By Catherine Dilts
I’m anxious to start writing a new series. It’s been on my
mind for a couple of years now, and darn it, I want to start writing the books.
Instead, I am carefully outlining books one through three.
This is taking far longer than I expected. I know the beginning and the end.
What’s the holdup?
I’ve been struggling to find the right tone. So much depends
on exactly what type of story I envision. When I began veering into a darker
telling of my tale, it felt wrong.
| Collins Cemetery in Willow Lake, South Dakota |
Was I failing to be true to myself?
Most of my novels and short stories have a cozy mystery
tone. What does that mean? The generally accepted elements defining a cozy are:
an amateur sleuth mystery set in a small community. There is no on-stage
violence or sex. The tone is light. There may be humor. If an animal companion
is involved, it will be featured on the book cover. The ending is reliably
happy. The mystery is solved. The bad guys or girls will receive their just
punishments.
Why would I veer away from such a comfortably optimistic
universe?
Insecurity. Cozy mystery authors don’t receive the same
respect in the literary world as thriller authors. Like romance authors (the ever-enduring
most-read fiction genre), people writing cozy mysteries sometimes suffer from
insecurity. Am I really an accomplished author when I don’t receive the
recognition of other genres?
What’s keeping me from writing in a sub-genre getting more
respect? Or stepping out of mystery genres entirely, and tackling a top-shelf
women’s fiction series, or literary crossover?
| South Dakota cornfield |
You might think writers creating bright, happy worlds are living charmed lives. You would be wrong. Sometimes, creating a safe community (aside from the occasional murder) is the writer’s attempt to find a safe space in fiction that doesn’t exist in her reality. Solving the crime at the end of the story is a way to bring order to a chaotic and frightening world.
Not that I believe writers in other genres live charmed
lives, and seek adventure through their fiction. Not at all. I suspect some
thriller and horror authors embrace their worlds as a way to kill the demons in
their real lives.
The basis of most cozy mysteries is that there will be light
after the dark, and the dark won’t be too scary or oppressive. Edge-of-your-seat
tense, but not lie-awake-at-night terrifying. Our own personal realities are
likely much harsher. If I’m guilty of wanting to escape reality, I embrace that
charge, along with the millions of readers hoping to disappear into an
uplifting tale for a few hours.
Right now, I’m reading a very light series, Annie’s Museum
of Mysteries. The lives of the characters may be a touch unrealistic, but I
treasure the simplicity of their world. I know what I’m going to get, and it’s
going to be fun.
During the outlining phase of my new project, I decided that
I don’t want to turn my small town into a horror show of blood and despair. I
want a safe harbor from scary reality. The trilogy may not fit the cozy mystery
category precisely, but it will have that feel.
I need to stay true to myself and my writing voice.












