Over the years writers have heard and read about the importance of reaching that phantom held fast in the minds of publishers, agents and booksellers: the average reader. You know the guy (I always think of the average reader as male though statistics suggest otherwise). He needs to be captured by the first sentence and must be propelled effortlessly through a compelling narrative. The writer must not linger too long over any detail as the average reader has many bids on his attention and needs to get on with it.
I never imagined that such a person existed. If such a person did exist, I thought, I certainly wouldn’t want to be in his company.
Reader, I married him.
An exchange about a book marked our first date.
“Have you read Julian Jaynes?” Bob asked.
“Do you mean The Origin of Consciousness in the Breakdown of the Bicameral Mind?”
The rest is domestic history.
But our discovery of each other’s literary tastes was not all skittles and beer. Early in our marriage I presented Bob with a mystery I had enjoyed very much, Robert Goddard’s Into the Blue. A while later, I found Bob reading. I don’t remember what it was but it wasn’t the Goddard.
“You didn’t like it?”
“Two pages of introspection and not a thing happened.”
I felt a cold chill. Could I have married a man who didn’t like mysteries?
I continued to buy the books I liked (my library is vast) and I watched what Bob picked out. I discovered that my husband is a great re-reader and he goes over favorite passages in a way I do not.
His favorites?
Dick Francis. Bob likes the way every word seems to serve to drive the plot forward. I’m tempted to say something here about galloping to the end but am resisting. Above all Francis does not blather. Mr. Francis was also a great favorite of Robin Hathaway’s and Bob and Robin enjoyed discussing their favorites. (Robin’s was Nerve; Bob has not committed to a favorite.)
Georges Simenon (the Maigret novels). Bob notes that Maigret is smart about people and focuses attention on those whose lives have largely been failures. He eschews forensics and relies on conversation. I like the fact that Maigret’s job allows him to spend a lot of time dropping into bars and drinking Calvados. Simenon does not blather.
Carl Hiaasen. You get a good mystery and serious issues are raised, but you’re laughing so hard you may not notice. Hiaasen’s madcap plots tend to blend together for me, but Bob actually remembers in which novel a particular plot twist or bit of business occurred. Hiaasen does not blather.
Elizabeth Peters (the Amelia Peabody mysteries). Bob once worked as an archaeologist and he admires Peters’ knowledge of Egypt and archaeological practices. He also enjoys her humor. I used to come home from mystery conferences with books set in the ancient world and Bob would say, “You get me these things, but they don’t really grab me.” I’ve pointed out to Bob that Peters, while she does not blather, is a touch more discursive than his usual favorites.
“Well, everybody goes on about something; you just have to like what they go on about.”
As I type, Bob is reading The Fifth Woman by Henning Mankell. This is most uncharacteristic as Bob is not much for Scandanavian brooding. “I do tolerate a lot in the Wallander novels that I wouldn’t normally put up with in other books,” he says.
So, what lessons should you draw from all of this?
They’re isn’t an average reader no matter what publishers, agents and booksellers imagine. But don’t blather unless you’re very funny or Swedish.
© 2013 Stephanie Patterson
Blog Archive
-
▼
2013
(129)
-
▼
April
(17)
- The End in Sight
- A Police Story: Bushwick Burning
- Some Time Among the Analysts
- Facebook and Me
- A Drink with the Hollywood Production Code
- Green-Wood: Where the Dead Go in Brooklyn
- A Police Story: Diary of a Dirty Cop
- Danger in the Depths of Manhattan
- What do you want to be when you grow up?
- Photo Essay: Evita's Clothes
- A Police Story: Spring 3100
- The Common Reader
- The King's Men
- The Historian Sleuth
- Everybody's Corrupt
- Mystery Writing in the Third Grade
- Marilyn Meredith's Rocky Bluff Characters
-
▼
April
(17)
Popular Posts
-
I find myself staring at the blank computer screen once again, with Friday on the way. I turn my eyeballs inward, seeking a topic to bloviat...
-
We need to talk. Before my thoughts on this subject solidify. On Facebook, two or three of my friends tend to post or share pictures eight...
-
I was a New York City policeman for 20 years: from 1967 to 1987, seminal years in the modern history of the NYPD, during which I rose from P...
-
I remain amazed what one can find when one begins researching a book. I have been digging around, looking for the history of East Africa i...
-
The greatest joy, for me, of being an active member of MWA/NY is the people I meet. Jerry is one of them. He is one of our few dramatists....
-
For the last week or so I've been deep into Ancestry.com, tracing the ancestors on my mother's side all the way back to the Great Mi...
-
You may have noticed, dear reader, that the Crime Writers’ Chronicle has started running ads. We decided to do this after conferring togethe...
-
Some people come into this world nicely dominant in their left brains and therefore neurologically prepared to spell well and find typos at ...
-
Words are unnecessary to tell the glory of Rome. The pictures below will give you a tiny taste. But I will tell you a story at the end--a...
-
Yesterday I listened to Julia describe how she lost her publisher as her second series mystery, COLD MOON HOME, was about to hit the streets...