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| Home > About Minette > Q & A with Minette | ||||||||||||||||||
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Minette answers
your questions... Minette is always happy to answer specific questions that her books raise. Now, some of the more frequently asked questions will be found on the FAQ page. However, we know Minette's fans like a challenge, so we encourage you to send in questions that dig a little deeper -- Minette will answer as many as she can! We will update this section frequently, so please check back to see if we've included your question! .
*** Q. For an article in Crime Time, Barry Forshaw asked Minette: why are women so conspicuously good at writing crime fiction? And why do so many women read it? A. Before I knew anything about P D James, I read her books thinking she was a man. I really think the writer's personality can be androgynous. And in my own book The Echo, I had some welcome compliments on my use of the male protagonists. But then, I live with a husband and two sons, so male thinking is very much a part of my life - and shouldn't a good writer be constantly observing people, whatever their sex? In America, people often say to me it's amazing how well women are doing in the British crime novel, so this is seen to be a geographical thing as much as anything else. It should also be remembered that there was a time when male writers couldn't get published in Britain, so great was the grip of the three main female crime writers: Christie, Marsh and Sayers. So whichever sex is doing well, the success of crime writers is both a temporal and a geographical thing. *** Emotionally damaged characters A. Dear Samantha: Thank you for this. I believe we are all flawed in different ways. Most of us disguise it well, but at times of crisis our flaws begin to show. Because violent death – even to a bystander – is deeply appalling and often frightening, the cracks in a personality will show fairly quickly. In terms of my novels (Ros in The Sculptress, Mrs Ranelagh in The Shape of Snakes or Jonathan in Disordered Minds), it is the emotional damage these protagonists have suffered that draws them into championing someone else's cause. Not only do they have an understanding of what the other person has suffered, but it forces them to put their own circumstances into perspective. It’s the old saying, there’s always someone worse off than you!
***
Themes A. Dear Amie: It sounds an interesting paper! I write about and explore the different forms of prejudice in modern society. This has led me to use real social issues as a backdrop to some of the stories – e.g. the Stephen Lawrence murder in The Shape of Snakes and, more recently, the war in Iraq in Disordered Minds. I hope I'm a voice for women, principally in the strength that I give to my female characters and in the issues that I write about. Watch out for my new book The Devil's Feather, which centres entirely on the dangers women face when the moral bases of society are destroyed by war. *** US
vs UK writing styles A. Dear Paul: I'm
honoured that you've chosen The Sculptress for your independent
study unit, and I hope the following answers will help you with your essay.
In simple terms, a Brit is more likely to be murdered by someone who professes
to love them than they are by a stranger. I believe it's a lower figure
in the US - you'll have to do some research - with something
like 25% of murders being committed by strangers - which is why serial
killer thrillers/gangland thrillers tend to work better there than they
do here. *** Race -- Rosemarie A. Dear Rosemarie: All my books deal with different kinds of prejudice, so it was inevitable that I would write one about racism. That book was The Shape of Snakes. It was followed by Acid Row, which has a rather splendid black character, Jimmy, as one of the heroes. I chose him to balance the somewhat negative image of Annie Butts in The Shape of Snakes, whom I painted throughout as a victim. Fox Evil has no black characters but because racism isn't always a clear-cut issue, I returned to it in Disordered Minds where Jonathan, half-Jamaican/half-Chinese, is more racist against blacks than most white people. So, in answer to your question, my choice of colour for characters is deliberate! *** Homosexuality -- Chris A. Dear Chris: Thank
you so much for this. I am sincerely flattered to be your favourite author
and hope you will continue to enjoy my books. As you clearly appreciate,
I write about groups/individuals who are/have been marginalised by the
rest of society, and this doesn't always make pleasant reading for people
who identify with those groups since I try to show the prejudice and ignorance
that surrounds them. *** Novella -- Gene, in the US
A. Dear Gene: The Tinder Box is the only crime novella I've written, and it was commissioned for the Dutch 'Bookweek'. During that week, one author's novella is given away with every purchase of books throughout Holland. It's an honour to be asked to do it and very valuable in terms of onward sales of the author's other books. "English Autumn - American Fall" is the only crime short story I've written and was commissioned by Mike Ripley and Maxim Jakobowski, two good friends of mine, for a "First Blood" anthology in England. I had many romantic novellas and short stories published when I was in my twenties, but all under pseudonyms that I refuse to reveal! This is not because I'm ashamed of them, but because I don't want publishers to cheat my readers by using my crime-writing 'name' to publish a genre they may not like or feel comfortable with. [Note: The Tinder Box has now been re-published in England.]
*** TV
adaptations -- Robert, in the UK A. Dear Robert: Acid
Row is currently under production with Company Pictures for a
TV/video film, but I'm rather more picky now about who adapts them. It's
the privilege of being an established author. As a raw novice, I was thrilled
that anyone was prepared to give me free advertising. Now I'm a little
more selective. *** Q. Firstly, thank you so much for your superb books. They are not only great reads but, especially recently, they have been incredibly intelligent studies of race, politics and the media. I notice that this element of your books has been much more prevalent from The Shape of Snakes onwards (although it has always been there) and wonder if it was a conscious decision on your part to become more political. Did editors, publishers etc. encourage you to take the political elements out of your early books or have events in your life caused you to want to write about these issues? -- Neil, in the UK
A. Dear Neil: Thank you. It's grand to meet a reader who knows my books as well as you obviously do! I think the novels appear to have become more politically overt because I decided to refer to real cases/events from The Shape of Snakes onwards. It was a conscious decision to shift the emphasis towards stronger realism, and I'm delighted that your letter suggests it works. However, as you say, the themes of prejudice, social alienation, dysfunction, miscarriage of justice, abuse etc are as clear in the earlier ones as they are in the later. One thing I can certainly reassure you about is that the only way publishers censor political references in books is not to publish them at all! *** Q. Would you ever get political in your novels? -- Robert, in the UK
A. Dear Robert: All my books are political or sociological, although it's less obvious in the early ones. Would I like to write a political thriller? Oh, yes! But it would be about futuristic anarchy and the overthrow of complacent, established governments who think they're practising democracy in a world where everyone has access to email or a telephone - and can express their preferences. But are my readers ready for that!? *** Q.
I live in the general area (near Southampton) where you set all your
plots and visit Dorset and the Purbecks a lot walking the cliff tops regularly,
so have no problem identifying most of your 'changed' place names. -- Andy, in the UK
A. Dear Andy: I can't remember changing names
in any of the books, although I certainly create imaginary places within
real settings. For example, Shenstead valley in Fox Evil,
which cuts through the Ridgeway somewhere between Dorchester and Wareham
in Dorset. Clearly this valley couldn't exist without a major river running
through it, since the Ridgeway is a prehistoric fold of land, but the
imaginary idea makes a colourful backdrop to the story.
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