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Are Crime Fiction Characters getting too Weird?
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If they're not believable, then it doesn't matter how *normal* they are, they're still going to be strange.
And, speaking from years of paralegal work in the criminal defense arena, I've yet to run into any fictional characters any stranger than the real ones get — on both sides of the courtroom.

If they're not believable, then it doesn't matter how *normal* they are, they're still going to be strange.
And, speaking from years of paralegal..."
Thanks for your point, Renee - yeah, I think making them believable is the key - too cliche or too much of a caricature and it doesn't feel right.

I think a good author will be able to 'sell' any quirks or potentially unbelievable attributes of a character through their writing.
The danger I suppose is where writers use unbelievable characters as a kind of gimmick or hook, in order to make them memorable and as a substitute for strong writing.
In saying that, I think that due to the enormous amount of books available, characters probably do need to be more unusual in order to attract readers, or keep readers' interest – with regards a book series for instance. Although without strong writing underpinning it all, attracting people with a 'quirky' character will probably be a pretty self-defeating strategy in the long run..!

How true! You don't get much weirder than real people. All my characters are based on people I've known.


A lot of characters have baggage, and that makes them sympathetic, but I think some writers have taken that as a given. So a lot of MCs now have parents/spouses/fiancés, etc. that were eaten/possessed/spontaneously combusted. And as that gets old, the baggage will get weirder as authors try to be fresh, when they should change it all together.
Books mentioned in this topic
Girl on a Train (other topics)The Evil Beneath (other topics)
http://awaines.blogspot.com/2014/09/a...
A J Waines: author of Girl on a Train and The Evil Beneath
http://www.amzn.to/14M9mSw
Both reached No 1 in 'Murder' and 'Psychological Thrillers' in UK Kindle charts.