Donald E. Westlake Explained

Pseudonym:John B. Allan, Judson Jack Carmichael, Curt Clark, Timothy J. Culver, J. Morgan Cunningham, Richard Stark, Edwin West, among others
Birth Name:Donald Edwin Westlake
Birth Date:12 July 1933
Birth Place:New York City, U.S.
Death Place:Mexico
Occupation:Novelist
Genre:crime fiction
Notableworks:Parker series, John Dortmunder series, God Save the Mark, screenplay for The Grifters
Signature:Donald Westlake signature (cropped).jpg
Awards:Edgar Awards for Best Novel (1968), Best Short Story (1990) and Best Motion Picture Screenplay (1991)
Mystery Writers of America Grand Master (1993)

Donald Edwin Westlake (July 12, 1933  - December 31, 2008) was an American writer with more than one hundred novels and non-fiction books to his credit. He specialized in crime fiction, especially comic capers, with an occasional foray into science fiction and other genres. Westlake created two professional criminal characters who each starred in a long-running series: the relentless, hardboiled Parker (published under the pen name Richard Stark), and John Dortmunder, who featured in a more humorous series.[1]

He was a three-time Edgar Award winner and, alongside Joe Gores and William L. DeAndrea, was one of few writers to win Edgars in three different categories (1968, Best Novel, God Save the Mark; 1990, Best Short Story, "Too Many Crooks"; 1991, Best Motion Picture Screenplay, The Grifters). In 1993, the Mystery Writers of America named Westlake a Grand Master, the highest honor bestowed by the society.[2]

Personal life

Westlake was born in Brooklyn, New York, the son of Lillian (Bounds) and Albert Joseph Westlake,[3] and was raised in Albany, New York.

Westlake wrote constantly in his teens, and after 200 rejections, his first short story sale was in 1954. Sporadic short story sales followed over the next few years, while Westlake attended Champlain College (a now defunct college created in the post WWII GI Bill boom) of Plattsburgh, New York,[4] and Binghamton University in Binghamton, New York. He also spent two years in the United States Air Force.

Westlake moved to New York City in 1959, initially to work for a literary agency while writing on the side. By 1960, he was writing full-time. His first novel under his own name, The Mercenaries, was published in 1960; over the next 48 years, Westlake published a variety of novels and short stories under his own name and a number of pseudonyms.

He was married three times, the final time to Abigail Westlake (also known as Abby Adams Westlake and Abby Adams), a writer of nonfiction (her two published books are An Uncommon Scold and The Gardener's Gripe Book). The couple moved from New York City to Ancram in upstate New York in 1990.

Westlake died of a heart attack on December 31, 2008, while on the way to a New Year's Eve dinner in Mexico, where he and his wife were on vacation.[5]

Pseudonyms

In addition to writing consistently under his own name, Westlake published under several pseudonyms.[6] In the order they debuted:

Westlake sometimes made playful use of his pseudonyms in his work:

Additionally, Westlake conducted a mock "interview" with Richard Stark, Tucker Coe and Timothy J. Culver in an article for the non-fiction book Murder Ink: The Mystery Reader's Companion.

Writing style

Donald Westlake was known for the great ingenuity of his plots and the audacity of his gimmicks. Westlake's most famous characters include the hard-boiled criminal Parker (appearing in fiction under the Richard Stark pseudonym) and Parker's comic flip-side John Dortmunder. Westlake was quoted as saying that he originally intended what became The Hot Rock to be a straightforward Parker novel, but "It kept turning funny," and thus became the first John Dortmunder novel.

Most of Donald Westlake's novels are set in New York City. In each of the Dortmunder novels, there is typically a foray into a particular city neighborhood. He wrote just two non-fiction books: Under an English Heaven, regarding the unlikely 1967 Anguillan "revolution", and a biography of Elizabeth Taylor.[6]

Westlake was an occasional contributor to science fiction fanzines such as Xero, and used Xero as a venue for a harsh announcement that he was leaving the science fiction field.[12]

Literary crossovers

Westlake and Joe Gores wrote the same encounter between two of their characters from different perspectives in two different novels. In chapter 18 of Gores' 1972 novel Dead Skip, San Francisco detective Dan Kearney meets Westlake's amoral thief Parker while looking for one of Parker's associates. The sequence is described from Parker's viewpoint in the 1972 book Plunder Squad, which Westlake wrote under the pseudonym Richard Stark. Gores hints further at the connection between the two books by referring to Parker's associates as "the plunder squad." Additionally, earlier in the novel, the book's protagonist Larry Ballard is described as being a reader only of Richard Stark novels.[13]

Gores and Westlake also wrote a shared chapter in Westlake's Drowned Hopes and Gores' 32 Cadillacs, having the characters in those books influenced by the same event.[14] [15]

Motion pictures and television

Several of Westlake's novels have been made into motion pictures: 1967's Point Blank (based on The Hunter) with Lee Marvin as Parker (changed to Walker); (based on The Score) with Michel Constantin as Parker (changed to Georges), also in 1967; 1968's The Split (from the book The Seventh) with Jim Brown as Parker (changed to McClain); The Hot Rock in 1972 with Robert Redford; Cops and Robbers in 1973; The Outfit with Robert Duvall as Parker (changed to Macklin), also in 1973; Bank Shot in 1974 with George C. Scott; The Busy Body (with an "all-star cast") in 1967; Slayground with Peter Coyote as Parker (changed to Stone) in 1983; Why Me? with Christopher Lambert, Christopher Lloyd, and J. T. Walsh in 1990; Payback in 1999, the second film made from The Hunter, with Mel Gibson as Parker (changed to Porter); What's the Worst That Could Happen? in 2001 with Martin Lawrence as Dortmunder (changed to Kevin Caffery); Constantin Costa-Gavras adapted The Ax for the European screen in 2005, to great critical and public acclaim – entitled Le Couperet, the film takes place in France and Belgium rather than the novel's setting of New England; Parker in 2013, based on Flashfire, with Jason Statham as Parker.

In his introduction to one of the short stories in Thieves' Dozen, Westlake mentioned legal troubles with Hollywood over his continued use of the Dortmunder novel characters; the movie studios attempted to assert that he had sold the rights to the characters to them permanently as a result of the Redford film.

The novel Jimmy the Kid has been adapted three times: in Italy as in 1976; in the U.S. as Jimmy the Kid in 1982, starring Gary Coleman; and in Germany as Jimmy the Kid in 1998, starring Herbert Knaup.

The novel Two Much! has been adapted twice: in France as Le Jumeau (The Twin) in 1984; and in the U.S. as Two Much in 1995, starring Antonio Banderas and Melanie Griffith.

Jean-Luc Godard's Made in U.S.A. in 1966 was an extremely loose adaptation of The Jugger. Neither the film's producer nor Godard purchased the rights to the novel, so Westlake successfully sued to prevent the film's commercial distribution in the United States.

His novel Memory, published posthumously in 2010, was adapted into the upcoming film The Actor, directed by Duke Johnson and starring André Holland and Gemma Chan.[16] [17]

Westlake was himself a screenwriter. His script for the 1990 film The Grifters, adapted from the novel by Jim Thompson, was nominated for an Academy Award. Westlake adapted Jim Thompson's work in a straightforward manner, but Westlake the humourist played on Thompson's name later that year in the Dortmunder novel Drowned Hopes by featuring a character named "Tom Jimson" who is a criminal psychopath. Westlake also wrote the screenplay for the film The Stepfather (from a story by Westlake, Brian Garfield and Carolyn Lefcourt), which was popular enough to inspire two sequels and a remake, projects in which Westlake was not involved.

In 1987 Westlake wrote the teleplay Fatal Confession, a pilot for the TV series Father Dowling Mysteries based on the novels by Ralph McInerny. He also appeared in a small role (as the mystery writer Rich Vincent) in the third-season episode, "The Hardboiled Mystery."

Westlake wrote an early draft of the 1999 James Bond film The World Is Not Enough, which was later scrapped because of difficulties in filming in the script's original setting in China. Westlake adapted the script into the novel Forever and a Death, which was published posthumously in 2017 by Hard Case Crime.[18]

Westlake wrote an unproduced screenplay adapting the Dashiell Hammett crime novel Red Harvest, which changed the story considerably to refocus the ending on solving the original murder for which the detective had been hired, which is solved relatively early in the original book and which Westlake felt made the detective's continuing involvement in the story hard to justify.[18]

Westlake co-wrote the story for the pilot of the ill-fated 1979 TV series Supertrain with teleplay writer Earl W. Wallace; Westlake and Wallace shared "created by" credit.

In 2022, Variety (magazine) reported that Robert Downey, Jr. and Shane Black were working together on multiple movie and television projects for Amazon Studios based on the Parker series.[19]

his novel The Axe apdated as upcoming South Korean film by Park Chan-wook.

Works

Novels

The following table can be sorted to show Westlake's novels in chronological order,
or arranged alphabetically by title, or by publisher, or by author credit, or by series.
! Year !! Title !! Publisher !! Author Credit !! Series !! Notes
1959All My LoversMidwood BooksAlan Marshall
1959Backstage LoveMidwood BooksAlan MarshallPhil CrawfordAlso published as Apprentice Virgin
1959Man HungryMidwood BooksAlan Marshall
1959SallyMidwood BooksAlan Marshall
1960All About AnnetteMidwood BooksAlan Marshall
1960All the Girls Were WillingMidwood BooksAlan MarshallPhil CrawfordLater printed as What Girls Will Do
1960A Girl Called HoneyMidwood BooksAlan Marshall & Sheldon LordA collaboration between Westlake and Lawrence Block
1960The MercenariesRandom HouseDonald E. WestlakeAlso published in the UK as The Smashers. Republished in 2009 under Westlake's preferred title, The Cutie.
1960So WillingMidwood BooksAlan Marshall & Sheldon LordA collaboration between Westlake and Lawrence Block
1960Virgin's SummerMidwood BooksAlan Marshall
1960The Wife Next DoorMidwood BooksAlan Marshall
1961Call Me SinnerNightstand BooksAlan Marshall
1961Passion's PlaythingBedside BooksAlan Marshall
1961Off LimitsBedside BooksAlan Marshall
1961Brother and SisterMonarch BooksEdwin West
1961Campus DollMonarch BooksEdwin West
1960Young and InnocentMonarch BooksEdwin West
1961Killing TimeRandom HouseDonald E. WestlakeLater published by Blackbird Books as The Operator in 2023.
1962The HunterPocket BooksRichard StarkParkerLater published as Point Blank and Payback. First appearance of master thief Parker.
1962361Random HouseDonald E. Westlake
1962Strange AffairMonarch BooksEdwin West
1963KillyRandom HouseDonald E. Westlake
1963Sin ProwlCorinth PublicationsAlan MarshallPhil Crawford
1963Campus LoversMonarch BooksEdwin West
1963The Man with the Getaway FacePocket BooksRichard StarkParkerAlso published in the UK as Steel Hit.
1963The OutfitPocket BooksRichard StarkParker
1963The MournerPocket BooksRichard StarkParker
1963The ScorePocket BooksRichard StarkParkerAlso published in the UK as Killtown.
1964Pity Him AfterwardsRandom HouseDonald E. Westlake
1965The Fugitive PigeonRandom HouseDonald E. Westlake
1965The JuggerPocket BooksRichard StarkParker
1966The SeventhPocket BooksRichard StarkParkerLater published as The Split.
1966The Busy BodyRandom HouseDonald E. Westlake
1966The HandlePocket BooksRichard StarkParkerAlso published in the UK as Run Lethal.
1966The Spy in the OintmentRandom HouseDonald E. Westlake
1966Kinds of Love, Kinds of DeathRandom HouseTucker CoeMitchell Tobin
1967Murder Among ChildrenRandom HouseTucker CoeMitchell Tobin
1967The DamselMacmillan PublishersRichard StarkGrofield
1967The Rare Coin ScoreFawcett BooksRichard StarkParker
1967God Save the MarkRandom HouseDonald E. WestlakeEdgar Award winner for Best Novel
1967PhilipThomas Y. Crowell Co.Donald E. Westlake
1967AnarchaosAce BooksCurt Clark
1967The Green Eagle ScoreFawcett BooksRichard StarkParker
1968Who Stole Sassi Manoon?Random HouseDonald E. Westlake
1968The Black Ice ScoreFawcett BooksRichard StarkParker
1969The Sour Lemon ScoreFawcett BooksRichard StarkParker
1969Somebody Owes Me MoneyRandom HouseDonald E. Westlake
1969Up Your BannersLancer BooksDonald E. Westlake
1969The DameMacmillan PublishersRichard StarkGrofield
1969The BlackbirdMacmillan PublishersRichard StarkGrofield
1970Wax AppleRandom HouseTucker CoeMitchell Tobin
1970The Hot RockSimon & SchusterDonald E. WestlakeDortmunderOriginally planned as a non-comic Parker novel; introduces John Dortmunder
1970Ex OfficioM. EvansTimothy J. CulverAlso published under the title Power Play.
1970Adios ScheherazadeSimon & SchusterDonald E. WestlakeBuilds on Westlake's experiences writing soft-core porn.
1970A Jade in AriesRandom HouseTucker CoeMitchell Tobin
1971Lemons Never LieWorld Publishing CompanyRichard StarkGrofield
1971I Gave at the OfficeSimon & SchusterDonald E. Westlake
1971Deadly EdgeRandom HouseRichard StarkParker
1971SlaygroundRandom HouseRichard StarkParker
1972Bank ShotSimon & SchusterDonald E. WestlakeDortmunder
1972Cops and RobbersM. EvansDonald E. Westlake
1972Don't Lie to MeRandom HouseTucker CoeMitchell Tobin
1972Plunder SquadRandom HouseRichard StarkParkerCrosses over with the 1972 Joe Gores novel Dead Skip
1973Comfort StationSignet BooksJ. Morgan Cunningham
1973Gangway!M. EvansDonald E. Westlake and Brian Garfield
1974Butcher's MoonRandom HouseRichard StarkParker
1974Help, I Am Being Held PrisonerM. EvansDonald E. Westlake
1974Jimmy the KidM. EvansDonald E. WestlakeDortmunderIncludes chapters from an otherwise non-existent novel by Richard Stark entitled Child Heist.
1975Two MuchM. EvansDonald E. Westlake
1975Brothers KeepersM. EvansDonald E. Westlake
1976Dancing AztecsM. EvansDonald E. WestlakeA shortened version, lacking one of the sub-plots, was published in 1976 as A New York Dance
1977Nobody's PerfectM. EvansDonald E. WestlakeDortmunder
1980Castle in the AirM. EvansDonald E. Westlake
1981KahawaViking PressDonald E. Westlake
1983Why Me?Viking PressDonald E. WestlakeDortmunder
1984A Likely StoryPenzler BooksDonald E. Westlake
1985High AdventureMysterious PressDonald E. Westlake
1985Good BehaviorMysterious PressDonald E. WestlakeDortmunder
1986One of Us Is WrongTor BooksSamuel HoltSam Holt
1986I Know a Trick Worth Two of ThatTor BooksSamuel HoltSam Holt
1987What I Tell You Three Times Is FalseTom Doherty AssociatesSamuel HoltSam Holt
1988Trust Me on ThisMysterious PressDonald E. WestlakeSara Joslyn
1989Sacred MonsterMysterious PressDonald E. Westlake
1989The Fourth Dimension Is DeathTom Doherty AssociatesSamuel HoltSam Holt
1990Drowned HopesMysterious PressDonald E. WestlakeDortmunderCrosses over with the 1992 Joe Gores novel 32 Cadillacs
1991The Perfect Murder: Five Great Mystery Writers Create the Perfect CrimeHarperCollinsJack Hitt with Lawrence Block,
Sarah Caudwell, Tony Hillerman,
Peter Lovesey, Donald E. Westlake
Collaborative novel, devised and edited by Hitt. Westlake contributes two chapters.
1992HumansMysterious PressDonald E. Westlake
1993Don't AskMysterious PressDonald E. WestlakeDortmunder
1994Baby, Would I Lie?Mysterious PressDonald E. WestlakeSara Joslyn
1995SmokeMysterious PressDonald E. Westlake
1996What's the Worst That Could Happen?Mysterious PressDonald E. WestlakeDortmunder
1997The AxMysterious PressDonald E. Westlake
1997ComebackMysterious PressRichard StarkParker
1998BackflashMysterious PressRichard StarkParker
2000The HookWarner BooksDonald E. WestlakePublished in the UK as Corkscrew
2000FlashfireMysterious PressRichard StarkParkerAlso published as Parker, movie tie-in[20]
2001FirebreakWarner BooksRichard StarkParker
2001Bad NewsWarner BooksDonald E. WestlakeDortmunder
2002Put a Lid on ItWarner BooksDonald E. Westlake
2002BreakoutMysterious PressRichard StarkParker
2002The Scared StiffCarroll & Graf PublishersJudson Jack CarmichaelPublished in the UK as by Donald E. Westlake
2003Money for NothingMysterious PressDonald E. Westlake
2004The Road to RuinMysterious PressDonald E. WestlakeDortmunder
2004Nobody Runs ForeverMysterious PressRichard StarkParker
2005Watch Your Back!Mysterious PressDonald E. WestlakeDortmunder
2006Ask the ParrotMysterious PressRichard StarkParker
2007What's So Funny?Warner BooksDonald E. WestlakeDortmunder
2008Dirty MoneyGrand Central PublishingRichard StarkParker
2009Get RealGrand Central PublishingDonald E. WestlakeDortmunder
2010MemoryHard Case CrimeDonald E. WestlakeWritten in the early 1960s, published posthumously.
2012The Comedy Is FinishedHard Case CrimeDonald E. WestlakeWritten in the early 1980s, published posthumously.
2017Forever and a DeathHard Case CrimeDonald E. WestlakeWritten in 1998, published posthumously.
2022Call Me a CabHard Case CrimeDonald E. WestlakeWritten c. 1977/78, previously only published in a significantly shorter version in Redbook in 1978.

Collections

Non-fiction

Produced screenplays

Unpublished/unproduced works

Legacy

Westlake has been acknowledged by many writers and fans of crime fiction as one of the masters of the genre.

The central villain of Stephen King's novel The Dark Half, George Stark, was named in honor of Richard Stark. King telephoned Westlake personally to ask permission. King's own "Richard Bachman" pseudonym was also partly named for Stark: King had been reading a Richard Stark novel at the time he chose the pen name.[25]

Writer Duane Swierczynski named his first-born son Parker, in honor of the Richard Stark character as well as Spider-Man's secret identity, Peter Parker.[26] [27]

In addition to Darwyn Cooke's graphic-novel adaptations of Parker, Cooke also homaged Westlake in his earlier work Catwoman: Selena's Big Score by giving one of the characters, an old flame and mentor of Selina Kyle, the name "Stark" as well as the face of Lee Marvin, who played the Parker character in Point Blank.[28] [29]

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Lee. Jennifer 8. 2009-01-01. Donald E. Westlake, Mystery Writer, Is Dead at 75 (Published 2009). en-US. The New York Times. 2020-10-17. 0362-4331.
  2. Web site: Times Staff. 2009-01-02. Mystery author Donald E. Westlake dies at 75. 2020-10-17. Los Angeles Times. en-US.
  3. Web site: Donald E. Westlake. authorscalendar.info.
  4. Web site: A Bit of the Past: Plattsburgh's Champlain College . May 9, 2014 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20140606211751/http://www.sbmonthly.com/?p=1259 . June 6, 2014 .
  5. Lee, Jennifer 8. (January 1, 2009), "Donald E. Westlake, Mystery Writer, Is Dead at 75", The New York Times. Retrieved January 1, 2009.
  6. Web site: Donald Westlake ~ Bibliography . March 26, 2007 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20070404190315/http://www.donaldwestlake.com/wks_biblio.html . April 4, 2007 .
  7. Book: Westlake, Donald E.. Donald E. Westlake. The Getaway Car: A Donald Westlake Nonfiction Miscellany. 24 September 2014. University of Chicago Press. 978-0-226-12181-9. 28. Writers on Writing: A Pseudonym Returns From an Alter-Ego Trip, With New Tales to Tell.
  8. Web site: Authors and Creator: Donald Westlake . February 3, 2009 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20081023230154/http://www.thrillingdetective.com/trivia/westlake.html . 2008-10-23 .
  9. Web site: Richard Stark titles . September 5, 2010 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20100826021512/http://www.press.uchicago.edu/presssite/author.epl?fullauthor=Richard%20Stark . August 26, 2010 .
  10. Web site: eFanzines.com - Earl Kemp: e*I* Vol. 3 No. 2.
  11. Web site: Chronogram - Prince of Thieves - Apr 2006. dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20060406170318/http://www.chronogram.com/issue/2006/04/arts/books/ . 2006-04-06 .
  12. Westlake, Donald. "Don't Call Us, We'll Call You" and responses by Frederik Pohl, Donald Wollheim, Harry Warner, Jr., Steve Stiles and others, reprinted in: Lupoff, Richard A., & Pat Lupoff. The Best of Xero. Tachyon Publications, 2004, pp. 120 et seq.
  13. Book: Gores, Joe. Joe Gores. Dead Skip: A DKA File Novel. 1972. Random House. 0-394-48157-7. Chapter 18.
  14. Book: Joe Gores. 32 Cadillacs. 27 June 2009. Grand Central Publishing. 978-0-446-56234-8.
  15. Book: Donald E. Westlake. Drowned Hopes. 31 July 2015. Mysterious Press at Bastei Entertainment. 978-3-95859-647-4. 6–.
  16. Web site: November 16, 2022 . Shooting of "The Actor" Moving to Budapest This Quarter . Budapest Reporter.
  17. Web site: Scharf . Lindzi . October 18, 2022 . Abigail Spencer . The Retaility . It’s called ‘The Actor’ and Neon is releasing it. André Holland and Gemma Chan are our leads..
  18. Web site: The Mind of Donald E. Westlake: The Letters, Books, and Films of a Crime Legend . Stahl . Levi . 2018-05-29 . CrimeReads . 2023-05-29.
  19. Web site: Robert Downey Jr., Shane Black Reunite for Adaptation of Donald E. Westlake's 'Parker' Series at Amazon . 3 March 2022 .
  20. Web site: Parker - Book Series In Order. 21 April 2017 .
  21. Egan, Sean. Ponies & Rainbows: The Life of James Kirkwood. Albany, GA: BearManor Media, 2015.
  22. Web site: Collection - Howard Gotlieb Archival Research Center . 2016-04-30 . 2016-05-30 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160530141553/http://hgar-srv3.bu.edu/collections/collection?id=122960 . dead .
  23. Web site: Historical Mysteries in Ancient Rome – Steve Saylor Author Interview. https://web.archive.org/web/20180618212200/http://www.mysterynet.com/books/testimony/rubicon/ . 2018-06-18 .
  24. https://winterfilmawards.com/performer/ghasem-ebrahimian/ "Ghasem Ebrahimian"
  25. Book: Richard Stark. Payback. 1 March 1999. Grand Central Publishing. 978-0-446-67464-5. vii–x. Richard Stark: Introduced by Donald E. Westlake.
  26. Web site: Cable Vision: Duane Swierczynski Q&A . Morse . Ben . 2007-12-04 . Marvel.com . 2023-10-29 . https://web.archive.org/web/20080103004100/http://www.marvel.com/news/comicstories.1976.Cable_Vision%3A_Duane_Swierczynski_Q%26A . 2008-01-03.
  27. Web site: Donald Westlake (a.k.a. Richard Stark) 1933-2008 . Swierczynski . Duane . 2009-01-02 . Secret Dead Blog: The online home of Duane Swierczynski . 2023-09-11.
  28. Web site: Graphic Novel Review: Richard Stark's Parker: The Outfit by Darwyn Cooke . Sherman . Bill . 2011-04-26 . Seattle Post-Intelligencer . 2023-09-11.
  29. Web site: Catwoman: Selena's Big Score . 2003-03-10 . Publishers Weekly . 2023-09-11.