If all goes as planned tomorrow, The Rap Sheet will welcome its first-ever “guest blogger,” noted American crime novelist
James Ellroy. As you might expect, I’m quite pumped at this turn of events. But I also feel more than a bit intimidated; after all, once you’ve had Ellroy guest-blogging for you, what do you do for an encore?

I believe my first experience with Ellroy’s storytelling came in the mid-1980s, when I snatched up a paperback copy of his debut novel,
Brown’s Requiem (1981). It told the tale of an alcoholic ex-Los Angeles cop turned repo man, whose job tailing the sister of a fat caddy introduced him into a convoluted plot involving hit men, incest, murder, corruption, arson, and the darker side of golf. It wasn’t long after that that I plunked down cash enough for a hardcover edition of
The Black Dahlia (1987), Ellroy’s “breakout book,” in which the compelling story of two 1940s L.A. cops--rivals for the heart of a striking but damaged young woman--is interwoven with the real-life slaying of
Elizabeth Short, a 22-year-old actress-wannabe whose mutilated corpse was found in a vacant lot in January 1947. (The case was never officially solved.) Brimming with duplicity, lust, obsession, and rich, street-slangy dialogue,
Dahlia was unlike anything I had read before, and led me to consume the subsequent three installments in Ellroy’s “L.A. Quartet”:
The Big Nowhere,
L.A. Confidential, and
White Jazz. I haven’t been quite as devoted an Ellroy reader since then, though I did enjoy
The Cold Six Thousand (2001) as well as the columns he used to pen for
GQ magazine.
It is with great pleasure that I welcome James Ellroy into The Rap Sheet. I hope he finds his stay here enjoyable and educational, and I hope readers of this blog will find his thoughts insightful.
(Photograph by Marion Ettlinger)
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