14 April 2024

Kinsey Millhone: a fantasy character with fantasies.


Recently my six-month-old Bouvier puppy mistook one of my Sue Grafton books for a chew toy. I apologize to anyone who is squeamish about crime scene photos, but this is what I had to deal with.

During her life and since her death, I cannot count the number of conversations I’ve had about Sue Grafton and her character, Kinsey Millhone.

Women detectives in novels get me every time. My bookshelf and bank account concur. Like any love affair - I’m committed, invested and have opinions.

After I taped the cover of the book, I looked at Sue Grafton’s site and found a quote from N Is for Noose about Kinsey, that reveals why she is so compelling as a character:

“Get close to someone and the next thing you know, you've given them the power to wound, betray, irritate, abandon you, or bore you senseless. My general policy is to keep my distance, thus avoiding a lot of unruly emotion. In psychiatric circles, there are names for people like me.”

It is followed by this explanation: 

“Those are sentiments that hit home for Grafton's readers. And she has said that Kinsey is herself, only younger, smarter, and thinner. But are they an apt description of Kinsey's creator? Well, she's been married to Steve Humphrey for more than thirty-five years and has three children, four granddaughters, and one great grandson.  She loves cats, gardens, and good cuisine—not quite the nature-hating, fast-food loving Millhone. So: readers and reviewers beware. Never assume the author is the character in the book. Sue…is only in her imagination Kinsey Millhone—but what a splendid imagination it is.”

There’s an old adage that writers should write what they know because readers have a nose for  inauthentic writing and there’s nothing inauthentic about Kinsey. Every woman can agree that people can wound, betray and bore you senseless. It reads as authentic and passes the sniff test. So, I argue that Sue Grafton knew Kinsey well enough to write about her. Kinsey’s rant about people didn’t even fit with the way her character lived because one of the staples of the series is her close relationship with Henry, her elderly neighbour and landlord. She even likes Rosie, who runs the local restaurant and bar, despite her serving odd and often repulsive food. If Kinsey Millhone is Sue Grafton’s alter ego, then Kinsey Millhone has her own alter ego and this is why readers felt her to be such a credible character. 

Just as writers write what they know, I suspect readers read what they know as well. I simply cannot read certain books. If a female detective (again, big fan) shows herself to be incapable of forming relationships and lacking in empathy on any page in the book, that’s the page I stop reading. This isn’t a judgement thing. It’s about reality. I have known many women as friends, as patients, heck, I even raised a woman, and I have never met one who doesn't form relationships and has no empathy. Not one. So when I read about tough women detectives (again big fan of tough women) who have no empathy, I can’t relate. Can’t read. They don’t seem real. 

Yes, there are people with antisocial personality disorder (ASPD) commonly known as psychopaths or sociopaths, but they account for 0.2% to 3.3% of the population. People overestimate their numbers in part because so many crime novels feature them and also because it has become in vogue to diagnose those one dislikes as a one of these. Kinsey has many dimensions but she does not fulfil the criteria of antisocial personality disorder. As I said, I have opinions and this is one of them.

Why Kinsey is so loved as a character is that she, like many of us, has fantasies. Sue Grafton’s readers understand this. I’m fiercely protective of my husband of over 30 years and have also, when annoyed, politely asked him to find me my book of poisons so I can make him dinner. If the former weren’t true, the latter wouldn’t be funny.

Kinsey as a character is so authentic that she, like all of us, has fantasies of being something worse than she is and then, she comes to her senses and hangs out with Henry or eats Rosie’s vile food without complaint. I can relate. No matter how annoyed I have been, I have never actually added poison to my husband's food and he eats the meal I prepare with gusto because he knows this. He does occasionally feign a near death experience while eating and it's hilarious, because it's all fantasy. 



8 comments:

  1. Very insightful, Mary. I just finished P Is for Peril. I’ve read only a couple, but now you’ve fired me up to read them all.
    Edward Lodi

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    1. So pleased you're going back to Sue Grafton. She is worth the time.

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  2. I must return to read these! I bet my perspective now would be different from 20 years ago. Love your book of poison recipe book! Melodie

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    1. Sue Grafton is iconic. My book of poison recipe book is one of my fav fantasies. It has saved my marriage.

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  3. Love the analysis of Kinsey Millhone v. Sue Grafton. And, from my experience working in the judicial system, and at the pen, a lot of people try to act / think / talk tougher than they really are. It's a shield, which at least gives US the illusion we can tough anything out.

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    1. Eve, this is so insightful. I believe this happens in so many professions - we all need an alter ego.

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  4. Mary, I agree with your thoughtful article. I’ve had trouble reconciling two well-known authors’ authenticity, one female, one male. In one case, the heroine is written as a man, almost a Sam Spade / Philip Marlowe clone in a skirt. The other author demonstrates his street crews by stopping the action and describing the fashions and accessories adapted by the main characters. I could more easily accept Kinsey trimming her hair with nail scissors than these characters.

    I also agree that Malone is not antisocial. One of the very few scenes I recall of any author comes from Sue Grafton when Kinsey drops in on… um, perhaps Henry, who’s frying bologna. She starts to salivate and says something like, “I’ll give you $200 and a roll in the hay for one of those sandwiches.” Who couldn’t love that?

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    1. As a reader and writer, Leigh, your nose for the authentic is excellent. Love that Kinsey quote. Hilarious.

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