The truth is that unlike
so many of my fellow authors out there, I had never in my life planned on
writing a book. I never though about a
career in writing and I never spent any time thinking up stories or developing
characters in my head that I would one day want to write about. My submersion into the world of books -
writing that is - came out of a dream I had back in 2007.
Now please allow me to
clarify. I’ve been an insomniac for many
years - something that actually started during my days as a criminal behaviour
psychologist back in the USA - I don’t have a problem falling asleep. My problem is staying asleep. I usually fall asleep quite quickly and on a
good day I will stay that way for an hour, maybe two, before waking up for the
first time during the night. From then
on it’s stop/start traffic all the way to the morning - sleep for three
quarters of an hour, wake up for five minutes (if I’m lucky) - sleep for an
hour, wake up for another five minutes - and so on. It’s quite a torturous and exhausting process,
believe me. There are rare occasions
when I manage to stay asleep for more than three hours straight, and it was
during one of these rare, uninterrupted sleepfull nights that I had this quite
bizarre and odd dream. One of the
reasons that made it so unusual was the fact that the dream played out in my
head like a plausible story, with a beginning, a middle and an end. For the record, I’d like state that my dreams
are never that coherent. Now, when
considering that I have become a crime thriller writer, here is odd part number
one – the story I dreamt about that night was not a crime thriller story, far
from it actually.
Odd part number two - in
the morning I could recall all of it - and I mean all of it – which is something
else that rarely happens to me.
The fact that I could
recall my dream in its entirety, kind of made me wonder, so as for nothing more
than just “conversation” topic, I mentioned it to my girlfriend at the
time. She was obviously intrigued and
asked me to tell her the story in my dream, which I did. It took me about ten minutes to run her
through the whole story, and maybe I should call this - “odd part number three”
– but the story didn’t bore her at all, on the contrary, it made her look at me
and say - ‘You know what, Chris? You
should write that story down. It’s a
good story. And I really like the twist
at the end.’
Odd part number four – my
reply to her was - ‘You know what? I think I will.’ The reason why I called this “odd part number
four” was because the reply came from someone who had zero experience in
writing. I mean, I had never even
written a short story in my life.
Odd part number five – the
next morning, against all odds, I stayed true to my word. I actually sat at my computer and began
writing the first chapter to this bizarre story I had dreamt about the night
before. I spent the entire day at it and
once I finally got to the end of that first chapter, a new thought came to me –
‘This is kind of crazy. Never in my life
had I contemplated the idea of writing a book, or even a short story for that
matter, but If I’m going to put time and effort into doing such a thing, due to
my background in Criminal Behaviour Psychology, I could probably come up with a
much more interesting plot for a psychological thriller than I could for any
other genre.’
I had finally started
thinking logically.
So, with my brain now
awake at last, I decided that instead of moving onto chapter two of the bizarre
dream story, I would put that first chapter aside and just as a trial, I would
try to write an opening chapter for a crime thriller story, or novel, or
whatever it was that I was doing. Let me
add here that unlike the story in my dream, I had no plot in my head whatsoever
for a crime thriller story. I simply tried
to think of something that I thought it would make a good opening for a crime
book, and I was right, because that was when my past as a criminal behaviour
psychologist came into play.
The first thing that
happened as I sat in my room, trying to come up with an opening chapter for a
crime thriller story, was that my memory took me straight back to my days as a
criminal psychologist. Every time I
needed to describe a crime scene, or the modus operandi of a murder, or the
signature of a killer, or the thought process of an investigator – basically
anything and everything to do with a murder and the process of its
investigation – my memory got utterly overwhelmed by images, reports,
conversations, locations, appearances, everything... even the undeniable smell
and the awful feeling one gets as he/she enters a crime scene.
At first I found it almost
painful, because to be honest, I didn’t really wanted to be taken back to any
of that, but I very soon realised that those memories filled my story with authenticity.
I spent another whole day
working on that first chapter.
The next day I gave both
chapters to my girlfriend and asked her to give me her truthful opinion.
‘I’m not very much into
detective stories,’ she said, after reading both chapters. ‘But I must admit that the crime thriller
chapter is a lot more exciting than the other one, I really like it.’
Odd part number six – I actually
kept on going – page after page, chapter after chapter. I decided very early that I wanted to include
several insights into the field of criminal behaviour psychology into the novel
I was writing, but instead of creating a separate criminal psychologist
character, I decided to bundle everything together into one single character,
who became the main detective in my novels – Robert Hunter. He is an ex- criminal psychologist who
decided that studying the minds of criminals wasn’t enough. He wanted to go after them himself.
Hunter’s character opened
the door for me to be able to bring criminal behaviour psychology into my
stories, which I believe is one of the reasons why my novels are so well
received not only in the UK, but in so many different countries.
More information about Chris Carter and his books can be found on his website.
2 comments:
Big fan. But I'd like to know where you got your experience as a profiler before becoming an author, and, if it's not too much to ask, maybe share with me a couple of the cases you worked on, if only just a brief description. Thanks, and keep up the good work.
great
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