By
Elena Santangelo
Watching
political ads this year has put me in a mood to discuss deception and
manipulation.
If
Agatha Christie had written campaign ads for Wendell Wilkie, FDR would never
have won in 1940. She was an absolute master at deceiving her readers. She'd
tell you almost right out who the murderer was in the first chapter, then have
a grand time strewing misleading clues and outright lies in your path. At the
denouement, her readers frantically flip back to the beginning, and, voila,
there's the main clue, now seeming to blink in neon light. A sore forehead is a
symptom of a Christie fan, because you can't help smacking yourself when she
tricks you.
Another
excellent study in the placement of clues is the movie "The Sixth
Sense." I can't say more without giving it away. If you saw it, you know
what I mean. If not, treat yourself. Put padding on your forehead first.
The
difference between mystery writers who can achieve the "Why didn't I see
that?" reaction and those who can't is sheer chutzpah. Many writers I know
are afraid to plant an obvious clue. Maybe they're thinking in terms of giving
the reader a nice puzzle to solve. I have nothing against puzzles. One of the
main reasons I buy a Sunday paper is for the crosswords and sudokus. (The
other? The comics.) And I have a closet full of jigsaw puzzles that I piece
together during the winter months.
Still,
as much as mystery readers love solving puzzles, they also love matching wits
with the detective. Hardcore mystery readers tend to be intelligent and savvy.
If we writers don't send our readers off after red herrings--if we don't come
right out and lie to divert attention--our sleuths may end up looking pretty
stupid.
But
unlike politicians, if we're going to deliberately mislead the reader, we have
to play fair. We have to show the solution or the path to the solution early
on. And frankly, once I plant that obvious clue, I have all the more fun being
deceptive through the rest of the story.
Learn
to lead a merry chase and your readers will love you. Be daring.
Don't
forget to vote. And don't believe anything you hear.
_______________________________________________________________
Elena Santangelois the author of the Twins Mystery Series and the Possessed Mystery Series,
including the novel BY BLOOD POSSESSED, which was nominated for an Agatha
Award. Her armchair companion to Agatha Christie's short stories, DAME AGATHA'S
SHORTS, won the Agatha for Best Nonfiction. She's also published numerous short
stories, and co-edited six anthologies of short fiction. Writing under E.A.
Santangelo, she's the author of YESTERDAY, TODAY AND FOREVER: The World War II
Journal of Joseph B. Chicco, a biography and history of life on a light cruiser in the South Pacific
in 1945. She's a proud founding member of Delaware Valley Sisters in Crime. You
can follow Elena at these links: Website:
www.elenasantangelo.com Amazon
Facebook: www.facebook.com/ElenaSantangeloBooks/
Twitter: twitter.com/santangeloelena Goodreads: www.goodreads.com/author/show/238087.Elena_Santangelo
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