When you look back over your childhood and early life, can you see where being a writer, or indeed a crime writer, began for you? Were there definitive moments that sealed your fate?
I *am* going to look back today - briefly over the fate-sealing days of childhood - and then at the origins of the first book in the failed trilogy that is the Last Ditch Motel series. Failed because Book 7 is slipping off its chocks and into the open sea this week and that's not how trilogies are meant to go.
When bad hair day + front tooth fell out day = school photo day (poor wee scone) |
Crime writer? Probably. I don't remember much of what we read at school but I do recall Terry the 'Tec and the ker-LUNK of the clue that was supposed to bamboozle us in every story. I was convinced I could do better. Then I found Agatha Christie and was equally convinced that I couldn't do it at all.
I'm away from my bookshelves so I'm having to be quite resourceful with these pictures. |
I was right that I couldn't do what she did, but thankfully there's a whole career to be had between the Dame and the Tec. And six (out of thirty-five) books in that career got a new addition on Tuesday. I've been blogging relentlessly about it though, which is why today I'm going to think back to the start.
I was asked for a trilogy in addition to Dandy Gilver and the standalones. (Still think that sounds like a band). Here's what I pitched (copied and pasted from the email to the editor):
Idea 1 Doris Day meets the X-Files
Genre SF mystery (urban fantasy mystery?)
Time 1950
Place California
Tone medium-boiled/funny
Protag Scottish female
Like Sookie Stackhouse, Dana Cameron’s Fangborn
Stories 1. Protag comes to CA and learns the secret while investigating her own husband
2. Small-town vs. big threat
3. Protag discovers own history while protecting secret
Idea 2 Book Town
Genre cozy
Time present
Place Wigtown, Galloway, South-west Scotland = Scotland’s book town
Tone soft-boiled/funny
Protag housekeeper to a rare-books dealer
Like If I could write like Blaize and John I’d be very happy/Sheila Connelly
Stories 1. The Last novel of Jane Austen (fake) discovered in attic. Fight to the death among dealers.
2. Writer of roman a clef murdered at literary festival
3. Wickerman festival (it’s about 30 miles away)
Idea 3 Calamity Jane Investigates
Genre Historical
Time 1870
Place Wyoming
Tone Medium boiled/funny
Protag Calamity Jane
Like Laurie King/Alan Bradley/Little House On the Prairie not Deadwood
Stories 1. Jane avenges the death of her best friend with permission of sherrif and garrison
2. Jane called in by respectable folks who heard of her avenging exploits
3. Back, tie-in story from Jane’s youth.
4. Solving a murder among the local Indians.
"She came up from a very hardscrabble life, unacquainted with bourgeois notions of decorum; she probably never knew financial security, but even in poverty she was known for her helpfulness, generosity, and willingness to undertake demanding and even dangerous tasks to help others. She was afflicted with alcoholism and wanderlust (and, perhaps, promiscuity), but, as someone remembered her, "Her vices were the wide-open sins of a wide-open country – the sort that never carried a hurt.""
- Huevos rancheros – delicious when deliberate and also a great excuse if your omelette goes wrong.
- Watermelon juice
- Police blotter
3 comments:
I want to live on a houseboat next to the Last Ditch Motel. Can’t do much but cook, but I could free them all up for detecting by providing meals. Let me know where to reply.
You've got the gig, Ann. Now we just need to merge worlds . . .
Sigh. I wish. Xo
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