Alum thinks about crime the write way
What happens when a freshly minted film studies graduate heads out into the world with no particular plan? How A&S alum Patrick Hoffman went from taxi driver to private investigator to successful author
Back in 1998, had just finished his degree in film studies at the University of Colorado 51“«Ć½ when he decided to head back to his hometown of San Francisco with no real plan in mind for a career.
āI was very green when I came out of college,ā says Hoffman. āI didnāt have much street smarts. Iād lived a pretty sheltered life.ā
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Author Patrick Hoffman, a 1998 CU 51“«Ć½ film studies graduate, located his newest novel, Friends Helping Friends, in Colorado.
He ended up landing a job as a taxi driver at night and working as a private investigator during the day. āDriving cabs at night in San Francisco and investigating murder cases are very quick ways to learn about the seamier side of life.ā
Those lessons in the seamy side of life informed his recently released novel Friends Helping Friends, a thriller set in Grand Junction and Denver, Colorado, that sees its main character infiltrating a white-supremacist compound on the Western Slope.
Before writing his newest novelāor any of his previous and acclaimed onesāHoffman realized that what he was seeing in his jobs as a private investigator and cab driver might make good grist for fiction.
Easier said than done, though. Hoffman would get started, but after a day or two, his motivation would melt away.
The best writing advice Hoffman ever got came from a friend who asked him what he wanted to do with his life. āI told him I wanted to write thrillers. He asked what was stopping me. I told him that whenever I started something I felt great at first ⦠but then on the second or third day, the inspiration would go away, and Iād feel like a complete fraud.ā
Hoffmanās friend then told him that the bad feelings were actually aĢżgood sign, and that the secret was to just embrace those feelings and keep going. āI literally started my first book the very next day and everything that has followed can be traced directly back to that conversation.ā
It all started in film classes
Hoffman adds that his film classes were āwhere it all started.ā Those days, he was thinking about very basic things like story and plot. āBut those were important questions, and you really get to wrestle with them when youāre studying something like film. I had great teachers, too: Jerry Aronson, Marian Keane and, of course, the legend Stan Brakhage. I also had wonderful philosophy teachers. Gary Stahl, may he rest in peace, comes to mind. The English and Humanities Departments were wonderful, too.ā
Following his friendās advice, and armed with the basics from his CU 51“«Ć½ classes, Hoffman turned out his first novel, The White Van, set in San Francisco and about a troubled young woman wanted for bank robbery and hunted by a corrupt cop who wants the money more than justice.
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CU 51“«Ć½ alumnus Patrick Hoffman drew on his experience as a private investigator to write his new novel, Friends Helping Friends.
Hoffman is adapting that book into aĢż. āHopefully that happens,ā he says.
His second novel, Every Man A Menace, was also set in San Francisco. Clean Hands, his third novel, was set in New York City, where he lives now.
And his latest novel,Ģż, takes place in Denver and Grand Junction, Colorado. āFor this one, it was time to come back home to Colorado,ā he says. āThere is a certain comfort in it. Also, Denver makes a great setting for a neo-western noir.ā
He admits that before his last novel, he was kind of blocked for about eight months, having a hard time coming up with ideas. āOne day I literally just started typing. I thought, āOK, thereās a woman in Denver, sheās a lawyer and sheās using steroids, and that was the start of the book. I went blindly from there. Thatās how I do it, though. The tricky part is getting started.
āFor me, writing fiction is 100% about overcoming self-doubt, being able to see something through to the end. The hard part is always starting the book. But then the middle and ends, of course, are hard, too.ā
Part of Friends Helping Friends takes place in a white-supremacist compound. To understand that arena, Hoffman says his 20 years working as a private investigator (he still does it) and handling many murder cases helped.
āSo, all of that, of course, informs the fiction. But also, Iāll just Google around and look for federal cases.ā And he searches public records for indictments. āI love talking to journalists, too. My wife is a journalist, so she gives me introductions to her friends and colleagues, and I force them to answer all my questions.ā
Up next for Hoffman is another bookāthis one set in 51“«Ć½, a place heās now reminded of regularly when riding the subway in New York.Ģż
āItās been amazing to see Coach Prime make CU trendy. I see people wearing CU Buffalo jerseys and jackets. Iām just like wow! Itās amazing. Go Buffs!āĢż
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