by Jackie King
Mysteries are my first love, but
since Valentine’s Day is tomorrow, I decided to explore mysteries that have a
love interest. Adding a touch of romance is something I do in my own mystery series
featuring Grace Cassidy.
In her autobiography, Agatha
Christie mentioned that if she added a bit of romance to her novels, the books to
sold more copies. Now I think that most mystery fans will agree that writing
romance wasn’t the great Dame Agatha’s strong suit. Her surprising plot twists were
what caused her books to fly off the shelves. But the famous lady of mystery was an astute business woman; therefore most
of her stories have some kind of love interest.
Agatha Christie |
Writers have now become adroit
at blending a love story with pure mystery. In Sue Grafton’s Kinsey Millhone mysteries,
our heroine always seems to have bad luck with men. But when Grafton penned G Is for Gumshoe and added an anti-hero
type guy named Robert Deitz, the book sizzled for a few pages.
Sue Grafton |
Historical mysteries also feature
love. One of my favorite authors, Anne Perry, uses two different hero types. William
Monk, brilliant and ambitious, fancies helpless, very ladylike women. Our
protagonist, Hester Latterly, who served with Florence Nightingale in the
Crimean War, is a prototype of the early feminist. When these two characters
are pierced by Cupid’s arrows, the excitement mounts.
Another of Perry’s popular
series features Thomas Pitt, a poorly paid policeman who weds Charlotte
Ellison, the daughter of a well-to-do family. The union is definitely a no-no
in the class-conscious Victorian setting. The marriage and the complications
that arise from it, make Perry’s plots deep and believable.
Anne Perry |
Even hardboiled mysteries
feature strong love stories. The Elvis Cole series, written by the grand master
Robert Crais, is a perfect example. Elvis’ love match with Lucy Chenier is
enough to melt your teeth. And even though the two have parted for the safety
of Lucy’s young son, her memory still lingers with Elvis and adds an extra
dimension to Crais’ books.
Robert Crais |
Joe Pike, that hour-and-a-half
hardboiled egg and my personal favorite hero (also created by Crais) is not
immune to love. When he falls, he falls hard.
This list could go on and on, and
I haven’t even mentioned the popular romantic suspense novels. So on
Valentine’s Day Eve, I’m going to go wild and say that adding romance to
mystery just makes the story that much richer and more fulfilling.
If you have a favorite mystery that
also features romance, I’d like to know about it. I will also love any comment
you care to make, favorable or not.
Great article and I couldn't agree with you more, Jackie. A little romance adds another dimension to the plot, but I don't think explicit sex scenes should be included in a mystery novel.
ReplyDeleteHi Jean, Thanks for stopping by. I agree with you on explicit sex scenes--sex is NOT a spectator sport. :-)
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