From Lee Lamothe. I kinda screwed up getting this post posted here; somehow I went onto another site and put it there: I think I might have whored out on my next
novel, due out in mid-July from Dundurn. Free Form Jazz -- the first
episode of a policier series involving a city cop and a provincial
policewoman -- was written several years ago and was set in Toronto
and the north of Ontario. (In fact I carved it from the original The
Last Thief which, in the first draft, was a stupid 193,000 words. I
removed the cops entirely from Thief and set them aside for later;
later came Jazz.) When my agent told me people in Canada don't want to
read Toronto-centric novels and Americans don't want to read Canadian
novels I switched it to a mythic mid-Western American city that has
now become the locale for several novels, both finished and in
progress. Some of them are stand-alones. Free Form Jazz now involves
an American city detective and a State Police officer. It now takes
place in my unnamed mid-Western city and crosses the border up into
Canada. The border -- especially post-9-11 -- is a monumental problem
for criminals and I'm surprised more writers haven't examined the
hassles it has caused for the criminal element. In any case, I've
travelled to enough American cities on business involving the
underworld, that I'm as comfortable in Detroit or New York or LA as
anywhere.
In the event, I did think long and hard about changing Jazz from a finished
Canadian book to a US/Canadian-based book. After much thought I
decided it didn't matter to me where the story took place. If not
Canada, then the US; if not the US, then Hong Kong; if not Hong Kong,
then Rangoon or Palermo or Rome. My characters are as tough and weak
and heroic and cowardly no matter where they operate.
So, a question -- being a bit of a Socratic nut: how many writers on
the site would change the geography of their story if it made it
significantly easier to get published into a wider market? And how important to the reader is locale to the average crime/mystery story?
Lee