Showing posts with label Deadly Ink. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Deadly Ink. Show all posts

Friday, August 14, 2015

Murder Mystery by Committee


At ten in the morning last Sunday a panel called "What If" took place at Deadly Ink, a small conference in New Brunswick for writers and readers of crime fiction. The "What If" panel was one of those where the panelists and the audience make up a whole murder mystery out of nothing, starting by inventing a detective and ending with the solution to the mystery.

I've been to a few of these things over the years, with a lot of bright, famous, witty people on the panels, and I don't recall any of those other panels working quite as well as this one did. Maybe it was the moderator, E. F. Watkins. Maybe it was the panelists, Annette Dashofy, Jane Kelly, the inimitable Brad Parks, and our own Sheila York. Maybe it was the audience members who offered suggestions and plot points, among them Annamaria Alfieri. But when they were finished, all these folks had outlined a good story. It was not a cozy, everyone agreed, although no animals were harmed that we know of.

We began with the detective. Professional or amateur? Amateur, everyone said. A librarian, said Paula Lanier. (I think Paula took the picture above, though I'm not sure. A lot of great panel pictures have been flying around.) A corporate librarian in a drug company, I suggested, figuring that a drug company was an excellent place for evil and chicanery of every sort. (Nobody remembered Jersey Monkey, so that was all right.) And everyone assumed that the librarian detective must be a woman. So they called her Sheila.

Good. The crime? Murder. The victim? The company's C.E.O. The reason for Sheila the librarian to investigate? They were having an affair, and she is a suspect. The means of death? An embolism caused by an injection of air from a hypodermic needle. Roberta Rogow insisted that hypodermic needles were passé. So, okay, the needle, found at the crime scene, came from a museum-type display case in the corporate library. Someone was trying to frame Sheila. Now for the suspects: the victim's wife, their son, the son's wife, and a failed litigant in a suit against the drug company.

And so it went. In the process of putting the story together the panelists and audience members made choices, accepting or rejecting various plot elements according to their own personal tastes and value systems as well as what they perceived to be the generally accepted norms of readers. Annamaria refused to entertain any plot idea that involved harm, or remote threat of harm, to a child. Brad Parks had to point out that as an adulterer the C.E.O. would fall so low in the readers' estimation that no one would care that he was dead. But his wife is sick, someone said. Ah, he said. John Edwards. It was held to be important for the reader to care about the victim. And so a long discussion ensued to figure out how to make the affair okay from the standpoint of the wife.

If you want to know whodunnit, I'll tell you in the comments later. I think the point I'm trying to make is that the character of the writer—the writer's moral nature—infuses the work. What was so delightful and refreshing about this panel, at ten o'clock on a Sunday morning when all of us had been partying until, say, midnight the night before, was the sweetness of character they showed as they crafted the story. It made me want to read their books. (Of course I've already read Sheila's books. And Annamaria's. Great stuff.)

© 2015 Kate Gallison

Friday, August 7, 2015

Today we go to Deadly Ink

Not all of us, just Annamaria Alfieri, Sheila York, and me. We plan to wear our official tee shirts and act like big shots as members of the famous Crime Writers' Chronicle. Everybody else there will be a big shot, too, each in his or her own way; the other writers because they write, the fans because without them we would have no readers (a sad state of affairs), and Debby Buchanan (a bit of both writer and fan), because she put the whole shebang together.

The Deadly Ink conference takes place at the Hyatt Regency New Brunswick, and will be running all weekend. There's still time to pick up a ticket and show up. If you plan to go, here's when we will be on panels, and what panels we will be on:

Annamaria will be on Location, Location, Location at 2:00 on Saturday afternoon, and will moderate the Q & A With some Real "Characters" at 1:00 on Sunday afternoon.

Sheila will be on the Pros vs Amateurs panel at 9:00 Saturday morning, will moderate Ripped from the Headlines at 3:00 on Saturday afternoon, and will be on the What If? panel at 10:00 Sunday morning and the Q & A With some Real "Characters" at 1:00 on Sunday afternoon.

I will be on the Jersey Girls/Boys panel on Friday evening, probably still stuffing myself with Deadly Desserts, and on the Short and Sweet (or Sour) panel at nine on Saturday morning, talking about short stories.

And of course we will be wandering around the conference at other times, perfectly willing to talk to friends, acquaintances, and strangers. You will know us by our CWC tee shirts. All the famous people will be wearing them.


To find out more, visit the Deadly Ink web site.

Kate Gallison

Tuesday, August 5, 2014

Report on Deadly Ink 2014


Guests of Honor Donald Bain and Renee Paley-Bain
interviewed by Toastmaster Donna Andrews.
Ultra-gracious, all three!

It’s not the biggest mystery conference of the year.  One of the smaller ones, actually.  But this is a blessing for the writers, aspiring writers, and fans who attend.   The information flow is constant and the level of discourse high, but there is no standoffishness among the participants.  Openness is one of this mystery conference’s greatest assets—no matter whom you want to talk to about writing the genre—everyone is right there and willing to engage.

Just one of score of panels featured the attending authors.


A particular benefit for the members of the New York Chapter of Mystery Writers of America is that this meeting of the tribe includes quite a few of us, so the mix of people offers quite a few familiar faces.  This is not to say that people don’t travel from afar.  Last year I made friends with a mystery novelist from Arizona.  This year I met a fellow writer of historicals from Louisiana.

The atmosphere at Deadly Ink is casual, and there are plenty of opportunities for one to one and small group discussions.
 
How the sky looked from my room.

The weather last weekend was quite awful, which gave us all an excuse to remark that it was no sacrifice to stay indoors on that particular summer weekend.  But everyone I met also said they would not care.  We were making our own sunshine, regardless of what was going on outside.

Unlike most such conferences, meals are almost all included.  So it is easy to sit with different people for each one and get to know many of the attendees.
Dinner entertainment.

Sherlock Holmes tests his Truth-o-meter on Terry Irving


This year during the banquet, a troop of local actors performed a comic whodunit, with audience participation.

E.F. Watkins, happy David Award winner!


Each year, the people attending choose the winner of the David award, for the best mystery of the previous year.  This year it went to E. F. Watkins for her Dark Music.


Annamaria Alfieri highly recommends that you attend next year!