by Janis Patterson
One of the rules for this – and
most other writers’ blogs – is that we can’t mention sex or politics. Of
course, as I am a contrarian, the very mention of the word ‘can’t’ is a red
flag. So –
Sex.
Politics.
Ah, that felt good! Another rule –
if not exactly broken – at least bruised around the edges. The life of a
dedicated contrarian is never easy.
Of course, being a mystery writer
makes it simpler. Breaking societal rules is our business. We get to create all
the havoc and do all the killings we want to and, as long as they stay on
paper, we’re honored and paid. Well, not as much as we’re worth to tell the
truth, but at least we don’t get arrested.
I’ve killed any number of people
who’ve annoyed me or ticked me off in real life – some of them repeatedly – and
I’ve enjoyed it each time. Much neater than reality, much cheaper than
psychotherapy and with the distinct potential of making money for my evil
deeds.
I’m too much of a wimp to commit a
crime in real life – beyond breaking the speed limit every once in a while, of
course – but on paper I can kill anybody I want without the slightest tinge of
remorse or worry. Author P.D. James said it best – “I love the power of
authorship. I can kill and leave the body right there on the page.”
Of course, killing or robbing or
breaking the law some other way is not the main reason for crime fiction. Crime
fiction is double barreled wish fulfillment. In the pages of our books we and
our readers can without guilt or risk mentally commit any crime we choose –
then in the same book we can take the opposite view and be assured that justice
and peace will prevail, that crimes will be solved and perpetrators will be
punished. It’s a win-win situation!
There is a security in crime fiction.
We know (most of the time – there are a few exceptions to the
justice-prevailing rule) that the bad guy will be caught and punished. It’s a
surety that is all too lacking in real life, but can be had in the pages of
almost every crime novel. Not bad.
Actually it really isn’t bad at all
– we get to get rid of those who annoy us (multiple times if we wish), we get
the good warm fuzzy feeling of the world being in proper accord and we get paid
– all in 80,000 words or so. Sometimes being a writer rocks! (Will someone
please remind me of that the next time I’m wrestling with a sagging middle and
an uncooperative protagonist?)
Janis Susan May Patterson is
a 7th-generation Texan and a 3rd-generation wordsmith who writes in mystery,
romance, and horror. Once an actress and a singer Janis has also been
editor-in-chief of two multi-magazine publishing groups as well as many other
things, including an enthusiastic amateur Egyptologist. Janis’ husband even
proposed in a moonlit garden near the Pyramids of Giza. Janis and her husband
live in Texas
with an assortment of rescued furbabies.
5 comments:
Yes, getting even in a book affords wonderful satisfaction for an author!
Morgan Mandel
http://www.morganmandel.com
Yes, I love it that the bad guys always get what they deserve in the end! Good post.
I've never been the rebellious kind. Always obeyed teachers and Scout leaders, kept quiet during public events, even hid in my closet reading while Mom entertained my guests at a noisy tenth birthday party -- for me. (Well, I guess that was kinda rebellious.) But now? Sex. Politics. Woo, no lightning. Will Janis and I be chastised? No, I will NOT tremble.
I love mysteries, I love that the good guy wins and that the bad guys have to pay for their misdeeds
Susan, I must be a contrarian, too, because I'm with you all the way. As crime writers, we can rid the world of bad people and serve justice the way it should be done. At least on paper. If we ruled the world, it would be done in real life, too.
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