I currently have two published
novels that fall into the “who dunnit” category. There’s plenty of romance, but
the plot revolves around discovering the bad guy before he ramps up his reign
of terror. If the author chooses not to let the reader in on the villain’s identity,
she has to play by a few rules.
1)
The
villain cannot come out of nowhere to
be a complete surprise.
2)
Clues
must be left along the way.
3)
The
reader should be able to figure out the bad guy’s identity, but not until the
end of the book.
So, how hard can it be? Actually, it isn’t
as difficult it may seem. I pick a cast of possible suspects and give them all opportunity. Each has to have a few
issues to be believable bad guys, which leads to motive. Sometimes I keep myself guessing until I’m absolutely
positive I know who the real culprit is. The key is to keep all possible suspects
in play in the beginning. As the book progresses, the author narrows down the
field. By the end, there should only be a couple of strong contenders left. You
want your reader to have that ah ha
moment when they know they’ve figured out the villain’s identity. If your
reader is completely shocked and surprised, you haven’t done your job of laying
a trail of clues.
One catch – it’s easy to fall into a
habit of creating similar bad guys. I used to read a famous mystery writer who
shall remain nameless. After reading a few of her books, it became a game to
determine the villain based on the book blurb. I was nearly always right. So,
get creative. Invent new and unique personalities for each bad guy. Most
importantly, have fun and readers will too!
In the
heart of the redwoods, a madman waits...
Recovering
from a broken engagement and determined to start over, Brooke Wakefield flees
to her grandmother's home deep in the redwood forest. Discovering her teenage
crush lives next door is a less than auspicious beginning. The last thing she
needs is another man to break her heart, but every time Dillon glances her way,
her heat level soars.
Dillon
Tremayne isn't looking for a relationship. With a young son, an eccentric
grandfather, and a logging company running him ragged, he can't afford any
romantic entanglements. But Brooke's humor and strength are hard to resist.
When a
woman from his past is brutally murdered and another disappears, Dillon is
heartsick--and terrified the killer will target Brooke next. Can Brooke and
Dillon find love in the heart of the forest? Or will a madman's twisted dream
destroy their chance at happiness?
Victim of Desire
Ex-soap star, Rachel Carpenter, is a single mom coping with the daily
problems of raising three daughters and operating her bookstore in the Napa
Valley wine country. Kane Lafferty is a burned out police detective struggling
with his own demons. The attraction between the two is immediate, though they
both have reasons to avoid a relationship. At a wilderness camp in the High
Sierra, their passion grows. But someone is watching. A man obsessed with
Rachel since her soap star days is determined to have her at any cost. Danger
mounts as the stalker’s reign of terror escalates. Kane risks his life to
protect Rachel and her daughters, but can he uncover the predator’s identity in
time? Or will Rachel have to sacrifice herself and her relationship with Kane
to save her family?
Today I’m
giving away a PDF copy of one of my romantic suspense books – winner’s choice.
Please leave a comment or email me at jannine @ janninegallant.com to be
eligible to win. Who are some of your favorite suspense authors? If you’ve read
mine, did I do my job and keep you guessing?
21 comments:
Great insight. Have to tell you V o D kept me guessing. When I get to it D L will do the same. BTW I loved the romance. Kane was something' else!
Thanks, Margo. It's always nice to hear figuring out the villain wasn't too easy!
Jannine,
Love your books. So you must be doing something right!
Thanks, Jerri, I hope so!
Great insight into creating a mystery story! All the best!
Wow, lots of things to add into your plot. Thanks for the inside workings of a mystery.
everything you said is so very true. From experience, it does help to know who the bad guy is going to be. In my first pubbed novel I planned to have the loveable curmudgeon town doctor be the killer--until my crit partner said she'd never speak to me again if I carried through on that idea. I made it someone else.
best of luck with this one, kid!
Kat and Veronica
Jessica, thanks for stopping by and the good wishes.
Laura, mystery plots can get complicated trying to keep everything straight!
Kat, I love it when the villain is someone unexpected. As long as he (or she) is believable as the guilty party. A lovable town doctor sounds like a great bad guy. Thanks for visiting.
Suspense/mystery is my favorite genre, too. I probably first fell in love with suspense way back with Gothic novels, but as far as modern novelists, Nora Roberts and Linda Howard are favorites of mine. Both of yours sound like great stories, and they're going in my TBR stash. :-)
Congratulations on your great cover! It looks so spooky! I just bought mine, and can't wait to read it. :-)
Great blog today!
Leah, I'm also a Nora and Linda fan. They both create excellent suspense. Thanks for stopping by.
Regina, my cover definitely has a chilling quality to it! I was really pleased when I saw it. Hope you enjoy the book!
Your post is so timely for me. I'm struggling with the last book of a romantic suspense tilogy. Now's the time to reveal the true head of the Red Hand Terrorist group. I'm struggling with setting it all up. And as I struggle, I avoid working on it, so much so that I've written and submitted a novella and two short stories. But I must...I must finish this. My agent is breathing down my neck and my editor is hinting she can't wait to read it...and my muse is in the corner, shivering and shuddering with "Oh, Lawd, Miz Vonnie, I haven't got a clue..."
I haven't read yours yet but Colleen Thompson is one of my favorite romantic suspense authors!
lisarayns(at)gmail.com
Great post, Jannine. I wrote a mystery earlier this year. I had a friend read it and she called me after the 5th chapter and said who she thought the killer was and was she right. She was! Guess I didn't layer in those clues well enough without giving the killer away or maybe because I'd talked about the book to her, that's how she figured it out -- At least that's what I'm telling myself. LOL. Right now, it's on the closet shelf but I plan on revising it some day soon.
I love reading books by Sandra Brown, Karen Robards, Linda Howard and others. After reading your blurbs, I'll definitely be adding you to the list.
Katherine
Katherineg425@yahoo.com
Keep plugging away at it, Vonnie. Pull out your cast of suspects and throw them all into the mix. I have complete faith in you!
Lisa, I haven't read Colleen Thompson. Thanks for the suggestion and for stopping by!
Katherine, I love all three of those authors. As for your mystery, your friend probably knows how you think too well. My daughter guessed my bad guy, but so far other readers haven't. Let someone who isn't so familiar with your work read it and see how they react before you go through massive edits.
And the winner is - Lisa Wells! Lisa emailed me a comment so I'll be contacting her to see which book she prefers. Thanks to everyone who left comments. Check back all month for more giveaways by all our authors. I'll have another one posted on the 18th.
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