James Ellroy
(born March 4, 1948, Los Angeles,
California
, U.S.) is an American
author
known for his best-selling crime and detective novels that examine
sinister
eras of modern American history, especially
police
corruption in
Los Angeles
in the 1940s.
Ellroy’s parents divorced in 1954, and he moved with his mother to
El Monte
, California, a suburb of Los Angeles. In 1958 his mother was murdered there, a crime that was never solved. In his autobiographical
My Dark Places: An L.A. Crime Memoir
(1996) and
The Hilliker Curse: My Pursuit of Women
(2010), Ellroy wrote about the crime and its effect on his life. After his mother’s death, he lived with his father. He attended
high school
in Fairfax, a section of Los Angeles, but was expelled before graduation. He then enlisted in the army but soon decided that he did not belong there and convinced an army psychiatrist that he was not mentally fit for combat. After three months he received a dishonourable
discharge
. Soon afterward his father died, and, after a brief stay with a friend of his father, Ellroy landed on the streets of Los Angeles. From age 18 he lived in parks and vacant apartments; he spent most of his time drinking, taking drugs, and reading crime novels. After being jailed for breaking into a vacant apartment, Ellroy got a job at a bookstore. Meanwhile, he had become addicted to Benzedrex. With his health deteriorating and fearing for his sanity, Ellroy joined
Alcoholics Anonymous
and found steady work as a
golf
caddy. At age 30 he wrote and sold his first
novel
,
Brown’s Requiem
(1981; film 1998).
Most of Ellroy’s books deal with
crime
and corruption. Among the best known are the four novels that
constitute
his first
L.A. Quartet series:
The Black Dahlia
(1987;
film 2006
),
The Big Nowhere
(1988),
L.A. Confidential
(1990;
film 1997
), and
White Jazz
(1992).
Perfidia
(2014) was the first volume in his second L.A. Quartet. The novel, which chronologically precedes the events of the earlier series, features many of the same characters and evokes a similarly penumbral view of Los Angeles. The story continues in
This Storm
(2019), the second installment in the series.
Ellroy emerged into mainstream
fiction
with the publication of the first novel in his Underworld U.S.A. trilogy,
American Tabloid
(1995), which treats the years 1958?63, ending with the
assassination
of U.S. Pres.
John F. Kennedy
. Its sequel,
The Cold Six Thousand
(2001), covers the turbulent years between the president’s
assassination
and that of his brother
Robert
in 1968. The final volume of the trilogy,
Blood’s a Rover
(2009), examines the years 1968?72. The trilogy represents the author’s expressed ambition to “re-create 20th-century American history through fiction.” In 2021 Ellroy published the
stand-alone
novel
Widespread Panic
, a fictionalized account of Freddy Otash, a real-life police officer turned private investigator who uncovered numerous Hollywood secrets while working for the celebrity tabloid
Confidential
in the 1950s.