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RIP Tony Hillerman

post #1 of 7
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Acclaimed author Tony Hillerman dies at 83
By AMANDA LEE MYERS, Associated Press Writer Amanda Lee Myers, Associated Press Writer Mon Oct 27, 1:57 am ET

PHOENIX Tony Hillerman, author of the acclaimed Navajo Tribal Police mystery novels and creator of two of the unlikeliest of literary heroes Navajo police officers Joe Leaphorn and Jim Chee died Sunday of pulmonary failure. He was 83.

Hillerman's daughter, Anne Hillerman, said her father's health had been declining in the last couple years and that he was at Presbyterian Hospital in Albuquerque when he died at about 3 p.m.

Hillerman lived through two heart attacks and surgeries for prostate and bladder cancer. He kept tapping at his keyboard even as his eyes began to dim, as his hearing faded, as rheumatoid arthritis turned his hands into claws.

"I'm getting old," he declared in 2002, "but I still like to write."

Anne Hillerman said Sunday that her father was a born storyteller.

"He had such a wonderful, wonderful curiosity about the world," she said. "He could take little details and bring them to life, not just in his books, but in conversation, too."

Lt. Joe Leaphorn, introduced in "The Blessing Way" in 1970, was an experienced police officer who understood, but did not share, his people's traditional belief in a rich spirit world. Officer Jim Chee, introduced in "People of Darkness" in 1978, was a younger officer studying to become a "hathaali" Navajo for "shaman."

Together, they struggled daily to bridge the cultural divide between the dominant Anglo society and the impoverished people who call themselves the Dineh.

Hillerman's commercial breakthrough was "Skinwalkers," published in 1987 the first time he put both characters and their divergent world views in the same book. It sold 430,000 hardcover copies, paving the way for "A Thief of Time," which made several best seller lists. In all, he wrote 18 books in the Navajo series, the most recent titled "The Shape Shifter."

Each is characterized by an unadorned writing style, intricate plotting, memorable characterization and vivid descriptions of Indian rituals and of the vast plateau of the Navajo reservation in the Four Corners region of the Southwest.

The most acclaimed of them, including "Talking God" and "The Coyote Waits," are subtle explorations of human nature and the conflict between cultural assimilation and the pull of the old ways.

"I want Americans to stop thinking of Navajos as primitive persons, to understand that they are sophisticated and complicated," Hillerman once said.

Occasionally, he was accused of exploiting his knowledge of Navajo culture for personal gain, but in 1987, the Navajo Tribal Council honored him with its Special Friend of the Dineh award. He took greater pride in that, he often said, than in the many awards bestowed by his peers, including the Golden Spur Award from Western Writers of America and the Grand Master Award from the Mystery Writers of America, which elected him its president.

Hollywood was less kind to Hillerman. Its adaptation of his 1981 novel, "Dark Wind," with Lou Diamond Phillips and Fred Ward regrettably cast as Jim Chee and Joe Leaphorn, was a bomb.

Although Hillerman was best-known for the Navajo series, he wrote more than 30 books, including a novel for young people; the memoir, "Seldom Disappointed"; and books on the history and natural beauty of his beloved Southwest.

"Those places that stir me are empty and lonely," he wrote in "The Spell of New Mexico," a collection of his essays. "They invoke a sense of both space and strangeness, and all have about them a sort of fierce inhospitality."

He also edited or contributed to more than a dozen other books including crime and history anthologies and books on the craft of writing.

Born May 27, 1925, in Sacred Heart, Okla., population 50, Tony Hillerman was the son of August and Lucy Grove Hillerman. They were farmers who also ran a small store. It was there that young Tony listened spellbound to locals who gathered to tell their stories.

The teacher at Sacred Heart's one-room school house was rumored to be a member of the Ku Klux Klan, so Tony's parents sent him and his brother, Barney, to St. Mary's Academy, a school for Potawatomie Indian girls near Asher, Okla. It was at St. Mary's that he developed a lifelong respect for Indian culture and an appreciation of what it means to be an outsider in your own land.

In 1943, he interrupted his education at the University of Oklahoma to join the Army. He lugged his mortar ashore at D-Day with the 103rd Infantry Division and was severely wounded in battle at Alsace, France. He returned from Europe a genuine war hero with a Silver Star with Oak Leaf Cluster, temporary blindness and two shattered legs that never stopped causing him pain.

He returned to the university for his degree and, in 1948, married Marie Unzer. Together, they raised six children, five of them adopted.

As a young man, he farmed, drove a truck, toiled as an oil field roughneck and worked as a reporter and editor for the Borger News-Herald in Borger, Texas; the Morning Press-Constitution in Lawton, Okla.; United Press International in Oklahoma City; and the Santa Fe New Mexican, where he rose to executive editor. He quit in 1962 to earn a master's degree from the University of New Mexico, where he later taught journalism and eventually became chairman of the journalism department. In 1993, he was inducted into the Oklahoma Journalism Hall of Fame.

Hillerman was still teaching when he wrote his first novel, "Blessing Way." A story that always made him chuckle: His first agent advised him that if he wanted to get published, he would have to "get rid of that Indian stuff."

Hillerman is survived by his wife, Marie, and their six children. Services are pending.

___
post #2 of 7
noirwest: Thank you for posting this tribute to Hillerman. I had no idea he was 83. I've enjoyed many of his mysteries.It really cracked me up when I read a book entitled ' Rotten Rejections' which contained such gems as his agent's advice " Get rid of all that Indian stuff. " Of course! it didn't follow the Holmes-Poirot clones of the deductive genius nor the Sam Spade-Philip Marlowe clones of the hard boiled tough guy. The " Indian stuff. " was what made it original and intriguing; stepping into a different world.

Thx again,

Mario
post #3 of 7
Thread Starter 
No. Hillerman was no John D. MacDonald when it came down to things like plot and characterization and his last few novels were over by chapter two. He seemed tired of it all except for when he was writing about the land. Ahhh, the land of the Dineh. I spent last week knocking around the four corners area and as always found myself overwhelmed by the absolute beauty of it all. Cloud shadows racing from mesa to mesa, sunrises that melted heaven into earth, the smell of woodsmoke and the amazing silence all made me stop and think. At some point in that thinking process it would occur to me, "Hmmmm, Hillerman country"...
post #4 of 7
Thanks for posting that, Noirwest. I didn't know all of that about him. Rest In Peace, Tony Hillerman.
post #5 of 7
I have read most of Tony Hillerman's work. He was one of my favorite writers. It was so sad to read that he had passed away. I gave my dad one of Tony Hillerman's novels for his birthday, and after that he was an avid fan. In fact, I would be willing to bet that dad was there to meet and greet him when he arrived in heaven, and they are probably going to be good friends.
post #6 of 7
Quote:
Originally Posted by noirwest View Post

. He seemed tired of it all except for when he was writing about the land. Ahhh, the land of the Dineh. I spent last week knocking around the four corners area and as always found myself overwhelmed by the absolute beauty of it all. Cloud shadows racing from mesa to mesa, sunrises that melted heaven into earth, the smell of woodsmoke and the amazing silence all made me stop and think. At some point in that thinking process it would occur to me, "Hmmmm, Hillerman country"...

The land of The Dineh is truly beyond description! Did you go down to Canyon de Chelly?
It's not one of the better known National Parks.
Folks: I'd suggest going there with someone you love. The beauty of it, if faced alone, can break your heart!

I suppose some of you will think I'm being melodramatic----unless you've been there.
I which case you know that, compared to the truth, all I've said is an understatement.

---------------------------

And the hotel had racks ot Tony Hillerman books, of course.

Cheers,

Mario
post #7 of 7
Thread Starter 
Ah Mario, I may have crossed your dusty red tracks. I always lug cameras, lenses, and associated gear with me when I wander. I was with a van load of Japanese tourists when I was there last and the deeper we drove back in time the fewer times the cameras left the van. In the end the doors would open slowly and people would get out quietly, turning, always turning around and around in a futile attempt to take it all in. No cameras can tell that story. Memory barely serves to hold it and even at that - only for a while.

Melodramatic? Nah.
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