Every day of our lives has a bit of mystery or intrigue in
it. The gas light is blinking in your
car. Will you make it to the gas station or have to call someone to either pick
you up or bring you gas? You're on your way home from work. What's for dinner?
Did you put meat out that morning or will it be something leftover from the
night before? Or you've been called to the boss' office. Are you getting a
raise or are you getting the boot?
For a writer each unique person we see becomes a puzzle or
mystery. We wonder about their occupation, their background, their family life.
We invent lives for them and eventually use them in a story.
It is these mysteries and our inquiring minds that bring
forth books.
My first published book, Marshal in Petticoats, was inspired by thoughts of—what if
an accident prone woman pretending to be a young man was made Marshal of a
small town? While the story is a historical western romance there is mystery
woven throughout the book. Is the Mayor really what he seems; is the hero a
hero or an outlaw? What happened in the hero's past? Will the heroine keep her
identity a secret when it matters most?
The first contemporary western, Perfectly Good Nanny, I wrote started after I heard
on the radio about a youngster who ordered items over the internet with their
parent's credit cards and the parents didn’t know until the items arrived at
their home. A mystery. My book started with a nanny showing up to start a job
and the ranch owner not having a clue why she was there. Mystery- Does he
let her stay or send her packing? Why did she pick a remote ranch to be a
nanny? Why does he not want anything to do with a woman? Why does he need a
nanny? All these mysteries are solved in the book.
I enjoy reading mysteries and I enjoy incorporating mystery
into the stories I write. My action adventure romances, Secrets of a Mayan Moon and Secrets of an Aztec Temple, have a lot of mystery and twists in them.
And to my great joy, I'm just about to write "the end" on my first book of a mystery series that I hope will win over mystery fans.
What was a book you read that wasn't categorized as a
mystery but it had elements of mystery within the pages?
1 comment:
think it was one of Kresley Cole's IAD books
bn100candg at hotmail dot com
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