Valerie
asked
Jacqueline Winspear:
I want to thank for Maisie Dobbs, as well. I enjoy reading mysteries series, so what you do fits me very well. However, while many series are extremely formulaic, yours are not. The writing is more literary than a normal mystery series. I always learn so much about the time period and the people when I read one of your books. And, your characters are so human, well-rounded, and real. How do you do this?
Jacqueline Winspear
Valerie, thank you for your question. I guess to start, I don't see why a work of mystery or any other "genre" fiction should not be literary. Some of the best, most intelligent, literary writing today is coming from writers in what people term "the mystery genre" - and it's in mystery that readers are exposed to fiction dealing with the sharp end of societal problems, historical events, etc. The fact that a mystery takes the reader through chaos to some sort of resolution speaks to the human condition - through the lens of mystery we see humanity at its best and worst. I don't know that I can say how I do what I do - but I know that I have a story in my head that I want to tell, and I do all I can to tell that story to the best of my ability. To do anything less would be to let myself down. That's how I look at it. And I'm like any other writer out there - I am always afraid to pick up the book when it's published, because I know I could have done better - after all, time is the best editor!
More Answered Questions
Heather Shaw
asked
Jacqueline Winspear:
I am huge fan of your book "The Care and Management of Lies." I felt like I was in the environment with the characters and by the end, had a much better understanding of the world they lived in. Do you plan to write more World War I- set books? I would be interested to read a book from further into the war... As the role of women evolved and the optimism of the war waned and outcome more unsure.
Morgan Golladay
asked
Jacqueline Winspear:
MAISIE DOBBS was the first novel I had read which gave me a clear insight into the struggles of the British during WWI -- the rationing, deprivations, fears for the men (and women) engaged in the war -- on a very personal level. Here in the US, we were isolated from the war, but for the last year, and while great loss was incurred, I don't think it matched the losses of England. What were your sources?
Jacqueline Winspear
8,254 followers
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