Jack McEvoy

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

John "Jack" McEvoy is a literary character created by Michael Connelly in the 1996 novel The Poet and starring again it the sequel the Scarecrow thirteen years later. In the interim, McEvoy appeared in one Harry Bosch novel 2001's A Darkness More Than Night and one Mickey Haller novel 2008's The Brass Verdict.

Connelly describes his time writing about McEvoy as his "least favorable writing experience" [1] because "he is easily the most autobiographical character I have ever written about".[2] After publishing the Scarecrow, Connelly confirmed that "Jack is on the back burner."

Fictional biography

Jack was born in May 21, 1961, the son of Millie and Tom McEvoy, the twin brother of Sean McEvoy, the younger brother of Sarah McEvoy (who died in 1976), and the brother-in-law of Riley McEvoy. He grew up in Colorado before going to college at the Medill School of Journalism in Chicago, Illinois. After college, he traveled to Paris, then returned to Colorado and took a position covering the murder beat for the Rocky Mountain News.

He moved to Los Angeles in the late-1990s and covered the crime beat for the Times. While at the Times, he married and subsequently divorced fellow journalist Keisha Russell, who had previously appeared in Connelly's 1995 novel The Last Coyote.

References

  1. "Michael Connelly Author Interview". MysteryNet.com. Retrieved February 21, 2011. 
  2. "Kill Her Madly". January Magazine. Retrieved February 21, 2011. 


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