Entry tags:
Bodies in the peat
We went on Thursday to the Lit & Phil for the launch of Val McDermid's new book, The Grave Tattoo. One of the questions from the audience was "Aren't you ever worried that someone might steal your idea?", and of course Val said no, that wasn't a problem, if you gave six crime writers the same plot idea they would still write six completely different books. As it happens, I can illustrate this from my current reading:
( The Grave Tattoo starts with a landscape, with extreme weather, and the body it brings to light )
( So does Useful Idiots )
Val McDermid reaches back from the present-day into the history of the nineteenth century - real history, spinning from the extraordinary fact that William Wordsworth and Fletcher Christian were schoolfellows. Jan Mark's central character also investigates the past, but as a professional archaeologist - and her novel is set in the year 2255. No problem here with comparable starting points leading to similar books, then.
( The Grave Tattoo starts with a landscape, with extreme weather, and the body it brings to light )
( So does Useful Idiots )
Val McDermid reaches back from the present-day into the history of the nineteenth century - real history, spinning from the extraordinary fact that William Wordsworth and Fletcher Christian were schoolfellows. Jan Mark's central character also investigates the past, but as a professional archaeologist - and her novel is set in the year 2255. No problem here with comparable starting points leading to similar books, then.