Festival of Books: What's the secret to making a crime novel work? - Los Angeles Times
Advertisement

Festival of Books: What’s the secret to making a crime novel work?

Share via

To write a good mystery novel, you’ve got to have a strong sense of place.

Otherwise, said novelist Steph Cha, it’s just a plot.

At a crime fiction panel at the Los Angeles Times Festival of Books on Saturday, writers Daniel Pyne (“Fifty Mice”), Naomi Hirahara (“Grave on Grand Avenue”), Attica Locke (“Pleasantville”) and Cha (“Follow Her Home”) talked about accurately describing places portrayed in their novels, whether it’s Los Angeles or Houston.

FULL COVERAGE: FESTIVAL OF BOOKS

Locke discussed the evolution of Houston’s diversity, which played a role in her two novels.

Advertisement

“Houston in ’81 looked very particular -- it was drawn along stark black-and-white lines,” she said.

“When I was in high school, I graduated high school in ‘91, I think there were 50 to 60 native languages spoken. I just try to show Houston as different than it was in ‘81, and that was very, very important to me.”

#LITIDOL: AUTHORS DISCUSS THEIR LITERARY IDOLS

Advertisement

Many of the writers talked about truly conveying the experience of living in these cities, including their multiculturalism.

“My characters tend to be from different ethnic backgrounds,” Cha said. “A lot of the time, when you write characters of color, people think you’re doing something, trying to prove a point. Sometimes the people around you aren’t always white, and they are women, so I wanted to write that.”

Hirahara talked about a shift in protagonists -- from Mas Arai, a Japanese gardener who was written in homage to her late father, to Ellie Rush, a mixed-race Japanese American LAPD bicycle cop -- between her two mystery series.

Advertisement

INTERACTIVE GAME: HOW TO BE A WRITER

“I really wanted to reflect what it is like to be an Angeleno,” she said.

Check out the Festival of Books schedule for this weekend.

MORE FROM THE FESTIVAL OF BOOKS:

What’s the secret to making a crime novel work?

Can social media solve the social justice problem?

‘Books spawn change,’ Times’ Austin Beutner says to open Festival of Books

Advertisement

Follow the books section on Twitter @latimesbooks and Facebook

Advertisement