Friday, August 19, 2011

A question I often get when talking to readers is are your characters based on real people? Most of mine are pure figments of my imagination, thought admittedly they sometimes bear a few characteristics of people I have known. In my new book, The Good, The Bad and The Murderous, however, a central character in the story is a fictionalized version of a young man whose story appeared in the local press.

He was Nashville's youngest murderer in recent memory, who shot a man during a drug deal when he was twelve years old. The article told what had happened, that he had been tried as an adult and sentenced to fifteen years in prison. He was now out after spending more than half his life behind bars. He vowed to stay out of trouble but hadn't been able to find a job.

I modeled a character named Djuan Burden after him. Fortunately, the newspaper put an interview with the young man on it's website, giving me ideas for some of the dialogue.

The book opens with Djuan going into a medical equipment store to complain about a Medicare document showing his grandmother owed money on a power chair, which she didn't need and never received. He finds the owner of the store, which turns out to be a Medicare scam operation, shot in the head. He panics, knowing the police would never believe he wasn't the shooter, and flees.

None of the other characters in the book was based on a real person, but when I lifted Djuan out of real life (I even got the name Djuan from a male nurse in my doctor's office), it set the tone for the book. Instead of a story about Medicare fraud, it turned into a tale about police misconduct.

I've had a few other characters over the years based loosely on real people, but, with the exception of one in my first published novel, they all played minor roles.

Chester Campbell

Mystery Mania

3 comments:

Kevin R. Tipple said...

Sounds good, Chester.

Morgan Mandel said...

It's great when we can pluck real life happenings into a book, and change them around to suit our purposes. Gives the books a more authentic touch.

Morgan Mandel
http:www.morganmandel.com
http://morganmandel.blogspot.com

Morgan Mandel said...

It's great when we can pluck real life happenings into a book, and change them around to suit our purposes. Gives the books a more authentic touch.

Morgan Mandel
http:www.morganmandel.com
http://morganmandel.blogspot.com