HANK PHILLIPPI RYAN: I love math. Do you? I’m not “good” at it, whatever that mean,
and I have been known to ask Alexa for percentages. (I am pretty good at figuring
out how much an article of clothing costs if I know the original price and know
it’s 40 percent off. It’s all about practice.)
But
I love it because it has answers. There’s a thing you can find (usually) if you
go about it a right way. Sometimes, and this was my downfall in class, I was
never quite sure why you’d want to know it. But we all have our skills. And our
limitations.
That’s
one reason I am so thrilled to introduce you to the incredible and brilliant
Sulari Gentill. Her newest book is AFTER SHE WROTE HIM. (Look at that cover!)
She’s got some ideas about the connection between math and mystery
writing. They connect? Yes, they do. Sulari lives on a small farm in the
foothills of the Snowy Mountains of New South Wales, where she grows French
Black Truffles and writes about murder and mayhem. And—math.
Here’s
her calculation.
The
Mathematics of Mystery
Some
novelists are all but born knowing they should write. Some study
literature, or creative writing, become experts is the academic form of the
art. Some belong to families of writers and words are their legacy.
But
not me.
I
came to writing via the scenic route, completely oblivious to the fork in the
road ahead which would lead me into this life. Before I was a writer, I
was a lawyer. Before that, I thought I wanted be an
Astrophysicist. Indeed, it took me about a year at University,
enrolled in what I have come to think of as the “Big Bang Theory” stream, to realise
that I didn’t ... and, in that time, I sat through a lot of pure and applied
mathematics classes.
I
might bemoan those lost hours spent trying to prove one plus one equals two
from first principles—actually more involved than you’d think—but I have come
to realise that everything that went before I decided to write is at least
material, and sometimes, more than that. Sometimes what came before
becomes technique.
Now
people appear to easily see the connection between the practise of law and that
of writing fiction, though I’m not sure the profession would welcome the
correlation. One doesn’t want to create the impression that lawyers make
things up! My background in mathematics, however, seems at first glance a
less natural precursor to storytelling. And yet, it is probably the
greater influence on my work.
In
terms of material, mathematics gave me very little, aside from the fact that I
could well imagine that some of my classmates kept a couple of bodies in their
refrigerators for company. Aside from that, a knowledge of Gaussian
curvature and set theory does not really contribute much to a plot and even
less to the development of character.
But
that year wrangling numbers did teach me a couple of things which are crucial
to my work as a mystery writer.
Firstly,
it ingrained the concept of logical thinking, the idea that proposition A can
exist if, and only if, proposition B existed first. This thinking is of
course the kind of inductive logic we have come to regard as deductive
reasoning, which is, in turn, essential for a mystery plot to hold
together.
Secondly,
and perhaps more importantly, it taught me where the interests of mathematics
and that of storytelling diverge.
One
of the first things you learn in the study of mathematics is that there are
many ways to arrive at the one solution and sometimes there are in fact many
solutions to the one problem, all of which are “correct”. A solution can
involve a hundred pages of working, or be achieved in three elegant lines.
For
a mathematician it is the elegant solution that is the holy grail. It is
the territory of the truly gifted, who can glance at a string of symbols and
numerals to recognise the heart of an equation, and then know how to extract
that heart with surgical precision. I remember those students... twenty
minutes after the three hour exam began they would put down their pens and sit
smiling at the rest of us as we scribbled frantically, content in the knowledge
that they were a species more evolved. They were probably also the ones
with the bodies in their refrigerators.
I
think in my entire mathematical career I came up with an elegant solution only
once, and that was more accident than design. My answers were generally
of the hundred page variety, multiple routes to reach a solution which stopped
at dead ends, attempts to use theorems that did not fit, pages of increasingly
panicked scrawl, ink smeared with tears and sweat and blood, until
finally, exhausted and broken, I battered out a solution that was probably
correct, but definitely not elegant.
But
you see, it turns out that I’m a storyteller not a mathematician.
In
the inelegant solution lies the story. A tale of valiant attempt, of
heartbreak, frustration and perseverance, sometimes of failure. There is
none of that in the brilliant three line epiphany. The stylish solution
is likely a work of genius, possibly poetry, but it is not a story. For
that, there must be those untidy attempts, those many pages of not knowing, and
above all, a fear of failure.
So
that misspent part of my youth spent studying mathematics taught me not only
how to solve the puzzle (eventually), but the value of not doing so too
cleanly. It showed me how to embrace the struggle that the genius never
knows. And that is the art of the mystery writer.
HANK: Oh, isn't that truly thought-provoking? Speaking of which, let me tell you a
bit about Sulari’s new book, AFTER SHE WROTE HIM.
The synopsis says:
“Madeleine d'Leon
doesn't know where Edward came from. He is simply a character in her next book.
But as she writes, he becomes all she can think about. His charm, his dark
hair, his pen scratching out his latest literary novel . . .
Edward McGinnity can't
get Madeleine out of his mind—softly smiling, infectiously enthusiastic, and
perfectly damaged. She will be the ideal heroine for his next book.
But who is the author
and who is the creation? And as the lines start to blur, who is affected when a
killer finally takes flesh?
After She Wrote Him is a wildly
inventive twist on the murder mystery that takes readers on a journey filled
with passion, obsession, and the emptiness left behind when the real world
starts to fall away.”
On
the cover? Is Dean Koontz. Who says “A pure delight…cleverly conceived and
brilliantly executed. Reds and readers, I cannot wait to read this.
And look how great that cover is! Just look again.
SO,
Reds and readers, how do you feel about math? And a copy of AFTER SHE WROTE HIM
to one very lucky commenter!
A
reformed lawyer, Sulari Gentill is the award-winning author of
the Rowland Sinclair Mysteries, which chronicle the life and adventures of
her 1930s Australian gentleman artist, and the Hero Trilogy, based on the
myths and epics of the ancient world.
Sulari
has won and been shortlisted in many awards including the Commonwealth Writers’
Prize, the Australian Book Industry Awards, the Davitt Awards, the Ned Kelly
Awards, and the Scarlett Stiletto Awards. She was the inaugural Eminent
Writer in Residence at the Australian Museum of Democracy.
Most
recently, Crossing the Lines, an unusual postmodern mystery—which
will be released in the US by Poisoned Pen Press in April 2020 as After
She Wrote Him—won the 2018 Ned Kelly Award for Best Crime Novel. Give
the Devil His Due, the 7th in Rowland Sinclair Mysteries, was just
published.
She
lives on a small farm in the foothills of the Snowy Mountains of New South
Wales.
@sularigentill
(Twitter and Instagram)