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Index Page » News & Media » Crime & Offenses
 

Murder Walls for Crime Novelists

 

A Murder Wall is a vital tool for crime novelists. Imagine trying to write a story without knowing your suspects or their possible motives. For any great crime novelist, your job is to treat your novel like a police investigation, following the clues and the evidence until it reaches the outcome or climactic resolution. If you watch most great crime dramas such as Law & Order and Without a Trace, you will notice that investigators often use visuals on a wall to keep each case organized. This is a Murder Wall.

Developing a fictional crime and its cast of characters can be confusing and overwhelming without a tool to keep everything organized. A Murder Wall shows the structure of the crime and the characters who are involved. On a wall close to your computer for easy access, tape up letter-sized pieces of paper featuring photos and key points on each character linked to a murder or crime. This technique enables the writer to visualize the cast of characters more fully, to give each suspect or victim a face and to bring them to life. It ensures that the basic facts of each character's existence are easily accessible. And it keeps you consistent with the facts of the crime and the evidence presented.

Creating the Murder Wall:

A Murder Wall consists of four main elements: the victim(s), suspects, witnesses and the killer (s). You will want to include important facts, clues and info on each victim, suspect and witness. On the killer's paper, I often find it helpful to have a picture of a silhouette, rather than the killer's appearance. It helps me to create the 'mystery of not knowing'. Then once I've reached the last few chapters, I may change this. This also acts as a 'non-spoiler' in case someone walks into your office and sees your Murder Wall.

Victims:
Basic info (name, age, occupation, marital status and physical description)
How did they die?
Time of death?
What motive would someone have for killing them?
What were they doing prior to death?
How are they connected to your suspects or other characters in your novel?

Suspects:
Basic info (name, age, occupation, marital status and physical description)
How are they connected to the victims?
What are their alibis?
Do they have a motive?
What clues can you leave to lead or mislead your readers?

Witnesses:
Basic info (name, age, occupation, and physical description)
What did they see or hear?
How are they connected to your suspects and to the victim?
What are their alibis?
Do they have a motive?
Will a witness become a suspect?

Killer (s):
Basic info (name, age, occupation, and physical description)
Motive
History and relationship to victim(s)
Preferred method of killing
Alibi

On the Murder Wall, keep the victim's paper in the center. Add the suspects around the victim, and add the witnesses along one side. Link a strip of paper from one paper to another if two characters had a past connection. For example, one suspect may know another suspect because he delivered her pizza the night before. The killer's paper can be off to one side and strips of paper may link him to one of the witnesses or suspects. Be sure to make notes on the strips connecting them.

Find photos of actors whom you think physically resemble your suspects and victims, and add a small photo to each paper. Most often writers already have a clear picture in their head as to what the character looks like. If you can draw, then go ahead and create your character. If not, then go online and search the celebrity sites. Pretend you are a casting agent. Whom would you cast in the role of the serial arsonist in your crime novel or the evil doctor in your murder mystery? One of the easiest ways to find your actor is to simply watch television. If you are looking for a face to play your slasher, then check out some of the detective shows. Find the face that inspires you, that makes you believe "Yes, he is Hans VanBuren, a demented, psychopathic killer! ?

During your novel's progression, there will be many tidbits of information that you can add to each Murder Wall paper secrets from their past, important clues and more. The key to writing a good mystery is to mislead the reader and drop clues in the guise of foreshadowing. Twists and turns are important elements of a good crime novel or mystery. And don't forget to list any bad habits your character might have. If she is a compulsive liar, make a note. If he's a shifty-eyed procrastinator, the note on his paper will act as a reminder and keep you consistent. As each character develops, continue to add any new information to each sheet. Plots change and characters mutate. They grow, they learn things, and they react.

Not only will a Murder Wall help to keep your suspects, victims and witnesses organized and in your face, you will start to really see them. And once an author can see her characters, there is a better chance that the reader will visualize them also. Choosing an actor to represent these characters will give them a voice, a stance, a personality, and life. No novel can survive without characters with depth, heart, soul and spirit. And a crime novel cannot survive without a strong motive!

A Murder Wall is an invaluable tool that will show you the victims, suspects and evidence in a clear, visible way. It will help you to plot a more believable crime, to create multi-dimensional characters, and to keep the crime, suspects and motives on track. It is much easier to plot or solve a crime when everything is laid out before you. Even criminals have a plan. Why shouldn't the crime novelist? And your plan should start with creating a Murder Wall.

* * * * * * * * * * *

Author: Cheryl Kaye Tardif
 
Author Bio:

Cheryl Kaye Tardif

Cheryl Kaye Tardif is the author of the emotional mystery, Whale Song, a novel that has become a huge success with readers of all ages and all cultures. Whale Song has already captured the interest of one leading Canadian film producer who has requested the screenplay, which Tardif is currently working on. At this time she is free to pursue all production companies who may be interested in this project.

Tardif is an award-winning author whose last novel, Divine Intervention (a 'psi-fi' suspense thriller), has been compared to Nora Roberts/J.D. Robb?s ?In Death? series. Her third novel, The River, will be released in August 2005. It is a gripping action-packed techno-thriller that is both thought provoking and terrifying. The River is based loosely on stories from the Nahanni River area of Canada?s Northwest Territories, legends of headless corpses washing up on its shores. A screenplay is in the works for The River. Cheryl Kaye Tardif has also started Divine Justice, the second in the Divine mystery series, and she has a fifth mystery novel on the go.

Tardif was recently nominated for the Lieutenant Governor of Alberta Arts Award. Two years ago, she wrote a public service announcement for a racial harmony campaign. Her PSA script, One Voice ~ One World placed third and was produced and aired on cable channels in Alberta. Other work has been published over the years in small Canadian newspapers.

Cheryl Kaye Tardif has been interviewed by Shaw TV Red Deer, Shaw TV Edmonton, RDTV, Global TV, CFRN TV, and A-Channel TV. She has also been interviewed on CJSR's "Liquid Chatter Talk Radio" and on New Age Radio in Waukegan, Illinois. She has been featured in The Edmonton Examiner, Edmonton Woman Magazine, Alberta Native News, California Chronicle and Real Estate Weekly (Edmonton). According to photojournalist, Heather Andrews Miller, who interviewed the author for the Real Estate Weekly article, Cheryl Kaye Tardif is a ?gem in the literary world?.

Born in BC, Canada, Cheryl Kaye Tardif was an 'army brat' and an 'army wife' who has lived all across Canada. Now residing in Edmonton, Alberta, with her husband, Marc, her daughter, Jessica, and the family dog, she proudly considers herself an ?Edmonton author? as Edmonton has become the place she calls home. Her pride in Canada is evident even in her novels as they all take place in Canada.

Tardif completed a course in Journalism and Short Story Writing and graduated with Highest Honors.

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