Clare
asked
Harry Bingham:
After reading Talking to the Dead, which I found really lovely and startling, I wondered how someone could craft so polarizing yet compelling a character that even prim young Catholics like myself found her irresistible. I normally take a secret pleasure in heroines who resemble make-believe-heroine-me, but Fi is quite different from that. I guess my question is, what did you focus on most when crafting Fi?
Harry Bingham
Wow! Good question . . . but I'm not sure if I have a great answer. Here are some of the things I've thought about a lot:
POWER: I wanted a heroine who was petite, junior, young, female and a member of a smallish regional police force. I wanted a person of no consequence. But I wanted her to have inner resources of will and determination that would make her, in truth, a woman of extraordinary power.
HUMOUR: Fi is a very dark character - that morgue scene (you know which one I mean) is as black as it gets, in a way. But I needed to make sure that there was something bright and upbeat in Fi as well. Her humour (*) is a big part of making her attractive and engaging, I think. (* - not a typo, just British.)
FAMILY & FRIENDS: Likewise, a lot of maverick cops in fiction are boozy, older men with dysfunctional relationships. I wanted the opposite. Someone who was mentally challenged in herself, but who did everything she could to foster a warm, supportive body of friends & family.
SURPRISE: One of the GREAT things about writing Fi, and I hope one of the pleasures of reading her, is that you never really know what she'll do / say / think next. When she does it, it's very often something very surprising . . . but also something that makes you think, "Oh yes, that's Fi through and through."
VULNERABILITY: I also wanted the reader to connect with Fi in an almost protective way. I want to show someone who is genuinely a very vulnerable person . . . so the reader wants to protect and shelter her . . . but who then astonishes us by entering places of great danger AND achieving whatever it is she set out to do.
I hope that all explains part of what's going on in my head - but I could write heaps on these subjects! Oh, and I will say this: that I'm putting the finishing touches to book number 5 in the series which will be a very interesting one for any prim young Catholic women with an interest in Ms Griffiths. No spoilers, but I hope your medieval theology is up to snuff . . .
POWER: I wanted a heroine who was petite, junior, young, female and a member of a smallish regional police force. I wanted a person of no consequence. But I wanted her to have inner resources of will and determination that would make her, in truth, a woman of extraordinary power.
HUMOUR: Fi is a very dark character - that morgue scene (you know which one I mean) is as black as it gets, in a way. But I needed to make sure that there was something bright and upbeat in Fi as well. Her humour (*) is a big part of making her attractive and engaging, I think. (* - not a typo, just British.)
FAMILY & FRIENDS: Likewise, a lot of maverick cops in fiction are boozy, older men with dysfunctional relationships. I wanted the opposite. Someone who was mentally challenged in herself, but who did everything she could to foster a warm, supportive body of friends & family.
SURPRISE: One of the GREAT things about writing Fi, and I hope one of the pleasures of reading her, is that you never really know what she'll do / say / think next. When she does it, it's very often something very surprising . . . but also something that makes you think, "Oh yes, that's Fi through and through."
VULNERABILITY: I also wanted the reader to connect with Fi in an almost protective way. I want to show someone who is genuinely a very vulnerable person . . . so the reader wants to protect and shelter her . . . but who then astonishes us by entering places of great danger AND achieving whatever it is she set out to do.
I hope that all explains part of what's going on in my head - but I could write heaps on these subjects! Oh, and I will say this: that I'm putting the finishing touches to book number 5 in the series which will be a very interesting one for any prim young Catholic women with an interest in Ms Griffiths. No spoilers, but I hope your medieval theology is up to snuff . . .
More Answered Questions
Denise Appel-Baird
asked
Harry Bingham:
This question contains spoilers…
(view spoiler)[
I just finished This Thing of Darkness and The Dead House back to back and it was hard to put them down to get to real life stuff..Well Done!.. My question is with This Thing of Darkness. Whether we find out who the mechanically altered voice is? Does Fiona figure it out or is this another mystery to be discovered later? One comment on The Dead House - if you are claustrophobic its really scary!
(hide spoiler)]
Ed
asked
Harry Bingham:
The response of people around Fiona--parents, sisters, fellow officers--was spot on and helps create our attitude toward her. The "reality" of a situation is whatever the the author decides it is but your description of the affect of Fiona's delusions on those around her is extraordinary. Is this something you researched--there is a LOT of literature out there? Or were you writing what made sense for these characters?
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