James Thane's Reviews > Raylan

Raylan by Elmore Leonard
Rate this book
Clear rating

by
3483907
's review

liked it
bookshelves: crime-fiction, elmore-leonard

I've long been a huge fan of the books of Elmore Leonard, and I've also really enjoyed the television series, "Justified," which is based on Leonard's excellent short story, "Fire in the Hole." Given that, I was really anxious to finally have the chance to pull Raylan off my giant stack of Books-to-Read and have at it. I'm sorry to say, though, that the book did not live up to my (perhaps exaggerated) expectations of it.

Reading the book, it felt to me like Leonard might have decided to sit down over a long weekend and sketch out a few plot ideas that the writers could then use in the TV show or, less charitably, that he might have just decided to whip out a quick book and capitalize on the popularity of the show.

While I've not read a lot of his westerns, I've read every one of Leonard's crime novels and, strange at it might seem to say, this book did not feel to me like a real Elmore Leonard novel. Most of the characters who populate the book are drawn from the television show, but they seem thin, without the usual depth of Leonard's characters. Instead of seeming genuinely quirky, the way so many of Leonard's great characters do, these characters often feel like they're straining for quirky but falling short of liftoff. And perhaps most disappointing of all, the dialogue, which has always been one of the great entertaining strengths of an EL novel, here seems labored and not nearly as sharp as usual.

The book itself involves several subplots, all taking place in Kentucky and revolving around U.S. Marshal Raylan Givens. In one, two dope-dealing Crowe brothers step up their game and hook up with a transplant nurse to steal human kidneys and sell them off. Another involves the efforts of a murderous female mining executive to clear the path for the destruction of a mountain allegedly full of coal, in spite of the environmental and human consequences of the action. In yet another, Raylan crosses paths with an attractive young college student who is attempting to make her fortune by playing high stakes poker.

Inevitably all of the women are bright and sexy and anxious to get it on with Raylan. Raylan, in turn, is quick on the draw and the body count in the book is fairly high. Upon completing the book, Leonard told the people involved with the TV show to strip out of it anything that they might like to use, and a couple of these plot lines did ultimately turn up in the show.

All of this is not to say that this is a bad book; in fact, it's a perfectly pleasant way to while away an evening, and if anyone else's name had been on the cover, one might put it down thinking it was a pretty damn good read. But when the name on the cover is Elmore Leonard, his long-time readers might have legitimately expected something a bit better. Readers who have not yet discovered Leonard's work might be better advised to begin with some of his earlier books like Get Shorty, or even Pronto, the book that first introduced Marshall Raylan Givens.
43 likes · flag

Sign into Goodreads to see if any of your friends have read Raylan.
Sign In »

Reading Progress

Started Reading
May 11, 2014 – Shelved
May 11, 2014 – Shelved as: crime-fiction
May 11, 2014 – Shelved as: elmore-leonard
May 11, 2014 – Finished Reading

Comments Showing 1-10 of 10 (10 new)

dateDown arrow    newest »

message 1: by Joy (new)

Joy I love the Justified TV series but haven't read any of these books. Great review!


James Thane Thanks, Joy. Actually I love Leonard's books--one of my favorite authors.


message 3: by Joy (new)

Joy James wrote: "Thanks, Joy. Actually I love Leonard's books--one of my favorite authors."

I think I've read 3 or 4 of his, Get Shorty is my favorite (good movie too)!


message 4: by Barbara (new)

Barbara Mitchell I would hate to think Leonard pulled a James Patterson and hired someone else to write this one. If I see Elmore Leonard advertised as the author of a book, I expect that he wrote it. I wonder how many authors who have had so many bestsellers no longer write everything they publish under their own name.


Tom V If I could write like even a pseudo-EL, I'd reckon that I had come a long way. He set a high bar, especially for himself, and your comment about seeing his name on the cover is right on.

I haven't seen the series on TV yet, so I'm not sure about the realization of the characters, etc.

But man, I miss that guy.

Good review!


James Thane Thanks, Tom. I miss him too, but at least he left a lot of very good books behind.


message 7: by Bonnie G. (new)

Bonnie G. I could not agree more. I have read Get Shorty and Be Cool years ago, and I had long planned to read more Elmore Leonard (I am originally from suburban Detroit, its required reading there.) I started this, read about 50 pages, and decided it just was not doing it for me. It went back on the shelf, and I will try again at some point, but I was finding in a little exhausting -- every character is a little more nutty than the rest and there is no one to hang on to. I may lack the testosterone necessary to enjoy this. Though I often enjoy tales populated with fast cars, sex-positive women, and effective weaponry this may be a little too much of a Tucker Max fever dream for me.


Eduard right, the book sucked and you gave it a 3 based on the author's name


James Thane Eduard wrote: "right, the book sucked and you gave it a 3 based on the author's name"

Actually, that's not what I said. I said that it was not a bad book and was a pleasant read. Only I would have expected more from E.L.


Eduard James wrote: "Eduard wrote: "right, the book sucked and you gave it a 3 based on the author's name"

Actually, that's not what I said. I said that it was not a bad book and was a pleasant read. Only I would have..."

I don't disagree in that you expected more - so did I. I just gave this a 1 - 1.5 stars. read the 1 star reviews and see what they have to say, pretty accurate. I expected so much more with Leonard - based on so many movies are made from his books. Maybe he isn't a good writer but an ok one who writes about riff raff subculture that just seems interesting.


back to top