And now for some truth...
Last Friday, in anticipation of tomorrow’s Capital Crime Writers event at the Ottawa Public Library, I blogged about liars. So, being fair-minded, today I’m giving equal time to telling the truth. And its sidekick, accuracy.
We’ve all heard the story, perhaps some of you have even experienced, the frustrated or could be gleeful, reader who fires off an ‘aha’ email – “gotcha! you can’t make a right hand turn at that intersection”. Or some similar faux pas.
They’re out there waiting to catch you in an in-accuracy. Ok, that’s not really fair. Most times these readers are just eager to help the author. Maybe the correction can be made for the re-print, after all.
But they’re right. Accuracy is important. The author tries to build a relationship with the reader based on trust and that’s a sensitive commodity. If your character is turning the wrong way, possible headed for a brick wall, is the reader going to believe that just hours before, the report this pathologist gave to the police about the cause of death in a suspected homicide is the truth? How can this person who can’t see brick walls, see the entry wound on a body? And it’s even more crucial if you’ve done tons of research and have the pathologist toss around some medical facts. Could leave a big question mark in the reader’s mind.
But, you know all this, don’t you? It’s basic mystery writing 101.
My point – and I do have one – is that in this thing called fiction, there’s always some basis of truth. It may be as subtle as your own observations creeping in (possibly unbeknownst to you) or it can be all those facts you’ve included in that long detailed pathologist’s report. The fiction is the story we spin around the facts.
So, am I totally at odds with what I blogged last week? I have no idea. Like most fiction that I write, once it’s on the page, it’s gone out of my mind. That’s a scary fact I’m finding out now that I’m in the editing stage of A Killer Read. In fact, is that even my title?
And now for something completely different! Jacques Filippi, whose superb crime blog is found at http://www.quebecrime.com/ and his cohorts have put together the QuebeCrime festival which is being held Oct. 28-30 in Quebec City. Visit the website for all the details. But stay tuned here because I’ve been given a pair of tickets to the festival – to give away at Mystery Maven Canada.
We’ll make this easy – the first email I receive after 1 p.m. EDT (have to give the West coasters a chance, too) at mysterymaven@rogers.com that names one of the many Canadian authors featured at this event, will win the tickets. So, check that website & get your fingers tapping.
Linda Wiken/Erika Chase
A Killer Read coming April 3, 2012
From Berkley Prime Crime
Showing posts with label truth. Show all posts
Showing posts with label truth. Show all posts
Friday, October 21, 2011
Tuesday, October 5, 2010
TUESDAY BRINGS TROUBLE

Truth can often make good fiction.
Okay, first off, you have a reading assignment. I’ll wait here until you’re done.
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/national/a-break-in-the-mysterious-case-of-tom-thomson-canadas-van-gogh/article1738779/
Done? Did you view the audio slideshow on the lefthand side of the first page of the article? Okay...I’ll wait while you look at that, too.
What we have here is, without a doubt, a completely realized and fantastic crime fiction novel, requiring almost no changes. Think about what a fantastic ending it would have as the narrator? protagonist? looks at the recreation of the face of Tom Thomson by the forensic artist. As a novelist (and a lazy one at that), I would love to be able to just plunk this all down and send it off to my publisher. What a story! It’s got it all, intrigue, a long unsolved mystery and a great romantic component. The only thing missing is who the murderer was (not having read the book yet, I don’t know if MacGregor goes into that) and why he/she did it.
So what do you think? If you were writing the ending to this story, would it be the person who owed Tom money, would it be someone else...or might it be Winnie because Tom refused to marry her?
But most of all, don’t you wish you’d thought up this story yourself? (And wouldn't that photograph of the skull make a great cover image?)
Rick Blechta is a Toronto author and musician. Oddly enough, each of his novels have a musician as the protagonist. Because he enjoys and plays all kinds of music, his books feature all kinds of music: blues, jazz, classical, rock. Next up is the opera world with The Fallen One coming in fall 2011. Set in Toronto, Montreal and Paris, it follows soprano Marta Hendricks as she searches for the truth about her dead husband.
His 2005 novel, Cemetery of the Nameless was a finalist for the Crime Writers of Canada’s Arthur Ellis Best Novel of the Year.
For more details, please visit rickblechta.com and Type M for Murder (http://www.rickblechta.com & http://typem4murder.blogspot.com/)
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