October 10, 2012
Life and living in a small Wyoming town
Huntington native Craig Johnson talks about his 'Longmire' series ahead of Book Festival apearance
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Courtesy photo
Huntington native Craig Johnson is the author of the Walt Longmire novel series about the sheriff of the least-populated county of the least-populated state (the fictional Absaroka County, Wyoming).
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"I think one of the biggest mistakes a lot of writing students make is that they get these magnificent degrees in writing, and they don't have any life experience to write about," he said. "I don't know about you, but if I read another novel about a novelist trying to write another novel about a novelist trying to write a novel, I'm going to bang my head against a wall."

Johnson said he was following in the footsteps of Jack Kerouac and John Steinbeck: writers who had lives and saw things worth writing about.

"It took a while to find a story I thought was important enough that I had to tell it," he said. "It's the sort of excuse from every writer: they're waiting for the story only they can tell."

But he might have a point. Johnson's Longmire books are about a middle-aged county sheriff solving crimes in rural Wyoming near an Indian reservation.

"To me, it wasn't really that much of a stretch, to be honest with you," he said. "I live in a town of 25 people."

His ranch is also located near the Crow Indian Reservation in Montana.

Since his first book, "The Cold Dish," Johnson has published seven other novels, all part of the Longmire series. His latest, "As The Crow Flies" is in stores now. He also has "Divorce Horse," which is only available electronically through iBooks, Kindle and Nook. 

Johnson's next book, "The Serpent's Tooth," should be out next year, and he's already working beyond that.

This summer, his books came to life as the basis for an A&E television series, "Longmire." The show was the network's highest-rated scripted drama and has been renewed for a second season, to debut in 2013.

"They were looking for something with really strong characters," he said. "They didn't say Westerns, just books with very strong characters."

But it helped that what he was doing was different. "It's kind of the anti-'CSI,'" Johnson said. 

Johnson said the first book was the hardest for him, though each new installment brings with it a familiar set of worries and fears.

With writing a series, he said, there's a danger of getting too comfortable, of playing it too safe or in trying to repeat something that worked one time that maybe landed the author on a book list somewhere.

"I think you need to be hungry. I think you need to be out there trying new stuff and not getting comfortable or settling in."

For his part, Johnson said he thinks he does a pretty good job of doing that.

"I'm a blue-collar writer," he said. "I get up and get the ranch squared away before I start writing. The first thing I do in the morning is shovel out the barn."

Reach Bill Lynch at ly...@wvgazette.com or 304-348-5195.

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