By Abir
What a week it’s been. My new novel, Death in the East was
released in the UK and Europe last Thursday and I’ve spent almost every minute of the
intervening week on planes, trains and taxis, running from one event to the
other. I’ve been from a rain-soaked Milan to a freezing cold Edinburgh and, it
feels, almost everywhere in between.
My new book. Please buy it, cos my kids need shoes. |
Right now, I’m sitting in my mum’s apartment in London after
spending the night on the Caledonian Sleeper down from Glasgow. It’s the first
time I’ve done it, and I feel the word ‘sleeper’ is a bit of a misnomer.
So far, the tour’s been both great and gruelling, and there
still a few more days of it to go, but right now I have a few hours to relax: jus enough time to tell you about some of many, many things that annoy me in
books.
I’ve read the posts of my fellow bloggers and found myself
laughing and nodding in agreement, and also holding my hand up and owning up to
the fact that I’ve been guilty of a lot of the transgressions that they highlight,
for which I’m truly sorry.
What can I add to that extensive and accurate list?
Number 1 - Look at me! I'm a straight white writer inserting token minority characters (who are exactly like my straight white characters!)
I stopped reading at that
point. I don’t care how brilliant the plot is, or how praised the author, if
they can’t be bothered getting the most basic facts about their characters
right, then they don’t deserve my attention. That’s not to say a writer should
only write about characters of their own ethnicity, religion or sexuality – far
from it – it’s just that when you do it, make sure you do it well and with
sensitivity, and don’t fall into lazy, cliched stereotypes.
Man, it felt good to get that off my chest! What’s next on
my hit-list? I’ll tell you:
Number 2 - Lead characters who look in the mirror in chapter one and
describe themselves for the reader’s benefit
You all know what I’m talking
about.
‘Lance Strongbow looked in the mirror. His blue eyes sparkled and his blond hair tumbled over muscular shoulders…’
Sod off Strongbow, and sod off the author who wrote you. Far
too often authors feel they need to describe every detail of their protagonist
in the first few pages when actually, most of the time, they should be
concentrating on the story. Even when it is necessary to describe the
character, the looking in the mirror as though they’ve never noticed themselves
before, just p's me off.
Which leads me nicely on to my next pet peeve:
Number 3 - Breasts
Male
authors describing female characters and spending far, far, far too much time
describing their heaving, voluptuous, pert, perky, [insert male fantasy adjective
here] breasts. What is this fascination with breasts? Actually, that’s
rhetorical. I know the fascination, but do we need to lay it so bare on the
page? What’s worse is when the male writer puts his female character in front
of a mirror and tells us how amazed/proud/saddened she is by her own breasts! I think there’s a special place in literary hell reserved for these
authors. At the very least, they deserve a slap.
Right. I’m getting angry now. One more and then I’ll lie
down.
I could go for gratuitous sex scenes or gratuitous violence or
serial killers who seem to be more creative in their mutilations than Picasso,
but my colleagues have already highlighted them. So I suppose I’ll have to go
for this:
Number 4: Dead cell phones
The hero or victim’s mobile phone that dies, is left on the sofa,
loses coverage at the worst possible moment, generally two minutes before they
enter the abandoned building/deep dark forest where axe wielding murderer/serial
killer/certified public accountant-gone-rogue is lying in wait.
Now I
understand the issue. So many wonderful literary deaths and ingenious plot
twists would be demolished if Jessica Fletcher simply received a call from
her colleague telling her ‘Don’t go into the derelict fish processing factory!
The mad actuary with the lopsided grin is waiting inside and he’s the one who’s
killed half the pensioners in Cabot Cove because their extraordinary longevity
has affected the accuracy of his life insurance tables!’ But of course, we need
Mrs Fletcher to go into that fish processing factory, which is to say, the
story needs it for tension. I just wish we could come up with better and more innovative
methods of stopping those pesky phone signals.
Well that was cathartic. I’ve been on the road for seven days
straight and I’m cranky, but having a rant has made me feel much better! I’ll
just end by saying, please read my new book, Death in the East. I can promise
you that the minority characters are well drawn, that the men don’t look in any
mirrors and the women don’t comment on the magnificence of their own breasts. It’s
set in 1922 and 1905, so there are no pesky cell phones to worry about, and there
are not one, but two fiendish locked room murders to solve. Go on! You know you
want to!
Right on! I remember reading Robert Parker novel and realizing by the end that he had described exactly one character--the secretary who showed for about five sentences, and it was just a quick sketch of her. I actually went back and looked through for other descriptions. Nada. It was brilliant. As for the breasts....
ReplyDeleteIt is cathartic to get those pet peeves out! Congratulations on the launch of your new book :-)
ReplyDeleteExcellent! Rant on, Abir. But if you're writing about your series characters in the new book, who are the minorities if the setting is India? surely that's the whitey whites?
ReplyDeleteI enjoyed reading this lot, hope the tour is going brilliantly, Laffers!
ReplyDeletevery good, thanx
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