Bernadette Calonego's Blog: Eventful - Posts Tagged "disappearance"
Death is stranger than fiction.
It is an eery feeling when an author publishes a murder mystery and soon after that, a crime takes place that is strangely similar to the one in her book. I know the feeling because it has happened to me. Not long after my murder mystery "Stormy Cove" was published, a young woman disappeared on the Northern tip of the Canadian island of Newfoundland, exactly where my murder mystery is set. In "Stormy Cove", a young woman disappears without a trace, too.
When I came to Northern Newfoundland, I instantly thought that this is a region where somebody could make a body disappear very easily. There are swamps, hundreds of small lakes, there is wilderness, the tundra - and there is the North Atlantic. When you dump a body in the North Atlantic, it won`t wash up on one of the beaches. It just vanishes.
The woman who disappeared in November 2016, a mother of two, hasn´t been found yet. The police treat her disappearance as suspicious and as a possible homicide. The locals talk about who they think is the murderer. But the police has a hard time finding the perpetrator. There is no body, no crime scene, no witnesses.
This is the dirty little secret in criminal investigations (and in crime fiction): So many cases are never solved. Thousands of murderers commit the perfect crime and get away with it. Only in crime fiction, we have the answer at the end of the book. Still, I haven`t given up hope that the woman - her name is Jennifer - will be found one day and that there will be justice for her.
When I came to Northern Newfoundland, I instantly thought that this is a region where somebody could make a body disappear very easily. There are swamps, hundreds of small lakes, there is wilderness, the tundra - and there is the North Atlantic. When you dump a body in the North Atlantic, it won`t wash up on one of the beaches. It just vanishes.
The woman who disappeared in November 2016, a mother of two, hasn´t been found yet. The police treat her disappearance as suspicious and as a possible homicide. The locals talk about who they think is the murderer. But the police has a hard time finding the perpetrator. There is no body, no crime scene, no witnesses.
This is the dirty little secret in criminal investigations (and in crime fiction): So many cases are never solved. Thousands of murderers commit the perfect crime and get away with it. Only in crime fiction, we have the answer at the end of the book. Still, I haven`t given up hope that the woman - her name is Jennifer - will be found one day and that there will be justice for her.
Published on April 14, 2019 16:24
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Tags:
canada, disappearance, newfoundland, perfect-crime, true-crime
Eventful
Right now, I am multitasking, juggling several books at the same time, emerging from one, diving into another one.
My new mystery novel "Stormy Cove" is released on May 24. But another things is happe Right now, I am multitasking, juggling several books at the same time, emerging from one, diving into another one.
My new mystery novel "Stormy Cove" is released on May 24. But another things is happening: My next novel that is set in the Arctic is being edited. And I am already thinking of a future novel with cowboys, horses and a series of unexplained high-profile accidents/murders in it.
Sometimes, when people inquire about my books, I mix up my heroines`names or the locations or even the plot. That is what happens when you are pulled out of your quiet and solitary occupation of writing, and all of a sudden you find yourself out in the open, surrounded by people and bombarded by questions. But I enjoy that part, too, I really do. I just have to manage the transition.
What I am really looking forward to is the exchange with my readers. It is amazing what they come up with and what a particular book means to them and their lives.
All I can say: Bring it on. ...more
My new mystery novel "Stormy Cove" is released on May 24. But another things is happe Right now, I am multitasking, juggling several books at the same time, emerging from one, diving into another one.
My new mystery novel "Stormy Cove" is released on May 24. But another things is happening: My next novel that is set in the Arctic is being edited. And I am already thinking of a future novel with cowboys, horses and a series of unexplained high-profile accidents/murders in it.
Sometimes, when people inquire about my books, I mix up my heroines`names or the locations or even the plot. That is what happens when you are pulled out of your quiet and solitary occupation of writing, and all of a sudden you find yourself out in the open, surrounded by people and bombarded by questions. But I enjoy that part, too, I really do. I just have to manage the transition.
What I am really looking forward to is the exchange with my readers. It is amazing what they come up with and what a particular book means to them and their lives.
All I can say: Bring it on. ...more
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