Vote Longmire for Sheriff

Vote Longmire for Sheriff

Craig Johnson on Walt, Wyoming and the West.

By: Candy Moulton 08/01/2007

The Old Cheyenne were with me, and I could feel their strength as I continued along the trail, my heavy boots forming the snow as I went. The drums were there too, matching my progress in perfect fashion, providing an easy rhythm and keeping my legs moving. I felt strong, like I hadn’t in many years, perhaps like I never had. I watched as my breath began blowing out ahead of
me, and it was as if the wind did not affect it. The searing air felt good in my lungs, and I almost felt as if I could run; but the steady beat of the drums held, and so did I.
—The Cold Dish

 

When you take a grizzled Wyoming sheriff who has an independent cadre of deputies and a diverse group of friends, and throw a murder into the mix, you stir a pot of surprises that will keep you turning the pages.

Craig Johnson’s novels—The Cold Dish, Death Without Company and now Kindness Goes Unpunished—put a reader in the passenger’s seat of “The Bullet” as Sheriff Walt Longmire of fictional Absaroka County, Wyoming, solves one case after another: the shootings of three youths on the edge of the Northern Cheyenne reservation along the Montana-Wyoming border; the death of a Basque woman in a nursing home; the killing of his daughter’s ex-boyfriend in Philadelphia. 

Sheriff Longmire does his work with the advice of his subordinates and his best friend Henry Standing Bear, a Northern Cheyenne tribal member, who happens to have a lot of relatives (some alive, some dead) who also give aid.

A former police officer, Johnson now writes and ranches near Ucross, Wyoming: Population 25. His fictional town of Durant is based on Buffalo, where Walt Longmire is so popular, he even got 13 write-in votes for Johnson County sheriff in the last election. “I had to go apologize to the incumbent sheriff,” Johnson says.

Many people populate Durant and a Walt Longmire novel, including the “sheriff” himself.

TW: Sheriff Walt Longmire is a unique character—hard-bitten, but with a soft underbelly. Is he a composite of any real Wyoming sheriffs you know?

CJ: I didn’t use any of the sheriffs I know as a model for the characters, but I did use characteristics of Wyoming sheriffs for bits and pieces of Longmire’s character. It is a patchwork because rarely does someone walk in the door who is what you need. My characters are a Dr. Frankenstein kind of product, pieced together from real people, but all the characters in a book are there for a purpose. 

How about his partner Vic?

She’s everything that Walt isn’t. She’s technologically advanced, while he is the old style of law enforcement. It’s turned out to be one of the best things I could have done. The books are first person with Walt telling the story in a strong masculine narrative. She provides the balance for that.  And Vic and the other females in the stories are the lifeblood for the books. Walt Longmire books are not just cowboys and Indians, they’re not just men’s stories. They appeal to women as well because those female characters really bring another voice and another strength to the books. 

 
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