You, know, serious crimes.
It's funny, they always say "write what you know". (And what most of "them" know is campus politics) So should crime writers have some experience?
I'm not much of a criminal type. Well, violence. But that's not like planning out how to kill somebody or how to take all their money. Then living with it. I know some people who do serious crimes. I don't really chase "bad boys". More the other way around. But I seem to have a knack for getting tight with guys who theive and brutalize a bit. I've been present when crimes were committed, which can be the same thing when you get to court, it turns out. Sometimes I feel sorry for the guy being worked over or ripped off. But sometimes not.
But do you think you can really get into the head of somebody who can point a gun at somebody and say they'll kill them if they don't do something, then if they don't do it, they go ahead and kill them? Or somebody who just got crippled so somebody could take their bank card and the $60 they just got from the ATM? Much less more serious stuff?
We think we know what we'd do if somebody killed our mother or raped our daughter or smashed up our brand new BMW, but do we? Is that really what we'd do?
Are most people law abiding just because they lack the guts to just take what they want?
Tags:
Interesting perspective, Cammy.
I think it gets down to motive. Given the right circumstances, anyone might cross that line. As a father and husband, I would do anything to protect my family. As you may know, I was in law enforcement for a couple decades and worked undercover during narcotics and gang investigations. I ran with the bad boys--bikers, gangsters, and drug dealers. The one thing that seperated me from them was motive. I was authorized by law and department policy to engage in a certail level of criminal activity to gain acceptance by these low lifes. I did not relish breaking the law, and it went against everything I believed in. Their motivation was greed and predatory advantage over others. Some did it because they were addicted to drugs. Most did it because they could.
On the other hand, I know just how ineffective law enfoircement can be in trying to track down those who have kidnapped, violated or killed others. Here is where I would be tempted to cross that line. For example, if a sex pervert snatched one of my daughters, all bets are off. I would move heaven and earth to save them or bring down the wrath of God on that deviate. I would have laid aside my badge (because my actions would be so contradictory to what I had sworn to obey and follow), and become that pervert's worse nightmare. This is the motivation that drives characters of novels and movies. I would become John Locke's Donovan Creed or Lee Child's Jack Reacher. The raw emotion that pushes the character into that new worlds were everything--including right and wrong--changes what a person is willing to do.
I think most people are law abiding for different reasons. Some do it because they don't want to suffer the circumstances, or they are afraid of getting caught. But I believe many obey the law because they recognized that with out it, we become one jungle where the weak die and and strong prevail.
I just did a guest blog post at Buried Under Books. Topic - Write what you Know, and how it applies to crime fiction. Check it out:
http://www.cncbooks.com/blog/2011/08/05/write-what-you-know/
LOL! I don't think many folks here would admit they did crimes. I am sure a lot of writers have. Writers are just people like everyone else so of course some have done crimes.
This reminds me of what erotica authors always say. They say people always think they are sex-crazed perverts because they write about sex. Writers mainly write what they do because they enjoy it. If you've researched something enough or have been around it, you can write it.
I've always loved suspense. I loved Hitchcock and started watching his films as a kid. He is one of the main reasons I write this genre. I love mystery, stuff like that. I always have so I guess it comes natural to write it.
No jury of your peers would ever convict you.
(How did you ever CLEAN those things?)
That was a bit spooky. Personally, I actually prefer kind gentle folk for the most part. I have met some people who were quite 'difficult' but it wasn't anything I had hoped to have to cope with. Write what you know? Well, in crime fiction I think having read good books on the subject or having watched lots of movies is more than enough. I do not think experience with crimes is any real requirement for writing crime fiction.
Are most people law abiding only out of fear or cowardice? Well, that is a question which I view as particularly spiritual in nature. I do not believe that all people are born criminals. In reality, I used to believe that all humans were born Good - opposite of Catholic teaching about "original sin", but have since modified my view that there may be diverse natures. The Hindus taught that there are people born in a natural condition dominated either by ignorance, or passion or goodness and that society can influence that nature. Personally, I do not believe that all obedience stems from personal cowardice, but more so from love and the maturity to appreciate that one is part of a group and that excessive and harmful forms of selfishness are often counter productive to one's own well being.
Welcome to
CrimeSpace
© 2024 Created by Daniel Hatadi. Powered by