Mystery/Thriller Reading Friends discussion
Miscellaneous Book Talk
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How important is character-driven story-telling to you?
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I generally will not enjoy a book if I do not warm to the characters.

Well-stated point. The action needs to get going from word one. And none of that ponderous back-story, either. Show me the character through what they do and how they interact with their challenges.
Eduardo Suastegui
Story-telling that captures the heart


I too feel like as I get older my tastes have changed. I used to delve into every mystery, loving that they were super fast paced and satisfying. But now I like a careful balance between mystery, character and plot.

In my opinion a skilled writer draws out the characters, even peripheral ones so that we understand them by the end of the book (or think we do)

Liz & Ann - Yes, balance is important. Too heavy on the character side without a strong concept driving the action--and there must be action.
Eduardo Suastegui
Story-telling that captures the heart




Mary Jo wrote: "I liked the book, Gone Girl, but thought the movie lagged."

Books mentioned in this topic
Blue Heaven (other topics)Gone Girl (other topics)
Defending Jacob: A Novel (other topics)
Authors mentioned in this topic
C.J. Box (other topics)Eduardo Suastegui (other topics)
Eduardo Suastegui (other topics)
Eduardo Suastegui (other topics)
I'm having that experience with a thriller that is jam-packed with action, but in which the characters feel like cogs and silver spheres in a pinball machine. Nothing that happens really makes sense in terms of who they are. The protagonist is an amazing kick-butt chick that strains credibility in her near perfection--except when she's making poor choices the narrative praises her for.
At some level I can still enjoy such a story... in the same way I enjoy skimming frosting from a cake. But it doesn't satisfy for long, and certainly not in any deep sense.
Anyone else out there feeling that way? Or do you rather find thrillers and mysteries that expose us to true, flawed yet admirable people boring and not on point for the genre?
Eduardo Suastegui
Story-telling that captures the heart