Today’s guest blog is by Peter Swanson. He is the author of two books The Girl with the Clock Heart and The
Kind Worth Killing. His novel The Girl With a Clock Heart was named
one of the best crime books of 2014 by the Boston Globe and the
Independent. The Kind Worth Killing has
also been optioned for film.
All books start with What If questions. At least mine do, and
I assume that other writers use this same all-important question. And it’s not
just that What If questions start the
whole ball rolling, they also keep the ball rolling. I need to keep asking them
to myself all through the process, because, even if you think you know where
the story is going, it’s nice to challenge those assumptions.
In my new book, The Kind Worth Killing, the What
If question that started it all, was: What if a man and woman met on a
plane, and decided to tell each other their darkest secrets? That led to an
immediate second What If question: What if the man confessed to the woman that
he wanted to murder his wife?
Of course, in reality, this would
probably be the end of the story. The woman would quietly ask the flight
attendant if there were any other available seats on the plane, and then she
would promptly move. Maybe, after the plane landed, the man would find the
woman and insist that, of course, he was just kidding, had too many gin and
tonics, etcetera. End of book.
But I was writing fiction, so the second
What If question led to a third What If question, and the one that
shaped the book. What if the woman, hearing that the man wants to murder his
wife, offers to help? That became my premise.
I decided that there should be two
narrators, a man named Ted and a woman named Lily,
that reveal the story in
back-and-forth chapters. Despite this structure, I still thought of Ted as
being my main character, but as soon as I started to imagine Lily’s backstory,
and to have her recount it in her chapters, Lily began to wrestle the novel
away from Ted.
This became Lily’s book, for better or
for worse. I didn’t know exactly where it was heading, but I did know that Lily
was the star, and then I brought in a few more narrators in order to tell the
parts of the story that didn’t involve either Ted and Lily. And all along, I
kept asking myself those What If questions. They get easier as the books goes
along, or they should, because if the characters are starting to take on a life
of their own, then the What Ifs get simpler. You just ask your characters what
they would do next, and if you’ve trained them well, they’ll tell you.
THE KIND WORTH KILLING by Peter Swanson is out now (£14.99, Faber & Faber)
More information about Peter Swanson and his writing can be found on
his website or read his blog Armchair
Audience. You can also follow him on
Twitter @PeterSwanson3 or find him on Facebook.
No comments:
Post a Comment