Tuesday, February 17, 2026

Elmore Leonard's Pronto

A TV show that was beloved by critics and fans alike, including myself, but never seems to be included in lists of the "best" is FX's Justified. The show is considered neo-Western crime noir and is about a U.S. marshal from Kentucky who returns home and has to deal with friends, enemies, and family he thought he'd never see again. Timothy Olyphant plays Raylan Givens, a man who has his own code of justice and would fit better in an Old West boom town rather than the modern world he has to navigate.

Wanting to do a rewatch of the show for several years, but never finding the time to do so, I instead decided to read the source novels from where the character came from. The first of the four books that feature Givens is called Pronto. It follows three characters, Givens, an aged bookie named Harry Arlo, and a mafioso hitman, Jimmy Bucks, also called The Zip. While the story starts and ends in Miami, the middle third of the book has all three characters travel to Italy.

Other than the characteristics of the cowboy marshal who fights by his own rules, the only element of the novel that is carried over to the television show is the showdown between Jimmy Bucks and Givens, which that is featured in the very first episode and is the catalyst to what sends Raylan home to Harlan County, Kentucky.

Elmore Leonard is mostly known for writing Out of Sight, which was made into a feature-length film with George Clooney and Jennifer Lopez. It is on my list to read after finishing up the Raylan Givens stories. However, he also wrote 3:10 to Yuma, which was turned into a film twice, Get Shorty and its sequel Be Cool, both which featured John Travolta in the film adaptation, and the original story that was turned into Quentin Tarantino's Jackie Brown.

Leonard is acclaimed for his gritty characters and natural-sounding dialogue. Having lived in Detroit, he sets a lot of his stories in that U.S. city, but according to the backstory provided in Pronto, Raylan grew up in Harlan County, Kentucky. He dug in coal mines and eventually got out of that place after serving in the military and then becoming a U.S. marshal.

Having watched the television show first, I can't see anyone else except Timothy Olyphant when I read the story and pictured Raylan conducting his business in either Miami or Italy. It is a role that Olyphant will most likely always be associated with.

The book was entertaining and I liked that it was a story I hadn't already seen during the television run of Justified. Although I knew how the climax was going to end being that it was part of the show, it still was a fun read and I'm looking forward to the next novel in series, Riding the Rap.

No comments: