Sunday, November 16, 2025

Nailing the victim...

 A long-delayed announcement: Melinda O, you are the winner of BOURDAIN: The Definitive Oral Biography! Please contact Celia at wakefieldpro at gmail!

HALLIE EPHRON: Earlier this week we talked about villains – is a good villain anything like law-breakers in real life? Which got me thinking about VICTIMS. What makes a “good” victim in a crime story?

I ask this because just the other day I was watching a TV mystery episode and realized, with a sinking heart, which character was about to be killed off. I had to turn the thing off. Seriously. I liked that character SO much and it just, well, did not seem fair.

I did not want to keep hanging out in that world, even though I know full well it's ficton.

I know, ridiculous thing to get upset about, but there you are.

Which got me wondering: Have you ever realized that you have the WRONG VICTIM? That you thought you needed to kill them off but, in fact, it was a bad idea and you needed to rework your plot?

HANK PHILLIPPI RYAN: Yes! Precisely. I was writing TRUTH BE TOLD, and even though I am a devout pantser, I knew I had to kill a certain person, I knew it, it was absolutely necessary. The whole story revolved around that death. Turned out, um, it didn’t. More I cannot say.

(But like you, Hallie, this is one of the hilarities of our household. We will be watching something, and I’ll point to the screen and say: DEAD. Jonathan is always somewhere between amused and annoyed. I am so sorry, though, I cannot help it.)

RHYS BOWEN: I found out pretty early on that I can’t kill a child. When I was writing Evan’s Gate ( that actually got an Edgar nomination to my surprise) I had planned for two little girls to die the same way. I couldn’t do it. One died by accident and the other stayed alive.

I always know who is going to be killed as the WHY is at the center of the story.

JULIA SPENCER-FLEMING: I wrote about the death of a child - not by murder! - and was actually sobbing the whole time. So I agree with Rhys; no kids and no dogs or cats as victims!

Because I like writing about social issues and communities, I usually prefer victims whose loss will have a strong impact on the other characters.

One thing that drives me absolutely BONKERS when watching movies/series is when a victim’s whole existence and death serves to motivate the enraged and grief-stricken detective. 99 times out of 100, the decedent is a woman and the detective is a guy.

C’mon, screenwriters, there are ways for your male characters to access their emotions without fridging their girlfriends.

LUCY BURDETTE: I’m thinking back on the last four or five books and seeing a pattern–I don’t necessarily like the victim. Which really is a little lame when you think of it–what kind of mystery is that? But it’s hard for me to let the good guys go…

Hank, that’s so funny. I’m usually completely clueless because I get caught up in the story, rather than figuring out whodunit.

JENN McKINLAY: Victims can be so sensitive! I once had a victim who refused to die and I had to rewrite the entire book and then he became a recurring character in the series. I’m glad he didn’t die because he really made the series so much better but at the time, I was like “Dude, you have to die! Cooperate!”

He didn’t.

DEBORAH CROMBIE: I've never thought I had the wrong victim, but there have been some that I really really really did NOT want to kill. But if had I changed the victim, I would have had no plot, so I just had to cry my way through it.

HALLIE: So how about you? Can you sense when a character you've gotten attached to is about to get bumped off? Does it make you keep reading (or watching), or is it your signal to bail?

16 comments:

  1. What an interesting question. Although I can see where the story is going [and am devastated that the character that I really like is about to become a victim], I grumble and cry and keep on reading. Watching is different . . . I just turn it off because I don't want to see it happen . . . .

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  2. I don't like to read about the death of a child, which is definitely problematic if you're reading history, when child survival rates were so low. (I thought you handled it very well, Julia.) Still, one of the several reasons I am ambivalent about the novels of Elizabeth George, despite her skill as a writer, is that she kills children fairly often. I was particularly annoyed when she put us inside the mind of a frightened little girl and some chapters later that child was revealed as dead. (Selden)

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  3. There are so very many authors and books and series to choose from that, as a reader, I have no trouble dropping a series or an author. I think that it is fine for a reader to be indignant about the death of a character, or their mangling, or their going bad ( like L.P.'s Jean Guy did.)
    In my opinion, an author can kill anyone in a stand alone. Anyone. But in a series, you might lose me as a reader if you kill someone I deem to be essential. I'll be the one who decides if I want to continue to read your books.

    We can do nothing about the stuff we see on the news. But I want justice served at the end of every book these days.

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  4. Sometimes we will watch something together, and I will point out the murderee to Steve. I usually get it right, based on the imperfections shown onscreen. It's more fun to not be able to figure it out, unless the victim is a kid, or otherwise more vulnerable than most. These days, I have a low tolerance for cruelty, even the fictional kind.

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  5. No kids or pets as victims. Beloved cars totaled? It's a shame, but sacrificing a vintage Aston Martin might give the plot a boost that a rusting fifteen-year-old Civic wouldn't.

    I published a Halloween short story about the self-appointed chairperson of the town yard police committee who is trapped in a screaming coffin with dry ice, which almost kills her (carbon dioxide displaces oxygen in a closed chamber). She doesn't deserve to die but learns her lesson.

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    1. That would not be my favorite way to go! But doesn’t the dry ice burn her horribly?

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  6. Oh yes, I've stopped reading when a character I care about is about to die--and might forsake a series on account of this. I threw a book in the trash once because of the victim(s)--never finished it, didn't want anyone else to read it either! Martha Grimes' Richard Jury series has involved the death of children at times, but in one of my favorite novels in the series, a would-be child victim refuses to die--I love that little girl! I recall reading that JK Rowling seriously thought about killing off the Ron Weasley character--poor Ron, he deserved a happier ending!! And Deborah, I've mentioned before one of your books where a character dies and I mourned his death--and that's the whole thing for me--some writers create such vivid characters that it hurts when they become a victim.

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    1. I think it was Ron’s brother who died in the battle against Voldemort in Harry Potter?

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  7. I would never murder a child or an animal, but in my Quaker Midwife series several babies died, due to accuracy of the era. Once I'd planned for premature twins to die and I just couldn't do it, so only one did.

    I have certainly changed the villain during the course of writing a book, but I don't think I've changed the victim. As Jenn said, you'd have to rewrite the whole story.

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  8. I’m in the No children or Pets/animals club here. Yes, I have stopped reading some books when animals or children have been killed. I find it disturbing enough in real life. I read to escape.

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  9. Can someone please explain WHY women often are murder victims in mysteries???

    Someone mentioned Elizabeth George. My mom loved the inspector Lyndley series until a recurring character ( one of our favorites) was killed. We Stopped reading the series!

    For me, I usually know who the murder victim will be because of how the story is written. My favorite murder victims are bad people who get their comeuppance like the dastardly character in MURDER ON THE ORIENT EXPRESS. A more recent example is by a new author ? Kay Brett? About a female serial killer who kills men like Harvey Weinstein.

    Like many, I cannot read a novel where a child, a person with disabilities or a pet is murdered.

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  10. I'm with Judy Singer. If you kill off a series favorite character with no apparent background for doing so I'm done. You could put them in ICU as you unravel the villain, but you'd better resuscitate them or I'm outta there. Many other series know better than to do that and I can turn to them to ease the pain of what you did to that dear character.

    I know sometimes babies, children and pets must die, but it guts me to read it and I am relieved to know it pains authors to write it. It makes a strong statement that authors innately feel the most pain when the innocents - adult, child or animals die. I cannot imagine what it must take out of you to write those scenes.

    Jenn, I swear I can just see you sitting at the computer arguing with your character to die! And laughed when I learned the character won. Reckon that reminds us that a good author listens to where her characters take her. -- Victoria

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  11. Paula B here ~ I read “Killers of a Certain Age”. Women over 60. Awesome.

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  12. I like the books where the character is not liked by almost everyone and anyone could have murdered the victim. But sometimes the author has a motive for everyone and it is just a total random pick to determine the murderer. The murderer should have clues and motive the others don't.
    Watching TV shows, my hub and I can generally tell who will be knocked off because that is the one who everyone dislikes.
    There is a BBC show called BEYOND PARADISE set in a stunningly beautiful British seaside town. The story involves a local police dept (4 people). The location is charming, the cast is charming, the stories this year have switched from someone getting murdered to a mystery that is happening but no one dies. I actually like it as I am getting rather tired of crime shows being about murder.

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