Mike (Emergency Contact sitting in the Swedish recliner opposite me, reading my latest manuscript) said something today that really got me thinking:
"I am absolutely amazed by your mind. How you create all these characters, make them all different, and keep them straight is beyond me."
So - being Author person first in the list of my personas, I said the obvious thing all writers would say given the circumstance: "But the thing is, YOU can keep them straight when reading that manuscript, right?"
"Oh sure," he said, to my relief. "I'm just wowed by your imagination."
I think what he really meant was memory. And I have to admit, I've been thinking about that a lot lately.
Writing a mystery is hard work. I don't want to say it is harder work than most of the genres - I've written in most of the genres and each has its challenges. But writing a mystery has specific requirements that make me wonder how long I will be able to measure up.
In fact, it requires an incredible memory.
In mystery writing, you need a large cast of characters.
First off, you need a victim. Check. Probably two. And if you're writing a Brit Mystery a la Midsommer, you probably need three. (Emergency Contact and I joke about who will be the third person murdered in each episode of Midsommer, Brokenwood, Death in Paradise, etc etc). This victim (or three) must be a fully drawn character. He must have a past. There must be a *reason* he is a victim in the first place, and that means drilling down to a life before the murder.
But we said there could be three victims. Three characters. Check.
We talk often about the need for five good suspects - three at the very least. I personally try for three darn good suspects with lots of supporting material, and a couple more perhaps less drawn out.
So five good suspects, all with believable motivation. All with *different* motivation on why they would be the killer and take a whack at the victim for gain.
That's eight characters so far, check.
You need a protagonist, almost always the sleuth. And a sidekick for the sleuth. Maybe even a love interest for the sleuth, who could be a local cop. Three more characters.
That's eleven.
Probably there will be more than one named cop. A constable to search the grounds. Probably there will be a secondary character or two, to run the Inn, serve at the table. You know the drill.
So that's at least twelve unique characters, all with individual motivation, and personalities. All looking different, with different histories. All in selected places at the important times for the sleuth to keep track.
Not only the sleuth. You - the author - has to keep it all straight.
Writing a mystery is an incredible feat of memory. We intertwine the lives of more than a dozen people, and work them around the novel like so many pieces of a jigsaw puzzle. I don't know any other kind of writing that requires such complex thinking and as I start my second book in the latest series (The Merry Widow Murders) I am truly shaking in my go-go boots. Will I be up to it once more? Will the task of keeping everything straight, creating a dynamic, exciting plot that MAKES SENSE but isn't easily solved, be once more in my grasp?
It's daunting. And I haven't even talked about the fact that I've already used up eighty plots. But just keeping the whole thing in motion in my mind is something I know won't be possible forever.
This year, I think I can do it. The plot I have outlined excites me, and my agent is keen. Next year? Meet you back on these pages next summer for a recap.
Melodie Campbell always has a mob angle in her novels, and usually they can't shoot straight. "Impossible not to laugh" says Library Journal about THE GODDAUGHTER. "The Canadian Literary Heir to Donald Westlake" says Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine. The Goddaughter series and The B-Team sold in all the usual suspects.