After years of being impressed (and have to admit, frightened) by Simon’s thrillers, I had the good fortune to chat with him at a reception at Bouchercon 2014 in Long Beach, California. I am delighted to have him as my guest today. Simon’s latest thriller, Deceptive Practices was released November 15. It’s the fourth and final installment of the Bay Area Quartet.
Simon shares how honing observation skills can bolster an author’s creative juices.
Ta-Pocketa-Pocketa-Pocketa
By Simon Wood
A little while ago I was in the restaurant with my
wife, Julie, and she kicked me under the table.
“You’re doing it again,” she said.
“What?”
“You’re watching something going on. You think
you’re subtle, but you’re so obvious.”
She’d caught me red-handed. Something had caught my
eye in the restaurant. But I was listening to her—honest! Her mother was
wrestling tigers in Sumatra. Well, I think that’s what she said.
I’m always people-watching and observing situations.
Regardless of the facts of the matter, there could be a story in it. Truth
always makes great fiction. If I can think it, I swear someone else has already
done it.
It doesn’t have to be a big thing that catches my
eye. A couple breaking up or falling in love can be just as fascinating as cops
chasing a subject down the middle of a crowded street. I can always learn from
how people handle themselves in real situations. A Hollywood bar brawl looks
nothing like two drunks really trying to duke it out on a street corner.
But I have to admit my passion is for the strange. I
love coming across weird chunks of real life to ignite my imagination. A couple
of years ago, I was driving to Fresno to give a speech to the Central Valley
chapter of Sisters in Crime. I was hurtling along I-5 and I suddenly had to
swerve out of the way to avoid an army duffel in the middle of the freeway. I
considered stopping, but with the onslaught of traffic behind me, I was going
to get smooshed and what the hell was I going to do with the bag if I did pick
it up?
Then the stories started forming. What if I stopped
to pick up the bag? What would I find? Clothes? How about a bunch of cash?
Would I keep it? Bloody right, I would. Finders keepers. What if the owners of
the moneybag saw me take the bag, came after me, and we mixed it up?
Then again, what if it was body parts in the bag
instead? I don’t think I’d keep the bag then, but my fingerprints would be everywhere
and the cops would suspect me of chopping up the body. I’d be an innocent man,
but the cops wouldn’t believe me and then I’d have to go on the run to clear my
name.
Maybe I decided to leave the bag alone because of
the potential of above and I drove on by. What if the effect of this was that a
school bus struck the bag, flipped the median and started a chain-reaction of
carnage leading to a fatal pile up? How would I feel then? Especially when the
parents of the school children banded together to hunt me down as part of some
tragic revenge story.
All these things occurred to me within 3 seconds of
passing the duffel, so that gives you a feel for how my mind works and why I
should be confined to a state facility.
The point of all this is that the incidences that
lead to ideas are out there. I must admit I have a habit of stumbling on to the
strange, but I can’t be everywhere at once. This is the reason I comb the
newspapers for stories. Not the headline stuff, but the little stories that
warrant only a few column inches. These back-stories and page fillers are great
resources. People do the oddest things for the oddest motives and that’s what
I’m looking for. Crimes stories usually boil down to a very basic and
fundamental reason and that what I’m always searching for—a passion for crime.
My latest book, DECEPTIVE PRACTICES,
came from misreading the TV Guide. From that simple mistake I thought of a
“service” that took revenge on cheating spouses. Within a few minutes I had this pitch line: Do
you have a cheating spouse? Has counseling failed? Want to get even with them?
Then hire Infidelity Limited to teach them a lesson… By the end of the day, I had my book
outline: Olivia Shaw bought into Infidelity Limited’s pitch. When her
husband is killed, she discovers that Infidelity Limited is far more dangerous
than she ever believed. Now the prime suspect in her husband’s slaying,
she has only one option—take down Infidelity Limited.
There’s only so much a writer can conjure from thin
air, but there’s a whole big bunch of stuff out there happening all the time. I
might not use it word for word, but reality makes a great foundation for
fiction.
So sorry, Julie, I’m going to keep people-watching.
Here’s looking at you,
Simon
Simon
Simon Wood
is a California transplant from England. He's a former competitive race car
driver, a licensed pilot, an endurance cyclist, an animal rescuer and an
occasional PI. He shares his world with his American wife, Julie. Their lives
are dominated by a long-haired dachshund, six cats and three chickens. He's the
Anthony Award winning author of Working Stiffs, Accidents Waiting to Happen,
Paying the Piper, Terminated, Asking For Trouble, We All Fall Down and the Aidy
Westlake series. His last thriller THE ONE THAT GOT AWAY has been optioned for
a movie adaptation. He also writes horror under the pen name of Simon Janus.
Curious people can learn more at http://www.simonwood.net.
1 comment:
Thanks for having me over...
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