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‘IN 1968, I WAS DRINKING, USING DRUGS, AND PEEKING AT WOMEN’ Hitlist THE BEST BOOKS, COMICS & EVENTS*

✽✽ Imprint A strong looking line-up for this East Ayrshire book festival with the likes of James Kelman (pictured), James Robertson and Jackie Kay in attendance. Various venues, Sat 7–14 Nov. ✽✽ James Ellroy See preview, left. Borders Books and GFT, Glasgow, Thu 5 Nov; Century. ✽✽ David Eagleman and Richard Holloway Nick Cave and Stephen Fry give us some recorded readings in this event to punt Sum, Eagleman’s ‘Tales from the Afterlives’. See feature, page 20. Traverse Theatre, Edinburgh, Wed 11 Nov. ✽✽ Alasdair Gray Here comes the launch of A Gray Play Book, an anthology of short plays, an unused opera libretto, a film script and excerpts from the pictorial storyboard of the novel Lanark. Roxy Art House, Edinburgh, Thu 12 Nov. ✽✽ Anthony Horowitz With his ITV drama Collision about to hit screens, Horowitz seizes the moment by dropping by to chat about his vastly popular Alex Rider series. Filmhouse, Edinburgh, Thu 12 Nov. ✽✽ Frankie Boyle He may have recently quit Mock the Week, but the Glasgow stand- up star is unlikely to slip from our minds for very long. Especially when he has a memoir to promote. Waterstone’s, Edinburgh, Wed 18 Nov. ✽✽ Attica Locke A stirring debut comes in the shape of Black Water Rising, about ethics and race during the US civil rights struggle. See review, page 33. Serpent’s Tail. ✽✽ Ryan David Jahn The brutal real-life slaying and the attendant ‘bystander effect’ results in another fine debut with Acts of Violence. See review, page 33. Macmillan. Got an opinion? You can now Comment on all our articles at list .co.uk

Blood writes

Iconic US author James Ellroy has just reached the end of an epic literary trail. Claire Sawers speaks to the man who creates history within a cultural vacuum

The final part in James Ellroy’s Underworld USA trilogy comes as a hefty, rewarding brick of a book and is already being hailed as his masterpiece. Following up American Tabloid and The Cold Six Thousand, Blood’s a Rover is a blazing, epic 650-page fusion of real events including Martin Luther King and Bobby Kennedy’s assassinations, Howard Hughes’ attempted takeover of Vegas, and the rise of the extreme right and gloriously imagined fiction. But despite the crime novelist’s staggering attention to detail, Ellroy, whose LA Confidential and The Black Dahlia have both been made into films, claims he lives in a cultural vacuum. ‘I’m not being disingenuous when I say that,’ he insists, chatting on the phone from a London hotel room. ‘I don’t follow modern culture at all. I don’t have a cell phone, I don’t use the internet, I don’t read newspapers or books. I never go to the movies.’

So how, exactly, does he create these awe-inspiring worlds of double-dealings, political upheaval and brutal crime from inside his vacuum? ‘I have a team of researchers that compile the chronologies for me,’ he explains. ‘But then I just lock myself in a room and make the rest of it up. I’ve always been very good at narrowing my focus. I’ll write for six or seven hours, and then when I’m done, I lie around in the dark. And I think.’ It’s presumably during these thinking sessions when the good stuff comes to him the spiderweb of conspiracies and odd romances, the cast of bent cops, militant leftie women and twisted megalomaniacs which provides him with the colour he needs to paint over the black and white of history.

32 THE LIST 5–19 Nov 2009

For the events in Blood’s a Rover, set between 1968 and 1972, Ellroy has had almost 40 years to think up what might have been going on behind the scenes. ‘I was 20 in 1968. Back then I was mostly drinking, using drugs, or peeking at women through their windows at night. I was dabbling in petty crime too. It takes many, many years for history to come to me.’ Ellroy describes Blood’s a Rover as his most ‘redemptive, romantic and accessible’ novel to date, and an indication of where his writing may be heading in the future. ‘It’s much less dark than previous books. In the last 100 pages or so, the tone softens, it becomes more elegiac, more reflective.’ Although he won’t give any clues about his next novel, in the meantime he will be releasing a memoir, The Hilliker Curse, a companion piece to My Dark Places, a blend of autobiography and investigative journalism where he discusses the murder of his mother. She was strangled when he was ten, and although he spent over a year working with the LAPD to find her killer, the crime remains unsolved. With such a preoccupation with crime real and imagined, political and personal does Ellroy ever feel he can’t escape the sinister, dark side of life? ‘You know, I have fun with it. I love my male characters, and I’m in love with the women. At the end of the day, I live to write the books. I’m not someone who relaxes. I don’t relax, I brood.’

Blood’s a Rover is published by Century, Thu 5 Nov. Ellroy appears at Borders, Glasgow and Glasgow Film Theatre, Thu 5 Nov.