Senior sleuths may be all the rage thanks to The Thursday Murder Club series and Only Murders in the Building, among others. But authors have been making use of older sleuths--and older sinners--for a long time. (Paging Miss Marple.)
I tackled this topic back in 2017. Given the increasing popularity of senior characters since then, this seems a good time to rerun that column, with minor edits. I hope you find it helpful.
Looks can be deceiving. No one knows that better than people who try to slip something past you. Con artists. Murderers. Even wide-eyed children and little old ladies. When you appear nice and innocent, folks will let you get away with murder.
I've written before about using teenage girls as protagonists. They work
well as evil-doers or crime-committers because no one suspects them.
They're young and peppy and can come across as sweet if they try.
They're also fearless and their brains aren't fully developed, so
they'll do stupid things few adults would. Today, I'm going to focus on
the other end of the age spectrum: the senior set. (I know some people
don't like that term, but I mean no animus, so please bear with me.)
Imagine you come home to find your house burglarized, with your files ransacked and your computer--with all your notes--stolen. In real life, you'd call the cops, never thinking you personally could find the culprit. It could be anyone. But things are different for fictional Amateur Sleuth Sally.
Imagine you come home to find your house burglarized, with your files ransacked and your computer--with all your notes--stolen. In real life, you'd call the cops, never thinking you personally could find the culprit. It could be anyone. But things are different for fictional Amateur Sleuth Sally.
Sally knows she's been investigating the arson death of poor Mr. Hooper, who owned the corner store. So with the neighbors leaning on their porches or whispering in small groups on their lawns, watching the police spectacle (it's a small town, so there's spectacle), Sally goes outside and studies her prime suspects in the arson murder and her own burglary: those very same neighbors.
Is the culprit Oscar, the grouchy guy in the green bathrobe across the street who puts out his trash too early in the morning? Sally heard he owed Mr. Hooper money. Or is it Maria, the skinny lady who works at the library? She lives two doors down, and Sally has heard she spends time with Mr. Hooper when Mrs. Hooper is away on business--or at least she used to until Mrs. Hooper put a stop to it. Or is it Mrs. Hooper herself, the betrayed spouse? Sally has lots of questions and suspects, but she never stops to think about kindly Katrina, the grandmother who lives next door. Surely a woman who bakes cookies and serves as a crossing guard couldn't have done in Mr. Hooper.
You all know. Of course she did. And Sally Sleuth's failure to recognize that appearances can be deceiving will almost be her undoing. (Almost. This is a cozy novel I'm outlining, so Sally must prevail in the end.)
But things don't always tie up so neatly in short stories. In short stories, the bad guy can win. Or the ending can really surprise you. Or both. And kindly Katrina could end up pulling one over on Sally Sleuth. I've made use of this aspect of short stories in several of my own.
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The beauty of the plan is no one will see Myra coming. On the outside she's kind and helpful. She calls people "dear." As one character says, she's "the heart of this department." Myra's nice on the inside, too, but she also has sass and a temper, which come into play as she hatches her scheme and it plays out.
Another great thing about Myra is she's known Douglas for so long that she knows his weaknesses, and she makes use of them. (This reminds me of a wonderful scene from the movie Groundhog Day. Bill Murray's character says of God, "Maybe he's not omnipotent. He's just been around so long, he knows everything.") The older a character is, the more knowledge she'll have--information she can use against others.
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| Towanda! |
Anyway, what happens to Myra, Douglas, and Jessica? You'll have to read the story to find out. You can find "Whose Wine Is It Anyway?" as a standalone e-story at Barnes and Noble (click here) and Amazon (click here). The story originally appeared in the anthology 50 Shades of Cabernet. It was a finalist for the Agatha, Anthony, and Macavity Awards for best short story in 2018.
Getting back to seniors, I had fun writing another senior character in a story that came out in 2016, "The Best-Laid Plans." Eloise Nickel is a mystery writer, a grande dame of her profession, and she's being honored for her lifetime achievement at this year's Malice International convention. (Does this convention's name sound familiar? Good.) It's too bad for Eloise that the convention's guest of honor this year is Kimberly Siger, Eloise's nemesis. Then, to make matters worse, a few weeks before the convention, Kimberly insults Eloise in Mystery Queen Magazine. Eloise isn't going to take that, so she plans to make Kimberly suffer during the convention. Because she's known Kimberly for many years, Eloise knows Kimberly's weak spots. And because she's thought of as a nice, aging lady, she figures no one will suspect her of any nefarious doings. Do her plans work out? Read "The Best-Laid Plans" to find out. This story, published in the anthology Malice Domestic 11: Murder Most Conventional, was a finalist for the Agatha Award in 2017. The anthology remains available in paper and digital formats from a lot of retailers.
So, fellow mystery authors, when you're thinking about your next plot and want a bad guy or gal who can hide in plain sight, think about a senior citizen. The same goes when you're devising your sleuth. A bad guy may not spill his guts if thirty-something Sally Sleuth is nearby, but he certainly might if Grandma Greta is. He thinks she's so innocuous, he won't see her coming--until she pulls a gun on him.
Do you have a favorite character--good gal or bad--who's a senior citizen? Please share in the comments. We can never have enough good short stories and books to read.





Yours and yesterday's Chris Knopf articles could very nearly be companion pieces.
ReplyDeleteBarb, my story Quality of Mercy, published in the MWA anthology, The Prosecution Rests, featured an elderly couple faced with a terrible situation. As usual, I'm intrigued by your stories.
My six Cranberry Country mystery novels feature Lena Lombardi, a septuagenarian cranberry bog owner and self-styled snoop. She’s handy with a gun (useful for shooting muskrats, which damage cranberry bogs) and for plugging evildoers. I based her on two bog owners I knew personally, tough Yankee ladies. Lena also appears in two short stories, available in anthologies from Black Beacon Books.
ReplyDeleteEdward Lodi
One of my favourite short stories (The Perfect Mark) won an award and was shortlisted for two more about 15 years ago, and featured an 80-something woman who pulls a reverse sting on the PSW who considered her a mark. Now that I am over 65, I'm being careful to make sure my older women don't appear silly or flustered.
ReplyDeleteMy short story, "Too Young to Die," appeared in Black Cat Mystery Magazine #12. The sleuthing protagonist, Harriet, and all her friends, including the victim, were in their eighties. I prefer the terms "aging" and "older" now that I'm an older woman myself. I snort when the terms are used for anyone under the mid-seventies. I roll my eyes when I hear such stereotypical damn-with-faint-praise putdowns as "spry." And I hate to see older women appear not only silly or flustered but oversexed or obsessed with their looks, guns, or anything that indicates they're of no interest unless they're caricatures.
ReplyDeleteMy senior citizen (but NEVER EVER tell her that) is Laskin's Matt (nee Martha) Stark, who looks, sounds, and acts like Calamity Jane. Matt more than holds her own with anybody, and was the one who solved the question of who robbed the Norseman's Bar and shot Linda Thompson (Matt's niece) in "Bad Influence" (in SleuthSayers' own "Murder, Neat" Anthology). I love writing Matt.
ReplyDeleteI loved "Whose Wine is This, Anyway?"
ReplyDeleteOne senior woman who stands out for me was one who was coddled all the way through the story she was in, with everyone going, "Oh, don't upset Aunt Whatsits", who "Oh, dear"-ed it all the way through the story, (annoying me to no end), until the end when she and the others were in mortal danger; she was the one who bashed the badguy. I always said I'd never go down without taking advantge of an opportunity to get away, but at this point, they would never believe this old lady would be waiting for an opening to get at the badguy.(May that theory never get tested!)
Thanks, everyone, for stopping by and sharing your characters. And Tonette, thanks for your kind words about my wine story.
ReplyDeleteFor a long time, I also wrote older characters as the focus of my stories. Do I detect a Sesame Street influence by having a grouchy character in a green bathrobe named Oscar always taking out the trash, Mr. Hooper, and Maria? :-)
ReplyDeleteYou do indeed, Justin! Thanks for catching my Easter eggs.
DeleteI set my first "librarian on the run" story in an old folks home and man, that was fun to write!
ReplyDeleteThanks, Barb. I tend to have villains of no specific age. Good idea to expand my writer's mind by giving this more consideration!
ReplyDelete