by Sheila Connolly
Recently
the wildly successful mystery writer Lee Child wrote an op-ed piece for the New
York Times, titled "A Simple Way to Create Suspense." While what I write is hardly similar to his
books, what he said made a lot of sense to me.
It can be boiled down to this:
Ask a question. Then don't answer it.
At a
regional conference, Dennis Lehane recently spoke about a related idea. As an example, he suggested beginning a book
with the protagonist—call him Joe—opening the refrigerator trying to decide
what to eat. Immediately we want to
know: what did Joe decide? If the author never tells the reader what Joe
ate for lunch, we feel cheated, because we humans are hardwired to look for
answers.
In both
Child's and Lehane's examples, the opening question, trivial or not, creates a
sense of tension. Child takes it a step
further by deliberately withholding the answer.
As he wrote,
"Someone
killed someone else: who? You'll find
out at the end of the book. Something
weird is happening: what? You'll find out at the end of the book. Something has to be stopped: how?
You'll find out at the end of the book."
Keeps you
reading, doesn't it?
This is
something my editor and I have been wrestling with in the edits for my next
Museum Mystery, Monument to the Dead. Someone dies in Chapter 1, but it seems to be
a natural death. Then other people are
identified as having died the same way, but all
were called natural deaths. Question
1: are these deaths natural, or is
someone killing them? There is no
evidence of murder, and nobody has investigated these deaths.
But to say
they were murdered, someone has to ask:
why? Who would want these people
dead? There's no obvious reason for killing them. So my protagonist and her allies go to work
trying to find links between them. And
they do find a primary connection, but that doesn't explain the
"why". That's because the "why" makes sense only to the
killer, and it's not obvious to anyone else.
My editor
(with whom I have worked on many books) wants to make this a more typical cozy,
with a body up front (got that), and a cast of likely suspects who are first to
be identified and then eliminated one by one.
I don't have that. There is really only one person who would have a
motive for killing these people, and it takes the whole book to identify that
person (and it's my protagonist's very specific knowledge that finally points
to the killer).
I read an official
FBI report on serial killers that states that motive is not the first thing an investigator should look for. FBI profilers
caution against working to identify motive rather than looking for the killer. And in most cases that makes sense. Follow
the evidence first.
But I'm
trying to twist it around in my book, because there is very little physical
evidence to be had: the victims are long
buried, the autopsies cursory, the crime scenes cleaned up. For me, the "why" is the important
question. And I do give an answer.
The tragic recent
events have left everyone asking "why?" Why would anyone decide one day to start
killing innocent children he didn't even know? Why would some guy set his house
on fire and start shooting at anyone who came to put the fire out? Investigators
are digging for every piece of family history, where the weapons came from, et
cetera, et cetera, and reporting every shred of tangible evidence to the hungry
press—because people want that "why."
But what if
the "why" is never answered? Lee
Child has got it right: we want the answer.
These awful events will linger in our memories, because that missing "why"
will haunt us.
|
Lee Child, me, and this other guy |
2 comments:
Good post, Sheila. Thanks. I wouldn't worry about telling an atypical story, without the usual identification of multiple suspects who are then eliminated. In cozy world, that's the usual pattern, but the occasional variation in a long-running series is not only acceptable, but to me at least, welcome.
I want to read this book. You created quite a challenge for yourself -- a murder with no evidence for the police to gather and puzzle over -- and my guess is you've handled it well. Let us know who wins, you or your editor. I hope you triumph, because we need less formula and more thought in the books we write.
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