DEBORAH CROMBIE: I want to talk about cars. This is partly because I just bought a new car, the first in 17 YEARS, which some of my fellow REDs will be fed up hearing me talk about! But also because the very emotionally weighty business of making that choice got me thinking about the cars (or the historical equivalents) we give our fictional characters and what it says about them.
In my very first Kincaid/James book I gave Duncan a classic, if slightly worn, red MG Midget. It looked like this.
This is the car my ex and I owned when we lived in England. I never drove it much, because a) right-hand drive, and b) the driver's seat springs were so sprung that I couldn't see out the windscreen! But it was fun, on a sunny day, driving with the top down along the Cheshire lanes in search of afternoon tea. Not so fun when it rained and the top leaked...
So it was partly familiarity that made me give Duncan this car. I also liked that he is a tall guy and I had an image of him disentangling himself from the little low MG. In the very first scene in the book he is driving through the Yorkshire countryside with the top down on a perfect autumn day, a picture of the romantic detective.
There was, on the other hand, nothing sexy about Gemma's little Ford Escort. This was a budget, single-mom-with-baby car and you could imagine the safety seat in the back and the detritus of spare nappies, teething biscuits, and juice drinks.
In short, Duncan was a cool if slightly eccentric guy, and Gemma was underpaid, overwhelmed, and over worked.
Eventually, their lives joined and moved on. With the advent of dogs and children, the Midget no longer suited and Duncan accepted a hand-me-down from his parents, an elderly green Vauxhall estate car. In American parlance, a station wagon, and about as nerdily uncool as one could get, much to now-teenaged Kit's humiliation.
When the Astra came to an untimely--or timely, depending on your point of view--end, it was Gemma who got the long-deserved new car, a Land Rover Discovery the same copper color as her hair, and Duncan who was left with the little orchid-colored Ford runabout. I spent a lot of time picking out that fictional new car for Gemma--almost as much as I spent picking out my own! But these cars are more than cars, they are a snapshot of the characters' personalities and of the progress--and balance--of their relationship.
So what does the fact that I drove my green Honda Accord for seventeen years say about me? If I was a character in a book, would I be frugal, dull, totally uninterested in cars, or in my image? Or would it say that I form lasting emotional attachments? None of the first things are entirely true, but the second maybe more so--I did love the Accord. And I do, actually, really like cars, and had been daydreaming about something that was a little sporty as well as practical, and RED, so this is what I bought!
With a "parchment", aka white, interior, just to prove I have a thoroughly impractical streak.
So, darling Reds, do you think about what your characters' cars say about them?
And readers, do you notice what cars fictional characters drive, and do those cars lead you to make assumptions? Do you have favorite cars in books?
(Two of my fictional heroes, Inspector Morse and Thomas Nightingale, drive classic Jaguars!)
PS! The car is a Mazda CX-5 in Soul Red Crystal.
PSS!!! I almost forgot the writing update! Besides car shopping, I have been writing!! I'm about to hit 80,000 words, which may not mean much to readers but fellow writers will recognize as a good progress marker, a good two-thirds of the book. I'm reaching the point where, as Hank said on Monday, I've passed, "Do I really have enough for a book?" and tipped over into, "Oh my God, how am I ever going to get it all in????"
Next time I will try to find a snippet, and we will hope I'll be closing in on THE END.
This is so interesting, but I have to admit that I don't generally pay much attention to the cars that the characters drive in the books I read. [Perhaps because I consider driving is a necessary chore rather than something I particularly enjoy . . . .]
ReplyDeleteMaybe now you will notice the cars more, Joan!
DeleteFrom Celia: good buy Deb's, I LOVE IT!
ReplyDeleteI have a small tea mug which says ," I flipping LOVE TEA! Next to tea I love cars. My father always had impractical cars MG, Citron, until he bought an Allard! Now that is the car Kit would love, me too to see it show its rightful place in a mystery. And yes for my detectives of the golden age, they have the cars I want and look out for in the stories. I think of Harriet vanes little car heading up the Oxford hills to the Gaudy. What she wanted, not what Peter could have lavished on her. Buying a car, first or fifth takes courage and commitment and so
Much enjoyment.
Thank you, Celia! I will think of Harriet as I drive!
DeleteI love the new car, Debs - what brand is it? For Texas, those light seats will come in handy when you can't part in the shade. I also really like cars and used to work on my own.
ReplyDeleteI wrote a scene yesterday where my protag Mac on Cape Cod describes how she had to sell her red Miata convertible because it's a two-seater and she and Tim now have two adopted children under age four. She got a sensible smallish SUV, perhaps like yours. But maybe I'll slide in that the new one is red, to make it more fun for her.
My northern California wine bar manager drives a blue 1966 Mustang convertible, and vintage cars play a big role in the books. Book #3, which I just turned in (yay!) opens with a vintage car show and wine tasting. (Jay loves that I include the would-be protag of a proposed series that didn't sell, featuring a vintage auto mechanic, as Cece's car fix-it woman in this series. I do too!)
It's a Mazda CX-5, Edith, the Premium Plus trim level. Vintage cars and wine-tasting sound like the perfect match!
DeleteLately, all of my main characters drive Subarus, largely because we're a two-Subaru family, and it's easier to get the details right when all you have to do is go out to the garage. I did give Matthias Honeywell a Jeep, though, so I've been on their website quite a bit, searching different models.
ReplyDeleteI love cars, but I drive a 2010 Forester because I don't owe anything on it, and as much as I love cars, I also despise car payments. Also I do love the Forester and will eventually replace it with another one.
Yes, I went twelve years without a car payment, so this is going to be a real adjustment for me!
DeleteI like your new car, Debs! We will have to go car shopping one of these days, too. Irwin's car is a 2010 and mine is a 2015. It is red, though.
ReplyDeleteI absolutely notice what cars our literary heroes drive. I made note of Duncan's car immediately, although I didn't remember that it was red. Gemma's cars were always the antithesis of that Midget, and wasn't her first one totally without a/c and with a heater that barely worked?
I look forward to reading a snippet next time. It's great to hear your progress report.
It's only recently that AC is becoming standard in the UK, Judy, and maybe I should amend standard to "more common."
DeleteIf you go car shopping, I will highly recommend the Mazda CX-5, having done all the research for you:-)
Congratulations on your new car. I admit I don't pay much attention to the car the characters drive, it could be because I'm not a driver.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Grace!
DeleteWell, that new vehicle is quite different from a green Accord. I hope it brings you many years of happy driving.
ReplyDeleteI definitely do not put as much thought into the cars characters in books drive as you do. I will be paying more attention from now on.
That 2008 Honda Accord was a gem!
DeleteAh! "Frugal, dull, totally uninterested in cars, or in my image"... Debs, you have been spying! Your car is lovely. I too just bought a new car — or, New to Us car. (I look for 2-year-old cars from the south, far from road salt, with about 20k miles. Then we drive them until they fall apart.) I am not a car person, I am a practical one. Our old car is a minivan, the essence of dull frugality unconcerned with image. However, since we live in a land of ice for six months of the year, I require all wheel drive. I personally like something heavy, since most of our roads are highways and more than half the other vehicles are trucks. I have seen what happens when a half-ton pickup hits a small car at 55 mph. My own truck rusted out and bit the dust and I sadly realized that at 65 it made no sense to buy another farm truck. So instead of heavy, I settled for reliable. Polling my friends, I found that all of them drive either a Subaru Forester or Toyota Rav4. I haunted the websites of dealerships 2-3 hours south of us and finally found a Forester that was in our budget. I paid a little extra to have one with heated leather seats, two luxuries we've never experienced and that I think our arthritis will appreciate in the cold. Now I have to clear the lumber out of our garage so I can get it inside. (Selden)
ReplyDeleteP.S. As to paying attention to cars that characters drive, I do notice. I thought your choices for Duncan and Gemma were perfect and told me a lot about them. Julia drove me crazy with Clare's decision to replace her MG with a Shelby Cobra — I was more upset with her than Russ was. I had to remind myself that Clare is addicted to flying and adrenaline, which, if she weren't marooned in a snowbank, she would certainly experience on an icy highway. (Selden)
DeleteThe new Mazda has all wheel drive, Selden, which I'm very much looking forward to. When we do get ice and snow here in Texas, driving is absolutely treacherous. I don't think you will regret the heated leather seats!
DeleteDEBS: I love your new car! Since I don't drive or travel much on the highway/street, I rarely notice car types on the road. But I did covet Inspector Morse's classic Jaguar. The 2 times I was in Oxford, I vainly searched the streets hoping to see it!
ReplyDeleteThat Jag is iconic!!
DeleteI love driving. When I get into my jeep suv for a trip of any length, Willie Nelson’s “On the road again” comes into my head full force, like freedom at last. My husband drove s Triumph when we married & it got vapor lock every time we took it out, our new caps on our heads & top down. We had to wait it out before heading home after parking. Sold it for a practical car for daughter heading to college…a Ford sedan I think. Yes, my character is driving a rentalJeep suv in a snowstorm when her tiny sport car can’t do it.
ReplyDeleteI love how many of us have given our characters sports cars!
DeleteOh Debs, I love your new car! I’ve driven some red cars in my time and loved them. I do notice the cars characters are driving and had to look up Duncan’s Vauxhall Estate car when his father gave it to them. I am very much looking forward to your snippet of your next book. I am impatiently waiting to be able to order it!
ReplyDeleteI'm tickled that you looked up the Astra, Suzette! And thank you for the book encouragement. I think I will get it fiinished before too long now.
DeleteDebs, I envy your GREEN car! But hotchacha, that red one sure is pretty! I hope you get as much safe and happy driving years together as you did with the Accord.
ReplyDeleteAfter driving Hondas for 43 years my daughter talked me into buying her 2015 BMW before they moved to Africa in 2020, which is still my car. It's very sporty, with turbo whatsit I have never used, and all kinds of gadgets. But with peripheral vision loss I need some of the newer safety features, like lane warning, in particular, so I've been looking around. We just visited the Portland daughter last week, and I got to drive her newish Hyundai Ioniq5, which is an electric car. Somehow, it includes technology that allows a 360 degree birdseye view of the car. Magic? Possibly. She took us on two two-hour drives each direction, and on the one in the Columbia valley we all watched the charge meter drop down, down, as she worked the generative braking to keep the car charged long enough to get to the next charging station. With a whole 8-mile range to go, we made it. Too much nerve wracking for me. So I'm thinking maybe a hybrid.
Adam Dalgliesh also drives a Jaguar, doesn't he? My boyfriend in high school was in a family of gearheads and shade tree mechanics, and the "family" cars were a powder blue MG Midget convertible and two Austin Healey sports cars. Lee got to drive the Midget, and I later dated his older brother, who had one of the Austins. Fun memories.
I love my newish Prius Prime plug-in hybrid, Karen, and it has all those features. It's not high off the ground, so if you're worried about backing out of parking spaces, you might want one more like Debs got.
DeleteKaren, we just felt that we drive long distances in Texas the all EV was too nerve-wracking. I also wanted high-off-the--ground, AND fun to drive. After reading and debating about which compact SUV for the last couple of years, I ended up not looking at anything but the Mazda. One test drive and I was sold--although I didn't tell the dealer that!
DeleteI'd been driving Hondas since 1997, but before that I drove a Mazda for eight years, and before that, Nissan/Datsuns, so I guess I like Japanese cars.
I bought the Premium CX-5, which has all the luxury car technology, for about half the price, including the 360 camera. It is an amazing car and I am absolutely thrilled with it.
Oh, and I think Dalgleish did drive and Jaguar!
I love red cars! When I downsized from a mom mobile used for carting kids to sport practice (everything except a fridge and filing cabinet) to an SUV, my daughter picked a blue/green color. It's my mulch, furniture, and dog hauler.
ReplyDeleteMy fictional heroine drives a battered navy blue van.
This Mazda will definitely be a mulch and potting soil hauler! We haven't tried convincing the elderly dog she should jump up in it yet, though. I'm waiting on the protective treatment for those white leather seats, and also I wanted to enjoy the car for a week or two without German shepherd hair...
DeleteLove your red car! I don't pay that much attention to cars in books, although I do remember Kit's angst about the estate wagon!. I bought a new-to-me car in December and am so thrilled. I went from a 2012 Nissan Leaf that I had bought in 2014 to a 2020 Chevy Bolt. It's a big EV upgrade for me. Instead of 50 miles on a full charge, I''m now at 215 (and this Bolt has some diagnostic software that only allows it to charge to 80%, software that will go away in a few thousand miles --so I expect more miles in the future). Woo hoo! And it's a lovely wine color, my first red car.
ReplyDeleteThat sounds fabulous, Gillian! I read a lot of car reviews and Chevy Bolt was the definite winner in the all-electric category.
DeleteGillian and Debs, before my family bought a new car, we read the Consumers Reports car reviews to make sure we got the best. We were deciding between a "cheaper" smaller car and a medium sedan from the car dealer. The rating for the medium sedan was higher and we bought the medium sedan. We have been driving that car for ten years now.
DeleteHappy happy happy to hear that magic number!! Yay! The book is progressing!! As to cars in books, yes, I notice. One of my favorites is the car driven by the character Skinny Slidell in Kathy Reichs' series. And now I can't remember the year/make/model, but it fits him to a T. He's older, kinda beat-up, a slob, and so's his car.
ReplyDeleteAfter two gray/silver cars, this time I got a new-to-me small red SUV--practical and zippy, too! Bonus, assistive technology and a sunroof--although I'd gladly trade the latter for Selden's heated seats!
Yay, Flora! My Mazda has all the safety tech and a sunroof AND heated seats! The steering wheel is heated, too. I was so far behind the curve that I wanted ALL the bells and whistles. It's astounding how much cars had changed since 2008.
DeleteWe always have vans, and the one before this Dodge Caravan, was a Kia something van. It had heated seats, and I really miss them. It made long distance driving a pleasure even on a hot summer day, as it eases the pressure/tiredness/pain in your back. You will love it, and no doubt use it in hot and not so hot weather. Sadly this caravan does not have it.
DeleteLove the car, Debs. What is it? And love the color. I have a red car and I never thought I was a "red car" person, but I adore it.
ReplyDeleteJim Duncan is an outdoorsman; he drives a Jeep, one that actually goes off-road. Sally just traded in her practical Camry for an SUV because she's a big-dog owner, but it's electric because no gas guzzlers - and it's red! I have no idea what Jackson Davis drives. Hmm. He's a dad, but his wife probably has the car for kids. I see him more as a sedan guy - but he's 6'5", so the image of him folding himself into a little car is appealing.
I'm noodling on a new story where the protag drives a slate-gray BMW MINI Cooper. Lennie has a bit of an edge.
Liz, I added the car make to the post. It's a Mazda CX-5 and the color is Soul Red Crystal. Mazda is famous for this color--they invested something like 35 million dollars to develop robotic technology that mimics hand-painting.
DeleteThe Mini Cooper is fun! One of my friends has one and she loves it, but I wanted to sit up higher than that.
Deborah--that's the newest version of my car! I love my red car!
DeleteYour new car is a beauty! May you have many happy adventures together.
ReplyDeleteYour first photo is what got my attention though. I'm in the midst of reading "Marble Hall Murders" by Anthony Horowitz and I immediately pictured Susan Ryeland tooling along in her red MG convertible. So apparently the answer to your question about whether I notice characters' cars is yes.
Oh, yes, I'd forgotten that Susan Ryland drives a red MG!
DeleteI am not a car person, but always loved Morse’s Jaguar – maybe because it comes with opera. In the Cotswold series by Julia Chapman, they have an old motorcycle, and a small car – it fits them for roaring around the rugged countryside, though fit may not be the word when the big dog gets in it (a weineramer)!
ReplyDeleteI also find it interesting to see if there is a pair of characters in the same car who does the driving. Lewis never drove the Jag, no one drove Lyndsey’s car, and Delilah doesn’t drive the motorcycle, although Samson occasionally drives the little car – probably for his own safety.
As for your new car – red is always the best choice!
Never a have been “the” right car person. Does it start when I turn the key? Do I feel safe driving it? And how many years has it been since it was washed? So no, I don’t pay attention to what cars are driven by characters in books. Although, knowing how everyone found the Astra a burden, in spite of Duncan’s injuries, I could “hear” the cheering after the crash. And Deborah, red cars are the best! Elisabeth
ReplyDeleteNow that Vera is retiring, I wonder if anyone will get her Jeep - old coffee cups included! (no one drove it but her!!!!)
ReplyDeleteI shudder to think!
DeleteI do notice characters' cars and absolutely believe that the vehicle can say a lot about who they are. I'm waiting to find a character in a book who drives an electric vehicle -- and who faces 'range anxiety' when on a car chase!
ReplyDeleteDarn it! My comment disappeared! Trying again
ReplyDelete