This has been an interesting and seemingly useful journey through genre structures. I have pretty much decided I am going to pivot, but it will be a soft pivot; walking back on a few things, changing the emphasis in a few places. Mostly having to do with character, as the ones having to do with story are going to take...more work like this.
I had been thinking that the London book didn't quite work as a mystery, but then I scanned the set-up scenes in the Japan book (there's a specific "refusal of the call" in that one) and I realized I'd missed a genre variation.
I was thinking Murder, She Wrote; where there is a body drop in the opening and the thing unfolds as a fairly straight-forward task of figuring out who did it. There's a different model, however.
It starts with a simple phone call. In London, this is Graham, who after a bit of a go-around explains someone might be stealing Roman coins from the dig Penny is working. It expands, with mysterious warnings, a shooting at the cemetery, more and more people of interest are added to the list and it is starting to look like a much deeper nest of conspiracies and secrets.
And in a way Penny was right. Although she finally confronts only one man, he was working with Penny's own boss and there was a tiny cover-up. But this wasn't nearly as big as the cover-up, and the secret, of Wentworth's Zero Room -- and that is where that final confrontation with Guy occurs.
I could apply this structure to the Japan book, with some stretching. It doesn't work at all for the Paris book but this itself is useful; it says that I may have been blending genres all along. Paris was designed as a treasure hunt, with the usual beats of that story template. And Japan is really...a caper.
The beats of the Japan book, in many places, I took quite consciously from the movie You Only Live Twice. Bond goes to a sumo match, Penny goes to the kabuki. She meets her Tiger Tanaka a little later, and up until that point had little idea what she had been sent to Japan for; just that it seemed to be a job and there might be more to it than it looked. Deacon/Blofeld is introduced fairly early. She and the local authority (in this case, a member of the Imperial Household Agency) plan their infiltration of his compound. She is discovered...and the ninja cavalry come rappelling down through the skylight.I don't exactly make it a secret, either. She all but names the movie in the "scars" scene at the Park Hyatt Tokyo (yes...the Lost in Translation hotel).
And whether it is a chase, a mystery, a caper, or whatever, I need some kind of structure for the New Mexico book. I can see it working as another Rockford style mystery (the type goes back a lot earlier than him...I'd call Marlowe the archetype). She starts to look into the body found during the archaeological dig (in her shovel pit...and it isn't entirely coincidence), and it looks very much like conspiracy and indeed turns out to be one. Just not the first one she suspected. Or the second.
The advice about plotting a mystery is exactly like the advice about plotting a thriller. There are few totally cerebral cases, not in today's genre fiction. I still have what I already knew; Penny needs some skin in the game.
I'm working on this now. There are hooks already there in the setup. It was her dig. Worse, the people running the dig might blame her, meaning her career is in jeopardy. More so, I've got a sub-plot that brings Lon into the picture, and this can be thrown into Penny's basket with a false accusation against her (and leaving a very, very small conspiracy for her to uncover on the way to the big one).
I might have to kill off Lon early, though. Because that's when things turn around and Penny goes all-out.
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Oh, and what was that about character pivot? What I've picked up is that the plot unfolds the same and believability remains the same whether your hero is an everyman or an adventurer. And neither impinges on what I call the "Christmas Jones" skills -- unless those skills are specific to the investigating or to the rough-and-tumble; trained forensics specialist, sharpshooter, martial artist, etc.
I'm going to back off her confidence. And the apparent competence. I like the physical exuberance but heading towards making her competent in parkour and climbing buildings and rough-and-tumble and maybe some very basic martial arts was not the direction to go. The grim round of workouts and training is boring me too. It was a thing for the Japan novel, because that was part of the joke. But she's not an athlete, she's a genki girl.
I want to keep that physical exuberance and the way she throws herself into things, but making her either good at it or, even, conscious of how good she is wasn't working for me. The chase scenes in the Paris book left me a little cold. But I could see this coming in the Japan book; The yakuza chase and fight worked for me. The climbing wall less so, and the fight with Kaori...no.
A couple things I am keeping. She is still scared when she gets in a dangerous situation, but she doesn't freeze up. She also has just enough perspective (Amelia's job in the Paris book was to finally hammer this point home to her) that when she does pull off something badass, she can admit it. And enjoy it.
And as for all those hard-won skills from the previous books, like picking locks and riding snowmobiles? Not quite back to ground zero. Almost as good as "I've never done this!" is "I think I remember where the gas pedal is!" So it plays out like she is picking it up quick or really lucky (the standard everyman excuse) but she does have her "junior woodchuck" hand-wave of "Yeah, I rode one once in Japan..."
Which remark she will make. So I'm not counting on the reader remembering, and I'm not showing her carrying around a knapsack full of skills. I'm just using a slightly different justification. (Basically, it's the "I used to bullseye womp rats" justification).
As for structure? I do want to keep the pressure up, even if it isn't tension or a ticking clock. Just that she will alway have something to lose by not continuing. But I also like her better when she has a positive reason to approach something. In Japan she actually cried before agreeing to investigate Deacon. But then, she was carrying a lot of extra baggage at that moment. World's fastest recovery from PTSD (just add buddhist shrine, mountain priest...and yakuza.)
The motor-mouth stuff I can tone down and her focus improve, now that I think of it. She's earned a little maturity.
And I want clearer plots. Perhaps I should say I want external plots.
I've been leaning on conflicts that are internal, or even more often, thematic, and relying on those to carry the story arc. I've been borrowing resonance from them when the external conflict seems to fall short of proper tension and resolution. Penny's trip into the tunnels would have meant a lot less without Linnet's journey in 1941. I am risking this again in the New Mexico book if the ideas of peoples and migrations and human history don't actually have anything to do with either the mystery she is solving or how she approaches it or the solution.
Well, sort of. I call it a "Prachetism" when there's something that through most of the novel seemed like a thematic motif, but it becomes oddly important (through some sort of magical theory-of-contagion thing) to the resolution.
I like doing that. But I should first see that my external plot is strong enough to stand on its own.