The Attraction… and Fear…. of the New
Those who follow me know that I write a long-standing series about a private eye named Hannibal Jones. My readers and I are very comfortable with Hannibal. There’s also the series featuring Morgan Stark and Felicity O’Brien. Five adventures later those stories roll our fairly easily too.That’s the beauty of writing series: Familiar characters who are fully formed allow a writer to focus on the plot. And readers know what to expect.
But sometimes a writer wants some surprises. There is an attraction to inventing a new cast of characters and seeing where they take you. Which is why the novel I most recently finished follows a character who is very different from any protagonist I’ve written. She is not a hero in any way. In fact, she’s a professional assassin.
Skye came to me as the focus of a short story for the Smart Rhino collection called “Insidious Assassins.” I’ll admit I was proud of the story, and that Skye wouldn’t leave my mind. She wanted more room to expand. Of course the wonder of short stories is that characters don’t have to have extensive backstories, and you don’t need to know details of their lives (like where they live, who their friends are or what they do in their off time.)
As I launched into the story I had in mind for my new character she began to deepen and develop. She doesn’t have a partner, per se, but she does have a confidente – her psychiatrist. This turned out to be a fun way to reveal character. The story moved quickly, and the action branded it a thriller reminiscent of the paperbacks I used to read in college (The Destroyer series, the Executioner books, etc.)
However, I was also feeling all the downsides of starting over. I had to really think through everything the character did. She was not at all familiar. In fact, I was working with a stranger who frequently did not react as expected. Plot points had to be adjusted to bring our protagonist to the places she needed to be.
And there is that last fear: what if my readers don’t like Skye as much as I do? What if in the 21stCentury a killer-for-hire as the protagonist is too much of a stretch for fans? What if these stories aren’t what my readers want? Well, ultimately the character attracted me. The story drew me. So now I have to accept the fear as well.
Published on June 24, 2019 17:08
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