Gary Phillips (writer) explained

Gary Phillips
Birth Date:24 August 1955
Birth Place:Los Angeles, California, USA
Occupation:writer
Education:California State University, Los Angeles (BA)

Gary Phillips (born August 24, 1955) is an American writer, editor, and community activist whose 1994 novel Violent Spring is considered a classic work of crime fiction and one of the essential crime novels about Los Angeles.[1] His more than two dozen books range from hard-boiled mysteries such as the acclaimed Ivan Monk series to graphic novels including Angeltown and anthologies like The Obama Inheritance: Fifteen Stories of Conspiracy Noir.[2] [3] Phillips has also served as a story editor and writer on the television show Snowfall.[4]

Life

Phillips was born on August 24, 1955, in Los Angeles to Dikes Phillips, a mechanic, and Leonelle Hutton Phillips, a librarian.[5] His family was among many African Americans who left the Southern United States for Los Angeles in the 1940s and '50s.[5] Phillips's mother developed multiple sclerosis after he was born, resulting in him being raised primarily by his father.[5] The stories Phillips's father told him about being on the road during the Great Depression would later influence his decision to become a writer.

Phillips attended San Francisco State University for a year and received a B. A. in graphic design from California State University, Los Angeles, in 1978. He has worked as a printer and as a "political campaign director, union organizer, and activist against police brutality and South African apartheid."[5] In particular, Phillips worked for the Coalition Against Police Abuse because of the brutality of the infamous 77th division of the Los Angeles Police Department that patrolled the area where he grew up. He also was one of the founding directors of the MultiCultural Collaborative, a community-based groups aiming to reduce racial tensions following the 1992 Los Angeles riots.[6] [7]

In 1989 after being fired from his job with a union, Phillips enrolled in a creative writing class taught by Robert Crais. During the class Phillips wrote a mystery story about an African American private investigator named Ivan Monk, a character he would return to in his first novel.[5]

Mystery writing

Phillips is known for writing comic books, detective noir, and pulp fiction, all works that also influenced him while growing up in South Los Angeles.[4] In particular, his crime fiction has been praised as being a "terrific" example of the hard-boiled mystery genre and being "firmed rooted" in that tradition.[2] [8] Phillips himself describes his writing style as "hard-boiled tales with dashes of Chester Himes and Ashley Montague."[9] Among Phillip's other self-admitted influences are Rod Serling, Jack Kirby, Jim Steranko, and Richard Pryor.

Phillips's first novel Violent Spring featured the character Ivan Monk, who he originally wrote about in Robert Crais's creative writing class. In the novel, Monk investigates the murder of a Korean shop owner in the aftermath of the 1992 riots. Violent Spring was released in 1994 by the small publishing company West Coast Crime[5] and later optioned by HBO.[4] The novel is now considered a "crime classic"[3] and has been called one of the essential crime novels of Los Angeles by CrimeReads.[1]

In addition to Violent Spring, Phillips has written three other novels in the acclaimed series featuring Ivan Monk[10] along with the short story collection Monkology: 13 Stories From the World of Private Eye Ivan Monk, released in 2004 by Macmillan Publishers.[11]

Another series of mysteries by Phillips focuses on an African American woman named Martha Chainey,[5] who is a former showgirl. The series deals with "her exploits with the Vegas mob as a crime solver."[9] Phillips has so far written two novels about Chainey.

In 2022 Phillips released the mystery novel One-Shot Harry, set in 1960's Los Angeles and featuring an African American crime scene photographer investigating the death of his friend. One-Shot Harry was a finalist for the 2023 Nero Award and nominated for the Sue Feder Memorial Award for Best Historical Mystery[12]

Phillips has also served on the national board of the Mystery Writers of America.[11]

Editing

Phillips has edited a number of anthologies including Orange County Noir and The Obama Inheritance: Fifteen Stories of Conspiracy Noir, with the latter receiving the 2018 Anthony Award for Best Anthology.[13] The Obama Inheritance was inspired by the many conspiracy theories generated about President Barack Obama.[2] Each story in the anthology focused on one conspiracy theory as a means to "Riff on it, take it apart and turn it on its head, and give the reader a thrill ride of weirdo, noirish, pulpy goodness."[2]

His 2008 anthology The Darker Mask: Heroes from the Shadows, edited with Christopher Chambers, presented a look at superheroes outside the traditional mythology of "admirable White males" and featured original stories by Walter Mosley, L.A. Banks, Peter Spiegelman, Ann Nocenti, Naomi Hirahara and others.[14] In 2011, Phillips co-edited The Cocaine Chronicles with Jervey Tervalon, an anthology of original stories.[15]

His 2022 anthology South Central Noir from Akashic Books focused the best-selling short fiction series on South Los Angeles and featured authors such as Tananarive Due, Gar Anthony Haywood, Naomi Hirahara, and Penny Mickelbury. In addition to editing South Central Noir, Phillips also contributed the story "Death of a Sideman" about two old friends surveying the changing section of Los Angeles.[16]

Comics and graphic novels

Philips also writes comic books, which he says was his first love as a writer. "I started out decades ago wanting to be a comic book artist and writer," Phillips said in an interview with Black Issues Book Review. "I wanted to work for Marvel so bad that I would have sold my sister if I had one."[11]

Among the comics Philips has written is the 2005 miniseries Angeltown released by Vertigo/DC Comics. His comic Twilight Crusade: Envoy for Moonstone Books, about a hitman for God, was released in 2008. Phillips also wrote for Dark Horse Comics.[11]

In 2008, Phillips released High Rollers through Boom! Studios. This four-issue comic followed the rise of a Los Angeles gangster named Cameron Quinn as he builds and runs his criminal enterprise.[17] In 2019 he co-wrote The Be-Bop Barbarians with Dale Berry, which told the story of three Black cartoonists "struggling to create unconventional comics in a racist industry."[18]

Television work

Phillips has had a number of his works optioned by Hollywood, including his first novel Violent Spring and Culprits, an anthology of short stories focusing on different criminals in Texas pulling off a heist.[4] After meeting John Singleton during a series of community panels and writers conferences, Phillips was hired to serve as a story editor and writer on the FX television show Snowfall.[4] The show is set in Los Angeles between 1983 and 1990 and revolves around the first crack epidemic and its impact on the city, including the neighborhoods where Phillips grew up.[4]

Critical reception

The bulk of Phillips's work is set in Los Angeles and frequently draws upon his life experiences to give the stories "a sense of reality and authenticity."[17] Phillips has been described as the "epitome of the noir cool" with Michael Connelly saying that "There is a raw energy in what Gary writes. His work is almost as physically imposing as he is because he's a no-holds-barred sort of writer."[9]

According to the Guide to Literary Masters & Their Works, "Some critics have complained that Phillips mixes social commentary inelegantly with his mysteries, since the genre is basically escapist, but to Phillips the purpose of writing detective fiction is to make a social comment about America and its mix of nationalities and cultures."[5]

Phillips's One-Shot Harry was called "fast-paced, tough, wry and smart" by Maureen Corrigan in The Washington Post, with the novel taking "readers deep into another world and time: its jokes, home furnishings, baloney-meatloaf-and-hot-dog-heavy meals; its hateful slurs, 'invisible' racial boundaries and cautiously hopeful possibilities."[3]

Selected bibliography

Ivan Monk series

Martha Chainey series

Other novels

Graphic novels and comics

Short story collections

Anthologies (as editor)

References

Bibliography

Books

Notes and References

  1. "The Essential Crime Novels of Los Angeles: 34 novels every lover of LA Noir should read as soon as humanly possible" by Katie Orphan, CrimeReads, March 11, 2020.
  2. "Collection Puts A Playful, Pulpy Twist On Preposterous Stories About Obama" by Maureen Corrigan, Fresh Air, NPR, October 9, 2017.
  3. "'One-Shot Harry' conjures up a Los Angeles we rarely see" by Maureen Corrigan, The Washington Post, May 2, 2022.
  4. "Snowfall writer Gary Phillips gives a glimpse behind the scenes of a hit television series" by Gregg Reese, OurWeekly, May 19, 2021.
  5. "Gary Phillips" by William Laskowski, Guide to Literary Masters & Their Works, Literary Reference Center Plus, Salem Press, accessed July 23, 2023.
  6. "Inside Agitators" by Sandra Hernandez, LA Weekly, September 30, 1998.
  7. "Expert Panel to Discuss Jewish-Black Relations," L.A. Times, January 24, 1998.
  8. "Review of Monkology by Gary Phillips," Publishers Weekly, 08/02/2004.
  9. "From South-Central to Noir Cool: Gary Phillips" by Wendy Werris, Publishers Weekly, August 24, 2012.
  10. "Review of The Obama Inheritance; Fifteen Stories of Conspiracy Noir" by David Pitt, Booklist, 10/1/2017, Volume 114 Issue 3, page 33.
  11. "Beyond Funny: Black voices in the world of comics and graphic novels" by Robert Fleming, Black Issues Book Review, July/August 2006, Volume 8 Issue 4, page 27-28.
  12. "One-Shot Harry by Gary Phillips," Penguin Random House, accessed July 23, 2023.
  13. "The Obama Inheritance wins 2018 Anthony Award for Best Anthology", Three Rooms Press, September 9, 2018.
  14. "Collection of Short Stories Hail Black Superheroes" by Frederick L. McKissack Jr., Crisis Fall 2008, Vol. 115 Issue 4, p39-40.
  15. Encyclopedia of African-American Literature edited by Wilfred D. Samuels, Facts on File, 2007, page 489.
  16. "How the authors of 'South Central Noir' captured South L.A. and created a genre" by Paula L. Woods, The Los Angeles Times, September 7, 2022.
  17. "Crime and Comic Books: Gary Phillips’s High Roller" by Van Jensen, Publishers Weekly, July 1, 2008.
  18. "Spring 2019 Announcements: Comics & Graphic Novels" by Calvin Reid, Publishers Weekly, 12/10/2018, Vol. 265, Issue 51.