas bar and “buddied up just that fast, that easy, hardly even talked about it, what drifters do.”

One thing you learn in Robbers: Boys like these never think more than about four hours into the future.

Eddie goes into a convenience store, plunks down $4, which is every cent he has, and asks for Camels. Comes to $4.01, the clerk says. Eddie says whaddya mean, the clerk insists on the copper Lincoln, and tempers flare. Eddie pulls a .22 pistol out of his boot and shoots the clerk stone dead. He takes his cigarettes and leaves the $4 on the counter.

This is the first of a string of convenience-store robberies and clerk-killings the pair commit as they make their way down U.S. 290 to Interstate 10, over to the western edge of Houston, and then down through Sugar Land to the coast and Bolivar Peninsula east of Galveston.

As it turns out, Ray Bob, not Eddie, is the senior partner in this criminal enterprise. He’s the one who murders the store clerks in all the other robberies, to the increasing discomfiture of Eddie, who is not really the violent sort—or even the larcenous sort.

Spawn of a Jasper County clan that’s “pure East Texas redneck, riverbottom poachers and thieves, violent by nature and ignorant by choice,” Ray Bob is a sociopath, a brutal killer motivated by little more than “a need to move, to get going. Nowhere in particular, motion being enough.”

“It was simple cosmology,” the narrator tells us. “Creation having come from nothing, nothing was Ray Bob’s aim.”

Eddie is a different animal, but he has two deficiencies. He’s dumb as a tree stump (but cheerfully garrulous, which improves him as fictional material). And he lets himself fall in with bad company and be influenced. One of the challenges Cook sets for himself is to convince us that Eddie has a good heart despite what the man did in Austin and without making him undergo some implausible conversion experience.

Outside Houston, in the middle of the night, Ray Bob and Eddie pick up a hitchhiking Della, the novel’s most endearing character. Single mother of two young boys (“nervous, thumbsuckers”), Della is a beautician who reads the self-improvement articles in Redbook and Cosmopolitan and likes to tell people she’s a model. OK, sort of a model.

As the novel opens she’s modeling a plan to haul herself and her brood up the socioeconomic ladder and away from that bin labeled “white trash.” This involves riding a stool in the West Houston Holiday Inn atrium bar, in hopes Mister Dreamboat will come along.

Sadly, Mister Dreamboat proves a kinky dude in the bedroom, and Della pokes him in the chest with a knife. Nothing in Redbook prepared her for that, which is why Della is walking down the highway toward her dumpy Sugar Land apartment in the middle of the night.

In a Bolivar Peninsula beach house, romance flowers between Della and Eddie, and the latter decides to give up robbery in favor of his original line of work as a blues guitarist and singer. He gets a gig at a nearby roadhouse. Della is thrilled. Ray Bob, for whom “runnin’ buddies” is a no-divorce proposition, isn’t.

Cook treats the pursued and the pursuer in alternating chapters. The role of hound in the hunt is played by Rule Hooks, Texas Ranger. It’s a measure of Cook’s audacity that he starts with a cliché and by the end of the book gives it life—in part, I think, by making the lawman shrewd and tenacious but not especially likable.

Tall and slender, laconic, gimlet-eyed, the middle-aged Hooks looks a lot like Porter Wagoner, several characters remark. Without the bangles and spangles, of course. The reason he works alone, Hooks freely admits, is that he’s pretty much an SOB.

He has two ex-wives and a college-age daughter who will barely speak to him, and lives out in the country alone with his dog. He uses women, including the sexually gluttonous wife of a fellow officer, then kicks them out the door before sunup. There’s nothing fancy about his police techniques, which involve going over the crime scenes and hitting the road in his Dodge Ram pickup, trying to anticipate where the boys will surface next.

Cook has a great ear for Texas redneck, although the reviewer is hard-pressed to find long stretches of it he can quote in a family newspaper. Be forewarned: If there’s a bad word that’s not in this book, I don’t know what it might be.

But in the boys’ dialogue, Cook captures perfectly the slang, the lame banter, the non sequiturs, the crimes against grammar (“You giving me the redass, pardner,” Eddie tells the ill-fated convenience-store clerk. “This is America. Gimmee them cigarettes.”).

Ray Bob thinks the famous French pirate was named “John the Feet.” And here’s Della’s end of a phone conversation with her sad-sack mother, on whom she has pawned off her kids temporarily (Cook, incidentally, eschews quotation marks, à la Cormac McCarthy).

You’re so mean. How can you say that? I’m not running around having a good time …

Well, it’s not that bad …

I don’t know when …

It is too the truth. If I had a phone I’d give it to you. No I’m not. Why would I be hiding from my own kids?

Are you sure? I can’t imagine Waylon doing that. Both ears? He must’ve got that off the TV …

It’s cause you stopped taking your iron again? How? Cause if you’re that tired, you stopped taking your iron, that’s how [ … ]

I doubt it’s a stroke, Momma. I just do. When you get older you lose muscle tone. Plus your face always drooped some on that side. Yes it did. Of course I’d tell you …

Is that Randy I hear coughing? Did you give him the medicine? Then hold his mouth open and make him swallow. If he bites, just slap him upside the head …

To liven the mix, Cook adds a pair of colorful minor characters, including Harvey Lomax, a crazed, Bible-quoting, gun-toting wrecker driver, husband of one of Ray Bob’s victims and self-proclaimed agent of God’s vengeance, and Bubba Bear, an ex-hippie turned bar owner given to free associating in the old revolutionary dope-smoker lingo.

The Edgar Allan Poe Award nominees for best first novel were announced recently, and Robbers, which was published in December, wasn’t among the five. That may have to do with Cook’s decision to violate one of the major conventions of the genre (to be more specific would give away too much), but I can’t imagine this isn’t one of the five most original, engagingly written debut crime novels of 2000.

Fritz Lanham is the Chronicle’s book editor.

 

—Christopher