WHAT IS THE BEST WAY TO OPEN A MYSTERY
NOVEL?
Writers of mysteries who struggle to find the
best way to open their books will find two great
ideas in the opening two paragraphs of Gideon
Defoe’s inspired and very funny novel The Pirates!
In an adventure with the Romantics or Prometheus
versus a Terrible Fungus (2012):
“The most exciting way to start an adventure,”
said the albino pirate “would be to open in the
sinister lair of the International Crime League,
eavesdropping as they plotted their most audacious
crime yet –the theft of the Queen’s brain!”
“That’s ridiculous,” said the pirate with gout.
“The most exciting way to start an adventure would be
to wake up inside a room, next to a dead boy, two pieces
of coal, and an unexplained carrot – but there’s apparently
no way in or out of the room!:
**
THE FINEST FORM OF LITERATURE
There is no finer form of fiction than the mystery.
It has structure, a story line and a sense of place
and pace. It is the one genre where the reader and
the writer are pitted against each other. Readers
don’t want to guess the ending, but they don’t want
to be so baffled that annoys them. Reading mysteries
is a way for people to deal with the crime they see
in their newspapers, or television or in their daily
lives, in a safe impersonal way.”
Sue Grafton in Writer’s Digest, January1991
**
"CONSTABULARY NOTES FROM ALL OVER
(from the Vincenne, Indiana Sun-Commercial)
John Laue, 410 Ramsey Road, told police Monday the
Fort Sackville Real Estate warehouse on State Street
was broken into Saturday night. A jar of pickles
was opened.’
The New Yorker (May 18, 1987)
**
THE CRIME AGAINST MARK TWAIN'S BOOK
“Huckleberry Finn was published first in England
at least in part because a horrified printer discovered
after thousands of copies of the book had been run
off that someone had made an indecent addition to a
picture of one of the male characters. The offending
page had to be cut out by hand and replaced in all
the bound copies. The 5,000 copies for Great Britain
were ready for distribution on the original target date, December 1884, while the 30,000 copies for the United
States were not available until February 1885. A $500
reward was offered by the publisher for the culprit –
thought to be a disgruntled employee. But he was never
found.”
Edward Ziegler. "Huckleberry Finn at 100" in
Reader’s Digest (February 1985)
**
WAS JAMES BOND BASED UPON A REAL PERSON?
“ Some readers believe that Ian Fleming based
James Bond character on a Yugoslavian man who
worked as a British agent infiltrating the Nazi
Secret Service – Dusko Popov (see Popov’s book
Spy/Counter Spy—1934). Popov writes: “I’m told
that Ian Fleming said he based his character
James Bond to some degree on me and my experiences.
As for me, I rather doubt that a Bond in the flesh
would have survived more than forty-eight hours as
an espionage agent. Fleming and I did rub shoulders
in Lisbon and a few days before I took the clipper
for the States he did follow me about.”
Philip Ward.A Dictionary of Common Fallacies (Boston:
The Atlantic Press, 1978)
**
TWO PUNNING MYSTERY NOVEL TITLES
1. Charles A. Goodrum. A Dewey Decimated (1973)
2. Charles A. Goodrum. The Best Cellar (1983)
**
ON THE NAMES OF CHARACTERS FOUND IN THE POPULAR
BOARD GAME CLUE
“In international versions of Clue, the colorful cast
can look quite different from what we’re used to in
the U.S. version. Professor Plum was originally called
Dr. Orange in Spain. Mr.Green goes by Chef Lettuce in
Chile. Mrs. Peacock is Mrs. Purple in Brazil and Mrs.
Periwinkle in France, and in Switzerland, she’s Captain
Blue, a man.”
Emily Goodman. “Boredom-Busting Facts About Board Games” in Reader’s Digest (Large Print) (December 2021 + January 2022)
**
ON RESPECTING ONE'S PROFESSION
“A burglar who respects his art always takes his
Time before taking anything else.”
O’Henry in Make the Whole World Kind (1911)
**
ON GEORGES SIMENON’S WORKING HABITS
“…he still maintains the working habits of a
one man assembly line. Up at 6:30 A.M. , with
a pot of coffee at his side, he types a 20 page
chapter in 2 l/2 hours, complete a twelve
chapter novel (common in France) in twelve
days. (His translation pace: three to six months).
Explains Simenon in halting English “I write
Fast because I have not zee brains to write
Slow.”
Time (July 9, 1951)
**
A FOR EFFORT
In Downey, California, a prowler ignored the
money in the local high school safe, took only
the 120 filled out report cards.
Miscellany Time (July 9 1951)
CAUTION
In Johnny Eager,
Robert Taylor tells Lana Turner:
“There ‘re lot of women in this town,’
And I picked the most dangerous one.”
What’s that got to do with me,
You might ask. O.K.
Look at this way.
There are a lot of poems in this world,
& you picked the most dangerous one.
Louis Phillips
Well-done (as usual). The Simenon quote reminds me of a quote that has been attributed to various writers: “If I had had more time, I would have written you a shorter letter.” Keep up the good work.
Thank you, Dear Louis and Merry Christmas!Love,April
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The O’Henry and Simenon quotes are gems just waiting to be stolen. Thanks!
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Well-done (as usual). The Simenon quote reminds me of a quote that has been attributed to various writers: “If I had had more time, I would have written you a shorter letter.” Keep up the good work.
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