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Interview with Richard Barre
2/15/00

Jon
Richard Barre
Could you describe the series for people who may not have read any yet? Wil Hardesty is a Southern-California-based P.I., Vietnam survivor, lifelong surfer, a man still haunted by the death of his young son. I wouldn't characterize the series as hardboiled, it has too much heart for that, but he does get down with the bad guys. And he gets around.
A lot of people I talk to seem to really identify with the books. Why do you think that is? A reviewer once said about Hardesty: "You can imagine having a beer with him. He and the others pop into 3-D and transcend the posture of their own drama." It's about character, I think—who and what they are, the forces that shape them. At least it is for me.
How much of your self or your own experiences become part of your writing? A certain measure of self is inevitable in these things. Thus said, I counter a relatively sheltered life with a lurid imagination.
What made you want to become a writer? And do you mind being classified as a mystery writer? To answer the second part, not at all; some of the best writing today, bar none, is in the field. As for the first part, Raymond Chandler called me. I just wanted to be him. That's all. Seemed so simple...
What did you do before writing, and what other jobs have you had? I wrote copy for my advertising agency for 15 years. Which teaches you to be succinct and powerful in your word choices or die. Wonderful discipline, especially for shaping a book during the editing process.
Do you strive for realism in the books, or do you prefer the reader to understand that it is fiction? To me, the best crime fiction is an amalgam of fact and made-up. The trick is to make the end result both seamless and integral. So yes, I strive for realism. Just not to the point it inhibits the impact. Bottom line: I'm trying to make you feel what I did in the creation.
If you could go back and talk to a twenty-year-old Richard Barre, what would you say to him? Start writing now, this minute. Experience. And for crying out loud, read more.
Is there anything about the writing and or publishing field that makes you nuts? These days, just about everything. Which is why I try to focus on the work. The rest is like trying to win at casino games. With ulcers compliments of the house.
I understand you have a stand-alone book in the works. Can you give some details about it? It's a suspense novel about a coming-apart family—husband, wife and daughter—who try to pull their lives together aboard a sailboat off Costa Rica. And whether they die trying.
Who and/or what do you enjoy reading? So many good crime writers: James Ellroy, Martin Cruz Smith, Don Winslow, Dennis Lehane, Bob Crais, James Lee Burke, S.J. Rozan, G.M. Ford, to name some—great voices classic and new. And Chandler...always Chandler.
Do you write on a schedule, or is it more in bursts? Schedule. I write from two in the afternoon until nine or so at night. Seven days, usually. But I divide the day into two parts, pre-nap and post-nap.
What is the one thing that is always in your refrigerator? Yogurt. How's that for exciting?

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