Tuesday, September 23, 2014

Please Welcome Suspense Novelist Libby Fischer Hellmann

Omnimystery News: Guest Post by Libby Fischer Hellmann
with
Libby Fischer Hellmann

We are delighted to welcome back author Libby Fischer Hellmann to Omnimystery News.

Libby visited with us last week, when we discussed her new Georgia Davis mystery Nobody's Child (The Red Herrings Press; August 2014 trade paperback and ebook formats) and we asked her to tell us more about how she sees her writing evolving. She titles her guest post for us today "Going Dark".

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Libby Fischer Hellmann
Photo provided courtesy of
Libby Fischer Hellmann;
Photo credit Michael Candee,
First Light Creative

Going dark.

No, this isn't about Facebook posts. Or how to fly under the radar. Or drop off the grid. This is about writing crime thrillers. Story arcs. Voice. Tone. Setting. Even action.

Over the past few years, my writing has grown progressively darker, and Nobody's Child, my eleventh novel and fourth Georgia Davis crime thriller, is the darkest book I've ever written. But where did this noir bent come from? Is that my authentic voice? Or something that's evolved over time?

Good vs. Evil

I've given a lot of thought to this and decided that I flip between two diametrically opposite perceptions of human nature. The optimist in me sees human beings as fundamentally good, compassionate, and principled. Life is filled with challenges — even disappointments — but tempered by mercy and inspired by endless possibilities. Kind of a combination of Anne Frank ("In spite of everything I still believe people are good") and the adventures of Francois Rabelais' Pantagruel.

But the other side of my brain sees human nature in a darker vein. People are selfish, manipulative, and greedy. The object is to get "yours" before someone else takes it. Destroy someone if they get in your way. Believe the worst and prepare for it. Take a trip down those Chandler-esque "Mean Streets." Of course, that's nothing new; most crime writers spend their careers tapping into the dark side. But we also understand that a villain is usually a hero in his or her own mind, so we may temper their evil by giving them abusive childhoods, broken dreams, or plenty of bad luck. Or we ignore their troubled background completely and create a really bad-ass with no redeeming qualities.

I've written novels from both sides. Indeed, in some books the perpetrator turned out to be a surprise, even to me. In A Bitter Veil, for example, the characters surprised me with their heroism and compassion, and I had to keep changing who committed the crime. That was my last heroic novel, by the way. Since then, I've taken a sharply darker turn.

Chaos To Order

Another factor that took me down the dark path has to do with the structure of a crime novel. When we begin, the world of the novel is in order. The commission of the crime tips that world into chaos, and it's the job of the protagonist to restore order. Which he or she does ninety-five per cent of the time. In this way, by the way, a mystery is similar to a western. The bad guy is caught and justice is served.

But what if that doesn't happen? What if the protagonist only does part of the job? Do the forces of evil return, perhaps even stronger, to wreak vengeance? Does the chaos persist, and if it does, who suffers and why? I wanted to explore those questions, and I have — in short stories, plus my novels An Image of Death, Havana Lost, and Nobody's Child.

The World Today

Yet another issue is the condition of our world. So many frightening situations occur today that even Upworthy can't comfort me. Hot tempers, hotter dogma, escalating violence, the explosion of the Middle East, aggression from our supposed friends … all of it fed by a media whose oversimplifications and biases make them shills for the highest bidder … It seems as if the planet is one matchstick away from annihilation. I don't write science fiction or dystopian, but it's clear some of that anxiety and despair has seeped into my fiction.

In fact, the downward spiral I've traveled is beginning to scare me. A human being can only take so much darkness. Not to mention readers. I realize I need to pull back. That's why my next book will be an Ellie Foreman mystery. Ellie's got a rock-solid support system and a great sense of humor. She refuses to wallow in the dark side for long. She's a fundamentally positive person, the yin to Georgia's yang.

For all those reasons, I've decided become a reluctant optimist. George Orwell explained it quite well in All Art is Propaganda:

"On the whole human beings want to be good, but not too good, and not quite all the time."

I'm going to try to emulate him. Wish me luck.

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Libby Fischer Hellmann is the author of two mystery series, several stand-alone thrillers, and numerous short stories. Originally from Washington D.C., she has lived in Chicago for 30 years and claims they'll take her out of there feet first.

For more information about the author, please visit her website at LibbyHellmann.com or find her on Facebook and Twitter.

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Nobody's Child by Libby Fischer Hellmann

Nobody's Child
Libby Fischer Hellmann
A Georgia Davis Novel of Suspense

A bloodstained note left for Chicago PI Georgia Davis reveals the shocking existence of a half-sister she never knew about. That sister, Savannah, is pregnant and begging for Georgia's help.

Determined to track her down, Georgia finds herself heading deep into the dangerous underworld of Chicago's illegal sex trafficking business. She soon discovers that trafficking is just a small part of the horrifying and deadly situation in which her new sister is caught up.

Even worse, as Georgia tries to extricate Savannah, she comes up against an old enemy determined to make sure neither woman will escape alive.

Amazon.com Print/Kindle Format(s)  BN.com Print/Nook Format(s)

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