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HANK PHILLIPPI RYAN: It happens at every event I attend--someone in the audience asks: What book are you reading? Why is this such a difficult question? My mind instantly goes blank, and I struggle to come up with an answer. It's--ridiculous, because I am reading all the time.
Sometimes I even plan for it. I think, okay, if one asks, I will say....and then my mind wanders, and I never decide. And then... they ask. Usually, though, I realize what I'm reading is one of two things. A non-fiction true crime or the like. Or a psychological thriller.
Do you have an instant answer for this?
And what if someone said--why do you read what you read? AH. Now there's a question. Luckily, author Tracey Phillips (whose terrific BEST KEPT SECRETS is brand new!) is here to help us think about that.
Do you have an instant answer for this?
And what if someone said--why do you read what you read? AH. Now there's a question. Luckily, author Tracey Phillips (whose terrific BEST KEPT SECRETS is brand new!) is here to help us think about that.
As your
gaze skims the words on the page, you curl into yourself. Elbows tuck and your
shoulders hunch. Your heart rate climbs from adagio to vivace. A fingernail
sneaks between your teeth and you work it till you come to the end of the
chapter and. . . “No!” You can’t stop there, the author’s left another
cliffhanger!
“Why do
so many women read thrillers?” A friend asked me during a discussion of my
debut novel: Best
Kept Secrets—released on October 8th by Crooked Lane Books. She
asked, “Why are thrillers and suspense novels so popular? Why do women in
particular read and watch so much crime fiction and psychological suspense? And
why did you write a suspense/thriller?”
Her
questions had merit. My good friend, bless her heart, has anxiety. I mean, my
little panic attacks pale in comparison to her debilitating ones. Nothing to
laugh at, my friend internalizes her fears to a terrifying degree. She won’t—can’t—read
Best Kept Secrets or she’ll not sleep for a week. No wonder she needed
answers.
Everyone
loves the feeling of a love story. Some crave it. Maybe it replaces the hole in
their heart leftover from that lover who jilted them. Maybe it fills a need to
be loved. Or maybe readers just need the happily-ever-after. Romance has always
been the most popular genre worldwide. For years it has also been the
best-selling genre.
I’m no
psychologist, but I’ve read that the act of falling in love releases feel-good
hormones in our bodies. And don’t we all want to feel good? In reading romance,
we live vicariously through the characters and we fall in love again. And
again. And it feels good!
So tell
me why according to Bookriot.com,
in 2015 mystery/suspense outsold every other genre, including romance. And according
to the Writing
Cooperative, in 2017 crime fiction and suspense became the top genre in the
U.S. (Romance was not among the categories in their study.)
Because
we love to be thrilled! We love to be sitting on the edge of our seat anticipating
the next event. We love it so much, that. . .
Women
Buy More Fiction Than Men
In
2017, Sophie Gilbert wrote an article for the Atlantic called Why
Men Pretend to be Women to Sell Thrillers. She states that women
dominate the fiction market in reading (women book-buyers represent 60%
of the market) and in writing. She says that some male writers have chosen
to publish with a female pseudonym because women want to read what women have
written. Terrence Rafferty says, “women
are writing the best crime novels”. Female writers “tell it like it is” rather
than fluff it up. This point of view is perhaps what female readers have been
craving all along.
Of
course, women don’t write better; women write differently than men. Women say
it from their perspective. We dig deeply into the emotions of the moment and we
feel their feelings. Is that to say we tell it from the perspective of fear and
anxiety?
Perhaps.
I recently got swept away by Lisa Gardner’s Find Her. She writes her
victims and female heroines with such a striking array of senses that I
couldn’t put it down.
What Does
the Darkness Cost Us?
We love
an unreliable protagonist like Paula Hawkins’ Rachel in Girl on the Train.
In an interview with The Guardian, Hawkins
said, “Men tend to be attacked by strangers, women tend to be attacked by
people they know.” This raises the stakes for us. It drives my imagination to
places I’d rather not go. But as Hawkins said, “Most women…are made to think about themselves in terms of
what they should be doing to prevent violence happening to them.”
Perhaps
in reading a good thriller, we live vicariously through the protagonist (yes,
just like in romance) and then when s/he overcomes their fear, when the
criminal is caught and the tension successfully abated, we find some release of
our own.
Why I Write
Psychological Suspense:
Psychological
suspense is my favorite genre. In my debut novel, Best Kept Secrets, Detective Jewell
is obsessed with her past. She can’t escape it. I think it’s what makes her human.
Her inability to let it go is what drives her to finally solve her best friend’s
murder. And when the story ends, we connect with our feelings and let some of the
anxiety go.
Where
my anxious friend is concerned, it doesn’t bother me that she’ll never read Best
Kept Secrets. I understand. Because I too have a degree of angst and
nervousness. But this is where my friend and I part ways. I like it. I
like the rush and the climbing heartrate and the hope and the fear that
everything will work out. I like to sit up in bed reading, every muscle tense
and ready for flight. And I love it when the ending comes with resolution.
And
that’s why I write.
HANK PHILLIPPI RYAN: Yes yes, when you open a book and the walls fall away and you cannot put it down and you are in another world--it happens, it does, sometimes. But not always. (Is it like dating? I refuse to go there.) And it;s such a joy when you find that book--that one that sends you into storyland.
But interesting, too, that what transports some of us is NOT what's compelling to others.
Okay, Reds and readers. Here's a test for you. Can you do it? Tell us ONE terrific book you've read in the past month. ONE. No comments, no explanation, no chit chat. Just: One title. (Okay, and the author.) (And no Reds. We know you love us, and we are SIGNIFICANTLY grateful.)
Can you do it?
And a copy of BEST KEPT SECRETS to one lucky commenter!
(I'll start. City of Windows, by Robert Pobi. How about you?)
ED. NOTE added later: okay, DUMB idea! What do you think about why women read--and write-- thrillers?
ED. NOTE added later: okay, DUMB idea! What do you think about why women read--and write-- thrillers?
Find me
on-line at www.traceysphillips.com
"Into the Fire" by Gregg Hurwitz
ReplyDeleteOh, love him!
DeleteFINDING ZELDA by Sue Ann Jaffarian
ReplyDeleteOh, tell us more!
DeleteA Better Man by Louise Penny
ReplyDeleteWHo else is reading this?
DeleteLoved A Better Man by Louise Penny. I was on the waiting list (50 people requested it at the library) and I loved the book. I
DeleteRead it in August!
DeleteLife and Other Near-Death Experiences by Camille Pagan
ReplyDeleteIs that fiction or non-fiction?
DeleteHild by Nicola Griffith
ReplyDeleteOh, I don;t know that one--tell us more!
DeleteI like to write short reviews in Goodreads, so here's mine for "Hild" - written by Nicola Griffith and published in 2013 by Farrar, Straus and Giroux. What an epic story this was! Griffith obviously immersed herself in researching 7th-century Britain and her hard work paid off, allowing her to fill this sprawling tale with lush descriptions of food and drink, both consumption and preparation (lots and lots of mead), politics, religion, conflicts, and above all, living, breathing characters. A family tree starts off the book and only a few are imaginary - Hild was a real daughter of the kingdom of Deira. Griffith fashions her as a young seer to her overking Edwin, who relies on her prophesies, later balancing them with messages from Catholic missionaries. One of Edwin's men, seeing a young Hild, muses, "Who was this child?...Perhaps she was an uncanny dwarf or a wall wight." We see this world primarily through the lives of women - "It's what women do: weave the web, pull the strings, herd into the corner. It's their only power. Unless they're seers." A short review cannot do justice to how glorious, vibrant and emotionally complex Hild's story is and I enjoyed every minute of it.
Delete'A Minute To Midnight' by David Baldacci.
ReplyDeleteLove him! Are you enjoying it?
DeleteHank, I really enjoyed it but can't say more since I reviewed it for Mystery Scene.
DeleteThe Light Between Oceans by ML Stedman
ReplyDeleteClicking like!
DeleteTara Laskowski's One Night Gone.
ReplyDeleteCongratulations on the new book Tracey! (We are Crooked Lane sisters.) Do you scare yourself while you're writing? (I had this discussion with Hallie at her book launch this summer--she said NO.)
ReplyDeleteThe Long Call by Ann Cleeves
Hi Lucy! Nice to "meet" you! I do get pretty worked up while writing a good scene, but I can't say that I scare myself. It may cause some good chills and increased heart-rate. Nothing wrong with a little adrenaline buzz!! LOL!
DeleteRead the ARC for The Long Call and it was well written.
DeleteA Better man by Louise Penny
ReplyDeleteA Better Man by Louise Penny
ReplyDeleteA theme emerges!
DeleteAll the Light We Cannot See by Anthony Doerr
ReplyDeleteClicking like!
DeleteAND THE WINNER of Vanessa Lillie’s LITTLE VOICES. is... Abby Fabian ! Yay! Email me your address! H ryan at whdh dot com
ReplyDeleteI am thrilled! Just emailed you. Thank you so much!
DeleteCongratulations to the winner. I wish I won. The library does not have this book so I will try the interstate library loan system.
DeleteAnd as for Roberta/Lucy’s question about scaring yourself… I don’t, either. How about you, Tracey? I do think we are seeing a wonderfully eclectic a list of books. Keep them coming!
ReplyDeleteI have to admit the first time I wrote the ending of HEAVEN HAS NO RAGE, I scared myself.
DeleteOne more series I need to get caught up on!!
DeleteHank, the one I'm writing right now freaks me out quite a bit because the premise really happened to me last winter. A guy I dated 33 years ago--that's right--emailed me with photos of something that belonged to me. I had dumped the guy hard so I have no idea why he would have kept these mittens that were from Alaska. He told me he is "keeping them safe for me".
DeleteI didn't respond (stalker!) but we do keep the doors locked tight now. Adn writing about what would/could happen is a bit scary!
Also from Tracey...oy!
DeleteYou did, Liz? How and why?
DeleteSorry, I'm late answering.
DeleteIt was the ending. The main story had been wrapped up. I put Sally in a very tight spot (I can't say much because...spoilers). I decided to try a technique I'd read about to accelerate pacing and tension - very short scenes that flipped between Jim and Sally's POVs. Basically, they are seeing the situation in real-time from two different angles.
It worked. Combination of stakes and pacing. I could feel my heart racing as I wrote. Would it all work out? I mean, I had a plan, but you know what they say about plans...
Little Comfort, by Edwin Hill
ReplyDeleteClicking like!
DeleteAnn Cleeves, The Long Call
ReplyDeleteCannot wait to see her at Crimebake!
DeleteThe Unkindest Tide by Seanan McGuire
ReplyDeleteOh, what's that?
DeleteAnne Perry, Death in Focus
ReplyDeleteClicking like!
DeleteElizabeth George, The Punishment She Deserves
ReplyDeleteSO exciting that you get to interview her at BOuchercon!
DeleteAnd sorry... know I'm breaking the rules but wanted to say thanks to Tracey! Such a thoughtful piece. As someone who is anxious (love streaming video because i can fast-forward through the tense parts - and in a book I skim, holding the book about a foot away), your analysis rings a lot of bells. I think it also explains the popularity of cozy mysteries. They're a 'safe zone'
ReplyDeleteThanks to all of you too! I didn't know this went live so early or I would have been in the conversation a while ago:)
DeleteI totally agree about the cozies, Hallie. Many people I know aren't into thrillers. But so many of us are these days, I thought the conversation had merit. By the way I'm reading your book You'll Never Know right now. (Am I breaking the rules?) And loving it! Can't wait to meet you at B-con.
DeleteThose were from me! Learning curve...
DeleteNO MORE RULES!! xoooo <3
DeleteA Means to an End, Lissa Marie Redmond
ReplyDeleteI am Watching You - Teresa Driscoll.
ReplyDeleteA Forgotten Place by Charles Todd
ReplyDeleteClicking like!
DeleteRead an ARC for A Forgotten Place. Loved the book and it is perfect for Halloween reading.
DeleteDiana
When Hell Struck Twelve, James R. Benn
ReplyDeleteClicking like!
DeleteRead many books in this series.
DeleteTwenty-One Truths About Love by Matthew Dicks, coming out Nov 19 - pre-order, because it is SO GOOD.
ReplyDeleteAnd I'm also going to break the rules to agree with Hallie - you have a very thoughtful exploration of why mysteries and thrillers, and more importantly, why WOMEN writing and reading them. It struck a chord with me, as I think it will will many readers.
DeleteThank you Julia!
DeleteThe Last Train to London, Meg Waite Clayton
ReplyDeleteClicking like!
DeleteOn the waiting list at the library for this novel.
DeleteJewish in America, Living George Washington's Promise, by Richard L. Rubin
ReplyDeleteCITIZEN VINCE by Jess Walter
ReplyDeleteDo women read more crime/thrillers/mysteries than men because of our innate ability to deal with birth and death, the circle of life? Does the familiarity of dealing with blood and all matter of bodily excretions of others help us produce an immunity of sorts? Or do we just have a congenital blood lust?
DeleteI am reading that, too! LOVE it!
DeleteIN HER BONES by Kate Moretti
ReplyDeleteClicking like!
DeleteAdding this to my reading list.
DeleteI think that what women have to face physically does have something to do with it. Blood lust? I can't say!
ReplyDeleteBone to Bone by Julia Keller, and to be perfectly honest, I AM reading it right now, soon to be finished.
ReplyDeleteClicking like!
DeleteOld Bones by Douglas Preston and Lincoln Childs ~
ReplyDeleteClicking like!
DeleteLoved this book . . . .
DeleteNever Have I Ever, by Joshilyn Jackson
ReplyDeleteClicking like!
DeleteCreepy, scary good . . . .
DeleteThe Things We Cannot Say Kelly Rimmer
ReplyDeleteClicking like!
DeleteNobody's Sweetheart by Maggie Robinson
ReplyDeleteAnd thanks to Tracey for her really interesting thoughts today. It's a question we talk about in my house. My hub did work for one of the cable channels that program for woman. He was just baffled at the popularity of "woman in distress"TV movies.
LETS ALL BREAK THE RULES! Forget the rules. Triss, tell us more!
ReplyDeleteSure. Husband is an intellectual property attorney who's worked in both publishing and films. At one time he did a lot of script vetting for a cable network that shall be nameless, but consider that those "based on a true story" are swamps for legal issues. He was just baffled at the stories popularity. Not my form of entertainment and I couldn't explain it to him except for this: at the end- ta-da!- the women overcome.
Delete(And Nobody's Sweetheart? A witty period piece with the ghost of a recently dead, charming,louse of a husband trying to make amends.Yeah, the Topper idea. Perfectly silly. Perfect escape. I spent the summer catching up on serious, weighty crime novels - worth it too - so needed a break)
I can tell we all want to talk... love that! xooo So let's do it.
ReplyDeleteAnd what do you all think about the selection so far?
ReplyDeleteAnd LOVE to all from the still-recuperating DebRo, who says her computer won't let her comment on JRW but says :
ReplyDelete"I just finished Beyond a Doubt, by Nancy Cole Silverman (3:30 this morning!)" . We are ALL sending our healing strength, DebRo!
Nancy Cole Silverman's book is on my list. I am still looking for the book at the bookstores and my library. And at mystery conferences.
DeleteDiana
The Golden Hour by Beatriz Williams. Such a good storyteller!
ReplyDeleteWhat's that about?
DeleteMurder, spies, intrigue in the Bahamas when the Duke of Windsor was governor. It begins in 1941 when an American reporter arrives to do society stories on the Windsors. The story moves to England and Europe later.
DeleteOh, that sounds GREAT!
DeleteRead and Buried (lighthouse library mystery) by Eva Gates.
ReplyDeleteLike!
DeleteAww thanks!
DeleteSince we're breaking rules, which is something I excel at, congratulations to Olga Tokarczuk, Nobel prize for literature, 2018. Last year the Booker, and now a Nobel for the same year too! Some Austrian got the prize for 2019, but you go, Olga.
ReplyDeleteGo Olga! xooxo She's having quite the moment.. :-)
DeleteSince we're breaking the rules, this is for Tracey:
ReplyDeleteCongratulations on your debut book, Tracey. I’m looking forward to reading it.
Yay, Joan..I promise I will never attempt to make rules again! oxoo
Delete:)
DeleteThank you Joan! Hope you like ita
DeleteThe Memoirs of Wild Bill Hickok by Richard Matheson
ReplyDeleteOh, I was just in Deadwood! Were you there?
DeleteStrangers She Knows by Christina Dodd.
ReplyDeleteFor me, she has just the right level of thrill. (And a great last name!)
Love her series!
DeleteLike!
DeleteThe Widow of Rose House by Diana Biller.
ReplyDeleteWhat a gorgeous title!
DeleteDeath on Tap by Ellie Alexander
ReplyDeleteShe Said by Jodi Kantor and Megan Twohey
ReplyDeleteOh, eager to hear...
DeleteIt's hard to pick the best book. I will say though that I'm a big fan of Louise Penny and really liked her latest book, A Better Man (Chief Inspector Armand Gamache, #15).
ReplyDeleteThe Sparrow by Mary Doria Russell
ReplyDelete