When the subject of murder mysteries comes up for me, the greatest influence in my writing career has to be P.D. James. Or rather, Baroness Phyllis Dorothy James of Holland Park. Yes, the Queen named her a Baroness. There is a great background article for those who are unfamiliar with her work on her Random House website.
She did so much to raise the murder mystery to a level of literary fiction that the rest of us can only strive toward. She’s written twenty books, and for me, the one where she pulls out all the stops in so many ways: point of view, style, plot construction is in “Devices and Desires” All of her characters are multi-faceted, there at least five major view point characters along with her sleuth Adam Dalgliesh. She has mastered, what Donald Maass describes in his book, “The Fire in Fiction,” the ability to craft micro-tension, those moment by moment bits of tension that keep you reading from one sentence to the next. In “Devices and Desires,” Rikards, the detective investigating the “Whistler” murders brings Dalgliesh to the room where the Whistler has committed suicide in a room in the hotel where he spent much of his childhood. Here is how she opens the chapter:
“Balmoral Private Hotel was the last house on an undistinguished twentieth-century terrace at the unfashionable end of the long promenade. The summer lights were still strung between the Victorian lampposts, but they had been turned off and now swung in uneven loops like a tawdry necklace which might scatter its blackened beads at the first strong wind. The season was officially over.”
What she accomplishes in those three sentences is masterful. Not only does she place you in that seaside town, you already have a sense of dread at the thought of those light bulbs coming crashing down on you at the “first strong wind” The sentences are complex but keep you in the present moment.
Dalgliesh and Rickards examine the body, where the Whistler has cut his own throat. There has been another murder in town and someone set it up to look like it was another Whistler victim, but it is established that the Whistler committed suicide well before the latest victim was killed. It would be very easy to simply write the Whistler off, but here we see why Dalgliesh is such an intriguing character they way he balances the stark detective’s eye for detail, against his own introspection.
“…He came to this neat box of an execution shed, imposing on his mind as if it were a memory, the picture of a skinny child lying supine on that same bed and watching through the high window the same single star while arranged on the chest of drawers with careful art were the trophies of his day: the tips in pennies and sixpences, the shells and coloured stones from the beach, the dried swathe of pustulated seaweed.”
Dalgliesh empathizes with this serial killer because he is able to understand what it must have been like as a boy, to grow up in this place. That the killer had been a child, a child who played on the beach and who stared out a window and probably had larger dreams of what he wanted from life than the reality that life gave him.
These are just snippets from an incredible piece of fiction, yes, “genre” fiction, but who said you can’t fill genre fiction with insight into life and into human nature.
P.D. James is now in retired, she is now 91 and penned her last Dalgliesh novel, “The Perfect Patient” when she was 88. She wrote a non-fiction book, “Talking About Detective Fiction” where she traces the roots of British detective fiction, discusses the essentials of what makes good detective stories and why we enjoy them so much. A must for any murder mystery writer or reader.
Thanks so much for stopping by. What is your favorite P.D. James book? How do you think Adam Dalgliesh holds up when compared to more modern fictional detectives? I’d love to hear from you.
NIce, Rachel! I enjoyed reading these excerpts. Thanks for sharing your passion for P.D. James with us. What an amazing woman, writing a novel at age 88! Wow!
Lynn, she also started writing about forensics back in the 1960’s. She was a bureaucrat in england, always wanted to be a writer but her husband was disabled. She finally decided that there was no more time to waste and got to work. Thanks for stopping by.
Great blog! Not only did I learn something new about this genre but also about your passion and influences. Keep ’em coming!
Jennifer, I’m so glad you found this helpful. I think the only way to grow as a writer (or a human for that matter) is to have something to strive for. I know I will NEVER be able to write like P.D. James (but then, she’ll never be able to write like me, but that’s another matter) but it is important to have people to emulate and use as pole stars along the way. Thanks for stopping by.
Wow still writing at 88. That’s what I want to be able to say.
It’s definitly good to always be learning about the craft of writing. James Scott Bell wrote in the beginning of his book “Plot and Stucture” how he believed writing couldn’t be taught and he gave up being a writer for a long time.
Mystery has never been my focus when it comes to writing. I admire people who can do it. I can’t (don’t want to maybe) to plan all those false leads and twists. I just write about people who try to deny their own feelings and try their best not to leave their comfort zone.
Asrai, thanks for stopping by. For me, mysteries are a great escape. When I’m in the hands of good story teller I know I can just go along for the ride, that I really don’t need to figure out “whodunnit” that it will be revealed. What I get to enjoy is how all the characters react and reveal their true nature when put in stressful situations. By the way, James Scott Bell will be one of three writing teachers at Story Masters, a three-day writing workshop held in Houston in November. Here’s a link if you are interested.
Unfortunatly I”m way too far from Houston. I wish though.
I saw on the news the other day that PD James is releasing a new book. The sequel to Jane Austen. http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-15023862
Asrai, I saw that too, thanks for the link. We are so lucky that she is still writing, at 91 no less. She is an inspiration. Thanks for stopping by.