Whom do you consider the most intelligent, diabolical, or frightening criminal you’ve encountered on the page, and why?
This
is a great question, but should I go back to the early memories I have of characters
that traumatised me…like the wicked stepmother in Snow White? Or should I fast
forward to serial killers without a single redeeming quality from fiction I’ve
read recently? To be honest, even from my early days, the baddies have often
attracted me more than the goodies…but maybe that says more about me than them.
Hmm…the psychologist in me says that’s true. So, if that’s the case…just how
much do I want to give away?
#1:
Thomas Harris’s cannibalistic forensic psychiatrist, and sometime FBI
consultant, Dr. Hannibal Lecter has to be a candidate: intelligent, suave, and
certainly mezmerising, he’s about as frightening as you’d want a villain to be.
And I thoroughly enjoyed reading about him, in a chilling way. My top pick,
because Lecter ticks all the boxes…in a really bad (and good) way.
#2:
The Daleks. Yes, yes, I know that not everyone reading this grew up watching
Doctor Who on TV during their formative years, hiding behind a cushion whenever
the Doctor’s Nemeses-with-no-soul, the Daleks, made an appearance, but I did! For
me, the scariest moment was when they were brought back by Russell T. Davies
and suddenly…they could fly! Until then, all anyone really had to do to escape a
Dalek’s death ray was to run off up/down some stairs, but once Davies gave them
flight…TERRIFYING!
I once met a Dalek - in the barn of a Welsh stately home. No I'm not kidding!
#3: Iago, from Shakespeare’s Othello: I first read Othello when I was about fourteen/fifteen, so at an impressionable age, to be sure. We’d read Shakespeare’s plays aloud in our English Literature classes, and, when it came time to read Othello, our teacher, Mr. Lee read the title character and picked me to read Iago. So I first encountered him as his words came out of my mouth. And I learned to love, and hate and fear, him, from the inside out. He’s reasonable, winning, charming, persuasive…and utterly amoral, self-interested, and unforgiveable. As characters go, you don’t get baddies who come much better formed than Iago, who – at the tender age of 27 (a fact he states in the text…so, no, he’s not an aged person, as he is so often portrayed, which makes his relentless actions even more alarming) - has already decided he hates all that is good, and wants to undo it.
Since I write about murder, and murderers, of course I write "baddies"...but, whilst I never want to mitigate their actions, I do try to write relatable baddies!
My new book has some...hmm...interesting characters. Find out more on November 13th, when the 13th Cait Morgan Mystery will be published. https://www.cathyace.com/
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