Author celebrates anniversary of famous character

By Kurt Anthony Krug
Legal News

For 5 years, fans e-mailed Michigan native Steve Hamilton, a New York Times best-selling author, wanting to know when he’d bring back his most famous character Alex McKnight.

“Oh, yeah, I hear from people all the time – ‘When’s Alex’s coming back?’ I’m glad that now I have a good answer. He comes back (Tuesday) August 21,” said Hamilton, 57, of upstate New York, a University of Michigan alumnus and two-time Edgar Award winner.

“Dead Man Running” (G.P. Putnam’s Sons $26) marks the return of Alex McKnight – a former Detroit cop who’s now a private detective/bounty hunter in the Upper Peninsula city of Paradise – in his deadliest case yet. The 11th installment in the series, it is the first McKnight novel since 2013’s “Let It Burn.” “A Cold Day in Paradise,” published in 1998 – which was Hamilton’s first novel and Alex’s first appearance – won the St. Martin’s Press/Private Eye Writers of America Award for Best First P.I. Novel by an Unpublished Writer.

Hamilton returns to Michigan where he embarks on a multi-city tour across his home state (see below for details). 

“This is the return of Alex McKnight. I’m starting my book tour in Michigan because I can’t imagine anywhere else,” said Hamilton. “When I first started writing, I came back to Michigan for that very first book. It’s hard to believe that it was 20 years ago. It was this month, actually. This month is the 20th anniversary of the first Alex McKnight book. After all the things that have happened since then, I’m still a Michigan boy coming back to Michigan; it’ll feel really good to be there. I hope a lot of people come out so I can thank them in person.”

In “Dead Man Running,” the FBI captures serial killer Martin T. Livermore, who sadistically tortured and murdered five women. However, he informs the FBI that a sixth woman is alive in a remote desert canyon in Arizona and he will lead them to her.

The only catch is: They must bring along Alex.

However, Alex doesn’t know Livermore. He never encountered him during his days as a cop, nor as a P.I. In fact, he’s never seen Livermore in his life, so he doesn’t understand why this cunning psychopath has adopted him as his arch-nemesis. More people are killed along the way in this deadly game of cat of mouse Livermore forces Alex to play, teasing him about their past connection that binds them together.

“Alex has no idea who this guy is and how he can have any connection to this guy – that’s the absolute mystery,” said Hamilton. “Often, in some of the books he will travel and leave the U.P., but he’s usually compelled to that because he knows why he’s doing it – it’s very specific ... With this book, there’s a reason that took him away from the U.P., but he doesn’t know why.

He has no idea. That’s how I got the idea of the absolute, most evil character he’s ever come up against. He’s really in a different world; a desert canyon in Arizona is about as far away from the U.P. in the middle of winter as you can get.”

“Dead Man Running” is told from the first-person perspective of Alex and the third-person perspective of Livermore. This is the first McKnight book where there’s another point of view character, according to Hamilton.

“It was not easy to be in (Livermore’s) head in this book; there’s just some characters you don’t want to spend time with, but for this to be a balanced book, this time you have to see things from that twisted, upside-down point of view. When you create a character like this, there’s a still a logic and a reason for everything. He’s still driven by basic human needs and emotions, but you turn them upside-down a little bit. There’s something deeply wrong with this guy, but we can still understand what he’s doing,” explained Hamilton. 

Fellow New York Times best-selling authors Linwood Barclay and Hank Phillippi Ryan praised Hamilton’s work.

“Steve has few peers when it comes to creating one-of-a-kind, memorable characters. I still recall Michael from ‘The Lock Artist,’ and I read that years ago,” said Barclay.

Added Ryan: “Steve is such a rock star! He’s the ultimate writer – hard-working, driven, and profoundly talented… he always intrigues me with his wise insights, fascinating analysis, and offbeat humor. Plus, he’s completely cool.”

Hamilton – who also writes the critically acclaimed Nick Mason series – talked about why there was a 5-year gap between Alex novels.

“It’s funny that a fictional character needed a break,” he said. “I felt that way before. I needed a break before and (wrote) ‘The Lock Artist’ ... I came back to Alex because I needed to know what he was up to next. I’ve always felt that way because no matter what I did, this character was there with me from the beginning – this was the first book, the first character ... Even now after I took some time away to write the Nick Mason series, I knew I’d go back at some point. I decided now is the time. Now I can take a book and see how’s doing. I knew I’d always come back. It always feels really good to come back. This is really an old friend and a place that I know ... It all starts in Paradise, a town I know well – I’ll be there next week (Saturday, Aug. 25), too.”
Both his Nick Mason and Alex McKnight books have been optioned by Hollywood. Mason is in the works to be adapted into a movie by Lion’s Gate. However, it’s in the beginning stages and Hamilton wouldn’t comment further. A TV series featuring Alex is currently in the works. Shane Salerno – who has collaborated with renowned movie directors James Cameron, Steven Spielberg, Ridley Scott, Oliver Stone, and Ron Howard – is attached to this project.

“I’ve actually said ‘no’ many times to people who’ve wanted to (adapt Alex) because I knew they wouldn’t do it right,” said Hamilton. “It wouldn’t be true to Alex and they probably wouldn’t even set it in Michigan or film it in Detroit or the U.P. That didn’t feel right to even consider letting Alex be taken over by someone who didn’t get him and didn’t get Michigan. But now, it seems like there may be some people who really do get it.”

Hamilton is an associate producer.

“I’m not sure what that means. I’m not sure anyone knows what that means,” he said, laughing. “But I’m definitely involved in it and will always be involved with Alex.”

Asked who he has in mind to play his beloved creation, Hamilton doesn’t know.

“I should be ready with that answer. People always ask that. When I think about it, I see someone who plays baseball – Bill Freehan was a catcher for the (Detroit) Tigers when I was a kid. I see a little bit of my father who actually looked like (the late) James Garner… It has to be one of these younger actors that I don’t know that well. Somebody who has a solid quality to him; the guy you can depend on. Who could do that? I honestly don’t know who that would be off the top of my head.”

But Hamilton isn’t focused on that at the moment; he’s focused on his book tour. One stop that was bittersweet was his final appearance at Aunt Agatha’s in Ann Arbor on Aug. 21. Earlier this year, Aunt Agatha’s co-owners Robin Agnew and her husband Jamie announced the bookstore will close its doors Friday, Aug. 31, after 26 years.

“I’ve been there for every book...Robin and Jamie are like family to me now. They literally made that store work in the shadow of the Borders (the Ann Arbor-based bookstore chain that went out of business in 2011) – the almost literal, physical shadow of Borders down the street. They outlasted them. They were so important to so many authors…It just won’t be the same without them.”

For a complete list of Hamilton’s book tour in Michigan, visit www.authorstevehamilton.com.