Matt Rees's Blog - Posts Tagged "leonard-cohen"
Love and the crime novel

As I write more novels, I’ve noticed that love is at the heart of crime fiction. At least, mine, anyway.
Leonard Cohen sings that “love’s the only engine of survival.” It’s a good way to look at the crime novel. Rather than being a race to unravel the murder puzzle and nab the killer, I view the crime novel as the detective’s journey toward understanding about himself. And understanding, in my experience, comes only with the unfolding of love. You can finger the killer and take away the danger he poses, but unless your detective learns about love, emotionally he won’t survive the trauma of his closeness to death.
It may seem that I ought to have figured this out before now – I’m close to completion of the manuscript of my sixth novel, after all. But society hides the centrality of love behind strictures of finance and duty and work, and the format of the crime novel often plays the same role. So it’s only now, 400,000 words down the line, that it’s clear to me.
I started out thinking of crime novels as marked by plot – a murder, an investigation, a discovery of the bad guy – alongside a deeper emotional characterization of the hero and as many of the other characters as I could manage.
Then as my novels went on, the importance of relationships between the characters started to grow more sigificant in the way I conceputalized them. I realized that it was these relationship which gave the novel structure and meaning, rather than the Three Act concept (dilemma, discovery, resolution) of most writing texts. The Three Acts were the superstructure, if you like, but no more.
Read the rest of this post on my blog The Man of Twists and Turns.<\a>
Published on October 13, 2010 23:58
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Tags:
bethlehem, brooklyn, crime-fiction, detective-fiction, leonard-cohen, new-york, omar-yussef, philip-marlowe, the-collaborator-of-bethlehem, the-fourth-assassin