The Stupid 365 Project, Day 42: Messages from Madison
November 12th, 2010
Last night I stayed up late, writing a first draft of the Thanksgiving story, so when I went to bed I didn’t even have a subject for this morning’s blog.
The Thanksgiving story, most of you will probably be happy to know, will only be one day long — it’ll begin and end on Thanksgiving Day. I should also say, well in advance, that it’s the dumbest Thanksgiving story ever written, so dumb that it’s not completely impossible that I’ll have second thoughts about it. But now that I’ve said out loud (so to speak) that there will be a Thanksgiving story, I’m committed to having one. So that’s progress. Of a kind.
Anyway, I went to bed with no topic for this morning, and all night long I had awful dreams. No monsters or scary houses or anything kinetic, but numb, static dreams of inaction and inertia, and I woke up a couple of times on the verge of despair. The details of the dreams had faded, but what remained was the sense of having been powerless to change anything, of having failed.
When I went downstairs this morning, my wife, Munyin, asked how I’d slept and I told her about the dreams. She said, “Maybe they’re messages from Madison.”
Well, how come she’s so smart?
Madison (last name Jefferson — her domineering father was a patriot) is the female protagonist of PULPED, the first Simeon Grist book in 16 years. Since Simeon is (for the first part of the book, anyway) stranded up in literary limbo, the half-imaginary hinterland to which series characters are sent when the last book in their series is pulped, someone on earth needs to solve the murder of Ferdy Carvalho, one of Simeon’s last readers. Characters up (or down — nobody knows) in limbo can see their readers on earth when a book in the series is open and being read, and Simeon is actually watching — as though he’s looking up from the page — when someone wraps a pair of very big hands around Ferdy’s neck and squeezes the life out of him.
So — with Simeon up there, participating only through the glimpses he’s catches when someone opens one of the six books in which he appears, someone down there needs to track Ferdy’s killer.
And that falls to Madison, who works in the used bookstore in Joshua Tree where Ferdy worked, who was the largely unwitting object of his affections, and who discovers the body. And, bang, just like that, I walked into the trap I’d set for myself, I was sentenced to write my least favorite kind of character in all detective fiction: the amateur sleuth.
I hate amateur sleuths. First, because there aren’t any. Amateur sleuths are about as common as amateur brain surgeons. For one thing, if people yielded frequently to the impulse to become an amateur sleuth, many of them would probably be dead in short order. This is the topic of a talk between the cop in the book, Detective Barnes, and Madison, when he first suspects she might be nosing around on her own.
“Maybe we’re not.” He raised an admonitory finger. “Here’s what I don’t want it to mean. I don’t want it to mean that you have aspirations to play amateur sleuth.”
“Of course, I’m not –”
“Breaking into a crime scene. Questioning witnesses. No amateur sleuthing on my patch. Clear?”
“Fine.” Madison knew she was good at icy, and she gave him the full arctic version.
“Forget what it says in the books Mr, Carvalho was pushing at you. Do you know how many actual amateur sleuths there are in the world?”
“It’s not of the slightest –”
“None. And you know why? Because the only real amateur sleuth is a dead amateur sleuth.”
(And then there’s a footnote leading to the bottom of the page, where the reader will find this data point:)
Vocational data from the 2010 Census — Amateur sleuths : zero. Dead amateur sleuths: 217
But still, mortality rate aside, why would any sane person become an amateur sleuth? This question pushed me into writing a young woman who is agonizingly conscious that she’s a passive people-pleaser, someone whose approach to life so far has been to go where she’s been kicked, who came to Joshua Tree in the first place because she fell for a totally useless man, and who remains there out of the inertia that’s been her defining characteristic as long as she can remember, a woman who gets hit on the Achilles tendon every day by her screen door when she comes home and can’t be troubled to fix it.
But she’s entering a new stage, in which she is consciously questioning herself, about pretty much everything. Here she is, coming home the day she finds Ferdy’s body. The screen door has already hit her Achilles tendon, prompting her to swear aloud.
Madison said a word of which her father heartily disapproved. Then she shouldered the front door open and scooted through it before the screen door could attack again.
She stood there, centered in the rectangle of yellow desert sunlight falling through the door, feeling the weight and heat of it on her shoulders, and surveyed her once-tidy living room. But what she was thinking was, Poor Ferdy.
A quick internal hyp-check rated the thought as 70% hypocrisy and 30% sincere. But, she thought, since she hadn’t said it out loud, and since there wasn’t anyone around to hear it even if she had, it wasn’t real hypocrisy. It was faux-hypocrisy, not meant to fool anyone. Except herself, she thought, observing herself thinking, except herself.
“I am spending too much time alone,” Madison said out loud.’
And she is, too. Way too much. And Ferdy’s death — and her dawning awareness that he’d been sweet on her while she was languishing over the worthless blue-eyed cowboy who’d brought her here in the first place — gradually leads her to the conviction that she can’t sidestep Ferdy’s death, especially since she doesn’t respect Detective Barnes. That, in fact, it might be the event that would take her out of her passivity.
The temperature in the room had dropped into double digits, and she went to the cluttered couch, cleared a Madison-size space, and sat, the book on her lap. It definitely did not exert the solid, reassuring pressure of the Balzac she was reading in the bedroom. The evening yawned in front of her, as featureless as the desert on the other side of her windows. Dinner presented itself as one time-consuming possibility, except that she’d overeaten at lunch and felt like her entire lunch, plus the lunchbox she’d carried it in when she was a child, were lodged sideways, just below her breastbone. The Fatal Lunch. She’d turned the shop over to Ferdy at the usual time – Poor Ferdy – and gone to the Carousel, as usual, for the usual lunch, hoping, as usual, that she wouldn’t run into Jake there, and she hadn’t, and that had upset her so much that she’d had a piece of peach pie.
That’s right, she thought, watching herself think it, I didn’t want to see Jake and I didn’t and the disappointment at not seeing the person I didn’t want to see made me overeat. There must be a medical name for this condition. Maybe it’s something new. Maybe it’ll be called Madison’s Dementia. Maybe I’ll be famous. I’ll have a reality show with other people who have a disease named after them. We could call it “Sick and Famous.”
Other people, she thought, real people, didn’t worry about how to fill their evenings. Other people didn’t have enough time left over from the fascinating, all-engaging, world-changing things they did. They leaped up at the last moment and ate standing at the sink, their minds still engaged in something bigger and more interesting than they were. Or than she was, at any rate. She gazed ahead into time, thinking it was probably straight but hoping it was actually curved so that the thing that was coming toward her, the thing that would change everything, that would broaden and enrich her life, was just around the bend, just barely out of sight. Coming into view any minute now.
Without even looking down, she opened the book.
The book is Skin Deep, and Madison is on the cusp of committing to becoming an amateur sleuth.
Everything you just read is first-draft and I have no idea how much of it will appear in the book, if I ever finish the book. But Munyin was right — for the past few days, Madison has been languishing unwritten, just at the moment she’d finally put her foot down. So today belongs to her, and I have to say this: even if none of this winds up in the final draft, I’m having a wonderful time writing it.
|
This entry was posted on Friday, November 12th, 2010 at 12:03 pm and is filed under All Blogs. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.
14 Responses to “The Stupid 365 Project, Day 42: Messages from Madison” -
Suzanna Says:
November 12th, 2010 at 12:36 pm
Tim, I find Madison very intriguing, and I love that you are writing another female character who has her limitations but is working on them so to speak. No real amateur sleuths, I ask somewhat kiddingly? But what about Nancy Drew? The Hardy Boys? I know they are not real but they were amateur sleuths.
-
EverettK Says:
November 12th, 2010 at 1:49 pm
It sounds like you’ve entered the Twilight Zone, Tim, leaping from straight mystery/adventure into fantasy. Not that I have a problem with that, it just caught me a little off-guard, since the other Simeon books have been firmly grounded in L.A. fantasy land. Unless, of course, your lead-in about Simeon being stranded in limbo was just your literary device for the purposes of this blog. (You would never lie to us, right. Right?)
As you say, the above is first draft, but I LIKE the direction it’s going. I WANT to know more about Madison, what her reading of Skin Deep brings forth, and I want to watch her collision with the stern Detective Barnes. The fact that these short snippets have already started to suck me in is a good indicator!
Of course, one must remember that ALL sleuths were amateurs at one point, even Simeon…
-
Lil Gluckstern Says:
November 12th, 2010 at 1:51 pm
I like Madison, her self deprecatory sense of humor, and her (hinted at) sense of fatalism. If you are having fun writing it this, think of what your readers will do. By condemning amateur sleuths, you have consigned a whole ton of books to the devil, so this Madison book may be your just desserts. Am I mixing all kinds of metaphors here? Anyway, a lot of this requires a lot of suspense your disbelief, and I am prepared to do just that.
-
Timothy Hallinan Says:
November 12th, 2010 at 2:05 pm
Thanks Suzie. I think — to the extent that I know anything about what will happen in the book — that by the time Simeon finds his way down to give her a hand, she won’t need one. She’s changing every time she does something she’s afraid to do and lives through it. And I know she’s female (surprise! I wasn’t planning that at all) but there’s a lot of me in her — that whole thought-bound, over-analytical thing.
-
Timothy Hallinan Says:
November 12th, 2010 at 6:40 pm
Hi, Everett, Hi, Lil –Yes, this one is different, with an overlay of fantasy, since Simeon is aware of the fact that he’s a fictional character and there’s a barrier of sorts between fictional characters and the real world. But at the center is a good old-fashioned murder, one that will have to be solved in order to work out all the other story strands, of which there are far too many at the moment.
I’m amazed that Madison has come to me as she is, because I feel about her the way I feel about Miaow in the Poke books — I know everything she’s thinking and pretty much everything she’ll say. She’s tremendous fun to write.
And I know, Lil — lots of people love amateur sleuths. I’m just not one of them. One of the funny things about the mystery/thriller limbo where Simeon lives now is that it’s inhabited by every kind of detective there is; in fact, his primary ally in the book is a woman who was featured in a series of cooking mysteries with a paranormal overlay, and Simeon, who is nothing if not a cynic, has to put up with all of it because, after all, it was all true in the world of Lobelia’s books, so Lobelia brings it all with her even when she visits Simeon in his Topanga shack.
I am WAAAAAYYYYYYYYY over my head.
-
EverettK Says:
November 12th, 2010 at 7:12 pm
This sounds like it’s going to be FUN!
-
Laren Bright Says:
November 12th, 2010 at 9:31 pm
The purple type made me remember why I enjoyed the Simeon books so much.
-
Timothy Hallinan Says:
November 12th, 2010 at 10:04 pm
Very funny, Laren — made Munyin laugh out loud.
If it isn’t fun, Everett, it’s going to be massively embarrassing.
-
Larissa Says:
November 15th, 2010 at 8:57 am
Reading your first draft makes me want to start writing again…and I say this because I can see that it’s a first draft-not in the “this is crap” way (never, never, never!!!) but I can get a sense of feeling your way around a little bit. The idea of Madison is obviously very well formed by the way that she acts and the little things that she does-they seem natural-and it’s awesome (again, as always) that you’re willing to post the first draft stuff…great reminder that they really can be fun to write…:D
-
Timothy Hallinan Says:
November 17th, 2010 at 12:13 pm
Thank you, Riss, and sorry it took so long to get back here the Ixnaycrat and suicide responses were overwhelming although I’m grateful for them. What I like about what I’m doing is that it’s the first time I’ve felt free to move in and out of a character’s consciousness like that — if I’d done it a few years ago, I would have torn it up. And if I hadn’t written all the women in THE QUEEN OF PATPONG, Madison would be a guy, and I don’t think it would work at all.
This is actually enormous fun to write — so much so that I find myself avoiding scenes in which she appears with other characters, where I’d have to do dialog. This is very unusual, because normally I’m racing through narrative, trying to get to the dialog. Oh, well, different pleasures for different books.
-
LC Evans Says:
November 17th, 2010 at 12:32 pm
Timothy,
This is very funny. I have an amateur sleuth in my Leigh McRae horse mystery series and I agree with you. No real human in their right mind would be one, but they are such fun to write. I mean, so over the top. Since the amateur sleuth doesn’t exist, I’m free to put Leigh McRae and her sidekick Sammi into all kinds of outlandish situations.
-
Timothy Hallinan Says:
November 17th, 2010 at 4:14 pm
Thank you, LC, for not taking offense. The way the book is shaping up, this is going to be a transformational experience for Madison, in ways she doesn’t expect at all. I think it’s going to be hard let go of her when the book is done.
-
Pat Browning Says:
November 20th, 2010 at 12:39 pm
Love it, love it, love it — as is. Do I make myself perfectly clear? This one has best-seller written all over it. Full speed ahead.
Pat Browning
Author of ABSINTHE OF MALICE,
featuring another one of those damned amateur sleuths
-
Timothy Hallinan Says:
November 20th, 2010 at 2:42 pm
Thank you, PAT!!!! High praise from the author of s seriously good amateur sleuth book with the year’s best title: ABSINTHE OF MALICE, now selling very well for the Kindle.
|
Share with your friends: |