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E.J. Copperman | Behind Inspector Specter

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โ€œWhere do you get your ideas?โ€

Writers get this question all the time. Itโ€™s an honest question asked by readers
and in some cases interviewers who want to know about the process. I understand
the impetus behind the question.

I just donโ€™t have an answer for it.

The fact is, if I had a formula, a foolproof means of finding a good idea for a
novel, I could get one whenever I wanted and this job would beโ€ฆ well, Iโ€™d still
have to write the book, so โ€œeasyโ€ might be something of an overstatement. But it
wouldnโ€™t be as hard, by a discernible margin.

My latest book, INSPECTOR SPECTER, is the sixth in the Haunted Guesthouse series. Youโ€™d think after five other books with the same characters it would be a struggle to find something for them to do. Not at all. This one came from the characters, which is the best place to start.

Alison Kerby owns a guesthouse on the Jersey Shore and it happens to have two
ghosts haunting it. They get along okay, but thatโ€™s a long story all by itself.
She also has a PI license, and in this book is asked by Lt. Anita McElone
(rhymes with โ€œmacaroniโ€), with whom she has sort of a grudging professional
relationship, to use her โ€œghosty connectionsโ€ to solve the murder of McEloneโ€™s
ex-partner, whom we met in another book in the series.

Because the story came from the characters, I could concentrate on how it
affects their relationships. I knew the story would be workable because it was
about the people readers have gotten to know, and new readers will find
accessible even without reading the other books in the series (although would
that be so bad?).

For those who want to be published writers, I canโ€™t offer a simple way to get an
idea. They tend to hit when you least expect them, so the best piece of advice
is not to expect one and see how that goes. I have gotten book ideas in the
shower (itโ€™s best not to picture some of these), while trying to fall asleep,
while walking the dog and while watching baseball on television. The baseball
ones donโ€™t tend to work very well, as my concentration is completely elsewhere.
Some of the others havenโ€™t been bad.

The trick, really, is to be able to tell a good ideaโ€”a sustainable one that will
make it through a whole book and not just up to Chapter Sixโ€”from a bad idea (the
opposite of that). And that is where some experience can actually be helpful.

Consider this: When you get a story idea, can you image what the middle of the
book will be like? Beginnings are easy; they are the story idea all by
themselves. Endings should take care of themselves because a premise demands a
resolution. What about the middle? Can you think of a really impressive,
important, fun scene thatโ€™s going to happen somewhere about halfway through your
story? If so, you might have a workable idea on your hands.

Who are your characters? One common mistake with writers is that we get a
terrific idea for a twisty plot, but we donโ€™t know whoโ€™s going to populate the
book. Remember that you character is the reason for the storyโ€”if itโ€™s not
specific to the personality youโ€™re creating, your story could happen to anybody,
and your reader wonโ€™t care as much about what happens. Think of the person you
most want in that situation, and then maybe create a character whoโ€™s the
opposite of that.

If youโ€™re trying to start a series, think hard about sustainability. Sure, you
have a great idea for this book, but if you want to bring the character back
time and again, is it plausible that s/he could get into another situation worth
writing about? Do you have more than one premise in your head? Do you know what
youโ€™ll do for Book #2? I once wrote a series about the owner of a one-screen
movie theater that showed only comedies.

Who solved crimes. Try coming up with more than one story idea for that series
sometime. It can be a challenge. (Although that series was a lot of fun to write.)

How interested are you in the story? How charged up? If youโ€™re not desperate to
get this book out before someone else hits on the same idea, if you donโ€™t feel
moved to get to the keyboard right now and start pounding it out, maybe this
isnโ€™t The Idea.

If youโ€™re writing something because you think itโ€™s going to be commercial,
because thatโ€™s the trend in publishing right now, because hey, hot teenage
vampires from Dubuque are what itโ€™s all about now and you can make a movie deal,
stop. Youโ€™ll write something even you donโ€™t want to read, and besides, by the
time your book is ready to be shown to editors, the trend will be talking
scarecrows who fight crime and search for love in the big city.

Donโ€™t write something because itโ€™ll sell. Write something that will sell because
you believe in it.

There are good ideas and bad ideas. Iโ€™ve gotten both. Hopefully, Inspector
Specter turns out to be one of the good ones, but ultimately you get to decide
that when you read the book. In your own writing, you do your best and hope the
readers agree with your assessment.

E.J. Copperman is the author of the Haunted Guesthouse mystery series from Berkley Prime Crime, continuing with INSPECTOR SPECTER December 2.

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