Does a Cozy Sleuth Have to be an Amateur? Elaine L. Orr
Can a police procedural be a cozy? No. Well…maybe.
When ideas pop into my head and don’t leave after a few
days, I pay attention. In fall of 2015, I heard a couple of stories about restaurants
doing away with tips. My immediate thought, as a mystery writer, was “that
could be worth killing for.”
The setting appeared spontaneously -- a small-town diner
situated in a town similar to the central Illinois towns I drive through
regularly. Within two days after the diner waltzed into my brain, I had some
quirky town residents and a first chapter – and a dead guy.
Things slowed down. I had another book under contract, and I
needed time to develop characters. Plus, I had not figured out who would
investigate the murder. Usually I start with that!
I was also doing something very different than in my other
books – chapter one would be from a narrator’s point-of-view and the rest of
the book from a sleuth’s. And that sleuth? Nothing made sense except having her
be the small town’s police chief.
But I don’t write graphic murders or use CSI-type evidence,
which is often what goes hand-in-hand with police procedural novels. I debated
the approach, not certain if my cozy readers would be willing to be involved with
the police instead of an amateur sleuth.
Finally, Chief Elizabeth Friedman emerged. She came to the
small Illinois town of Logland to get away from some of the more graphic
murders she’d investigated in Chicago. She’s no wimp, but she likes the pace in
Logland and has gotten to know local merchants and some of the town’s more
colorful characters. Now some of them are suspects.
So, is Tip a Hat to
Murder a cozy? Cozies mysteries feature violence that is off-screen (the
sleuths discover the body, not witness a murder), love is an option but not sex
scenes, and the setting is often a smaller community. Many of these novels
employ humor, and the amateur sleuth’s profession often figures into the story.
Most aspects of the book fit the definition. Elizabeth is
friends with the medical examiner, but she doesn’t stand over the autopsy table
while he points to the bullet’s path through a shredded liver. She’s called to
the crime scene rather than forcing herself into the investigation, but she initially
doesn’t have a lot more clues than an amateur would.
Neither the town residents or members of the agricultural
college’s fraternity are helpful. Why would they be? One of them is a killer,
and the others can’t believe anyone they know would be one.
Humor? I found a police chief’s experiences rife with better
opportunities than my traditional cozies. An amateur sleuth would not be called
to the frat house because goats chased a campus cop onto a table.
Unlike a traditional police procedural (pardon the
oxymoron), the interviews are professional but less formal. Not a single cop
swears like the guy in the tank top who gets arrested on reality TV shows, and
town residents usually call Chief Friedman by her given name of Elizabeth. She
varies how she introduces herself based on the situation.
I was so certain this would be a single mystery rather than
a series that I wrote a blog post about how differently I approached the
stand-alone story than my two series. Oops. Fell in love with the characters.
Writing the second book of what is now the Logland Mystery
Series may be the tougher part of making a police chief the protagonist of a
cozy mystery. The one thing that will be easier is finding a reason for her to
pursue the murderer. I just have to figure out if the chief and the medical
examiner can become more than friends without causing a local scandal…
Bio:
Elaine L. Orr authors the Jolie Gentil and the River’s Edge
mystery series, and was pleased to find the Logland series taking place in her
home state of Illinois. She writes, blogs, and teaches online classes in
self-publishing.
Comments
And, I LOVE how the premise came to you. I often get story ideas (for short stories) like that. A diner, mid-town USA. What's not to love. Still... I might have chosen another name for the town besides Logland. For me it's a bit hard to say... like my tongue gets to rolling, like it wants to gargle. (Sorry! I don't mean to be mean or critical. It's just a personal thing.) Anyway - that's YOUR town, so go for it! Good luck with #2.
Thanks for visiting, Elaine, great topic!
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