Michael Koryta
Michael Koryta
Michael Korytais an American author of contemporary crime and supernatural fiction. His novels have appeared on the The New York Times Best Seller list, and have won or been nominated for prizes and awards such as the Los Angeles Times Book Prize, the Edgar Award, the Shamus Award, the Barry Award, the Quill Award, and the International Thriller Writers Awards...
NationalityAmerican
ProfessionAuthor
Date of Birth20 September 1982
CountryUnited States of America
tornadoes randomness feels
We understand tornadoes scientifically, but it still feels supernatural. The randomness makes it feel supernatural.
elephants skulls musical
Band of Skulls is joining Cage the Elephant as my new musical caffeine.
running character long
In terms of characters I wish I had created - just because I haven't dealt with anything like them - I'm really impressed by characters who can endure over time, whether that be a long series run like a Harry Bosch, or a character who endures over generations and continues to please readers: Sherlock Holmes.
crime-novels giving looks
Horror and supernatural novels give you a lot of what you look for in a crime novel, just with a twist that was very fresh for me as a reader.
writing love-is process
What I love is the writing, it's not having written. I like the process of it.
real thinking ebb-and-flow
I think if you looked at the kind of ebb and flow of supernatural fiction and horror fiction, it does seem to be more popular in times when were hammered over the head daily with threats from all angles, very real threats.
book thinking rivers
For 'So Cold the River,' I'm actually working on adapting the book with Scott Silver, who was just nominated for an Oscar for 'The Fighter,' and who also wrote '8 Mile,' which I think is a terrific screenplay. The chance to work with Scott is a tremendous pleasure and I'm learning a lot.
book inspiration ideas
I've never really found inspiration for story ideas in the news, but I'd say it certainly affects our lives in so many ways. I would say that certainly the stories of the day appear in the work - I just have never gone so far as to say, well, this particular event could influence a plot of an entire book.
reading writing
I started writing as soon as I started reading.
book night careers
'Envy the Night' was my first stand alone, the first book I'd written in the third person and I loved the feel of that, and it was different but it was also the same. 'So Cold the River,' I knew, was going to be really different, and that's why I thought about doing it as a novella under a pseudonym, because I didn't want to damage my career.
forever stories want
You have only so many chances to tell stories. I didn't want to be forever wedded to one form of storytelling when there are so many out there.