Out of Sight by Elmore Leonard
"Out of Sight" is a novel by Elmore Leonard that intertwines gritty crime elements with a romantic narrative. The story begins with a gripping prison break inspired by a real-life event, which is set in a medium-security Florida prison. Leonard employs a unique narrative technique, shifting perspectives among three main characters—criminal Jack Foley, U.S. Marshal Karen Sisco, and Foley's former partner, Orren "Buddy" Bragg—allowing readers to experience the unfolding drama through different viewpoints.
As the characters navigate their way from the sunny confines of Florida to the darker streets of Detroit, the tension escalates, blending moments of violence with the development of a romance between Foley and Sisco. Critics have noted the juxtaposition of the novel's comedic elements against its brutal themes, leading to some contention over its tonal consistency. The story's exploration of love and crime reaches a pivotal moment when Foley and Sisco find themselves in a precarious situation that sparks a romantic connection. Although the novel was not a commercial success, its film adaptation featuring George Clooney and Jennifer Lopez received critical acclaim for effectively capturing Leonard's distinctive dialogue and character dynamics.
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Out of Sight by Elmore Leonard
Excerpted from an article in Magill’s Survey of American Literature, Revised Edition
First published: 1996
Type of work: Novel
The Work
In Out of Sight, the trademark gritty realism of Elmore Leonard’s oeuvre is blended with a romance between criminal Jack Foley and U.S. Marshal Karen Sisco. The novel’s opening is widely acknowledged to rank among Leonard’s best, as he takes the reader through a daring prison break, modeled on a real escape from that same prison in 1995. As is his practice, the point of view shifts among three different characters in the first three chapters, as the same scene is viewed from three different angles.
The opening sentence of the novel, “Foley had never seen a prison where you could walk right up to the fence without getting shot,” immediately locates the reader both psychologically—within Foley’s consciousness, attitudes, and experience—and physically—just inside the fence of a medium-security Florida prison. The second chapter begins as Sisco pulls up to the parking area just outside that same fence, looking at the same point from the other side, both literally—outside the prison versus inside—and figuratively—cop versus criminal. As she sits in her car, the headlights from a car pulling into the row behind her hit her rearview mirror. The opening of chapter 3, “Buddy saw the mirror flash and blond hair in his headlights, a woman in the blue Chevy Caprice parked right in front of him,” takes the reader inside that second car as it introduces a third major character, Orren “Buddy” Bragg, a former partner of Foley who has arrived to help him escape. The escape itself is thus rendered in great visual depth, as the reader sees Buddy see Sisco see Foley as he emerges from a tunnel by the fence. Such detailed multiple visualizations are especially common in Leonard’s later novels, which can resemble screenplays in their rapid cuts from character to character and their close specification of the precise angles and fields of vision from which characters view scenes.
After the successful prison break, the plot takes all these characters to Detroit, where the suspense intensifies as the relatively gentle and sympathetic Foley and Buddy are thrown into an uneasy alliance with a set of violent sociopaths seeking to rob a wealthy financier. Critic James Devlin notes the symbolism of the settings in the novel, as the sunny Florida setting of the opening scenes gives way to the dark and cold of the Detroit scenes. Brutal scenes of rape and murder alternate uneasily with scenes sketching the developing love story between the criminal and the cop pursuing him. For some critics, the conventional story of love at first sight, complete with a film-friendly “meet cute” when Foley and Sisco are locked in the trunk of a getaway car, is a rare misstep by Leonard that ultimately breaks the book into two incompatible halves, one a screwball romantic comedy and the other an usually violent portrait of depravity and urban violence. Although not a hit at the box office, the motion picture adaptation starring George Clooney and Jennifer Lopez earned high praise from film critics such as Roger Ebert for its success in translating “the texture of the pacing and dialogue” and the large cast of colorful characters to the screen.
Bibliography
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