10 Commandments of Detective Fiction; Rebooted
We are probably all familiar with most of the ten commandments of golden
age crime fiction as they were written by Mr Ronald Knox, a Catholic priest
who belonged to the Detection Club. Nowadays
the club hosts such luminaries as Martin Edwards, Simon Brett, Michael Ripley
and many others who know a lot of things. And are good on a quiz team.
Do these
rules stand up to modern fiction?
Could we
apply Stephen Moffat’s idea of there’s nothing new, things just change, i.e.
when he was writing Sherlock in the modern day he looked at the originals very
carefully. Organised crime was a big thing in those books, it was a new threat
to the audience and it was very scary. By the time the TV series came along with
Cumberbatch and his cheekbones, it was suicide bombers and cyber terrorism we were scared of. Different song but the same
tune.
Here's Ramsay’s
tongue in cheek guide to the ten rules of crime fiction- rebooted.
- The criminal must be someone mentioned in the early part of the
story, but must not be anyone whose thoughts the reader has been allowed
to follow.
I think
this still stands. Unless you are writing Rodger Ackroyd again….or filming Taggart
in which case the killer is the last man standing.
- All supernatural or preternatural agencies are ruled out as a
matter of course.
Or maybe not. The lovely James Oswald has a
distinct sixth sense present in his novels. Obviously no good if a ghost turns
up and says, 'by the way, Jimmy did it'. But a wee bit of spookiness sometimes doesn’t
go amiss.
- Not more than one secret room or passage is allowable.
Unless there’s
an architect in the book and the house has signs of being recently remodelled. You
were warned dear reader, you were warned.
- No hitherto undiscovered poisons may be used, nor any appliance
which will need a long scientific explanation at the end.
Ha, I think
Tom Clancy did okay with the latter bit. And my recent book does have a bit of
explanation of reverse DNA searching. I think that covers number 9 as well.
Plus, thinking about it, the poisoning of
various persons from a certain country ( the fatal poison on the door handle) was
both terrifying and fascinating. So weird poisons are okay, especially when inflicted on an
innocent bystander by a government.
- No Chinaman must figure in the story.
Bloody hard
to do if the book is set in China.
- No accident must ever help the detective, nor must he ever have an
unaccountable intuition which proves to be right.
I think the
latter part of this is anti feminist. Of course female detectives have an intuition re
who the baddie is, something just not right about him/ her/ it. It makes up for
us having to go for chapters without going to the toilet, and for having to
take a handbag to every crime scene.
- The detective must not himself commit the crime.
Yes because
that never works out does it? *See note at end not included here because rule
eleven should be ‘no spoilers.’
- The detective must not alight on any clues which are not instantly
produced for the inspection of the reader.
Still true
I think.
- The stupid friend of the detective, the Watson, must not conceal
any thoughts which pass through his mind; his intelligence must be
slightly, but very slightly, below that of the average reader.
You do need
one character to explain things out loud for the readers benefit, a few
thoughts machinating in their head. It’s when two professionals doing the same
job explain things to each other that the trouble happens. I mean, if they need
that explained, they shouldn’t be doing their job!!
- Twin brothers, and doubles generally, must not appear unless we
have been duly prepared for them.
Or not
prepared for them but the DNA may or may not be identical, Same DNA different
fingerprints. Sorted.
·
Totally unsuccessful like the longest running
stage show on the face of the planet. Or London’s West End, Same thing.
Any rules you’d like to see rebooted?
The hero must not forget he has a mobile in
his pocket i.e. he could have called it in on page 3 and saved us the bother.
Electric cars have a limited range. They don’t
last the length of the book, the way the detectives' bladder seems to.
Cheers
C
All rules are made to be broken by writers with sufficient chops. The rest remains as an exercise for the student...
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