Karen Harrington | When a man loves a woman…who murders
When a central character is still deeply in love with someone you and I would judge harshly, for, say, murder, that presents a challenge for the writer. How can readers be sympathetic to a misguided, love-struck protagonist? And does a writer necessarily have to sympathize with him?
I know all about this challenge.
In my debut novel JANEOLOGY, Tom Nelson is still in love with the woman who has destroyed his life. He misses her. He craves her. He wants to touch her. He wants to talk to her over a cup of coffee the way they used to as friends. But this is never going to happen.
The story begins with Tom’s horrific discovery that his wife Jane drowned their toddler son. An act he feels is so out of character that it defies logic. Now, he judges himself harshly for still loving the woman he thought he knew. The world quickly vilifies Jane and urges him to join in their group hate. If that weren’t enough, prosecutors charge him with ‘failure to protect’ believing he should have known Jane was ill and shielded his child from her. This legal charge only makes Tom delve deeper into questioning his love for Jane. Was it misplaced, he wonders throughout his own trial? Is he, in fact, partially responsible as the prosecutor alleges? And what does he make of his attorney’s bold defense: that Jane’s nature and nurture conspired to make her ill-equipped to be a loving parent?
I began writing this story with the central question: what causes a mother to kill her own child? I could not ignore this question. It didn’t seem to add up that a mother could be pouring Cheerios one minute and be altered the next. Someone in her family, I reasoned, had to have witnessed the decline. It had to have taken place over a period of days, weeks and months – not overnight. While the horrible murder sets JANEOLOGY in motion, the novel is really a story of a man desperate to for understanding.
The idea that we sometimes miss changes in loved ones precisely because we love them began to take shape. I realized, at least in the fictional world of JANEOLOGY, that a spouse like Tom could indeed still love the person he originally knew without acknowledging the person she had become. We are all guilty of this at times. Time stands still in the face of love. And that is what happens to Tom Nelson to his profound detriment.
I invite you to read an excerpt of the novel by visiting my website http://www.karenharringtonbooks.com/
You can also view the video trailer for JANEOLOGY below, which so hauntingly couples water imagery with hints of dark family secrets trickling down among the generations of Jane’s troubled family. The unrelenting tribal drumbeat of the music ratchets-up the tension until you feel like the hairs on your neck stand at attention and you have to know what happens. (Fortunate author that I am, this trailer was created by THE inventor of the novel trailer art form, Kam Wai Yu, who has been developing this art since the 1980s.)
Thanks to FreshFiction for inviting me to blog here today among so many great authors.
See you on the bookshelves!
Karen Harrington
Labels: characters, Karen Harrington, legal, murder, writer
8 Comments:
I like this write up and the questions it raises.
I agree with International Vagabond-- Karen's post and her novel raise many difficult, intriguing questions.
Beth Fehlbaum, author
Courage in Patience, a story of hope for those who have endured abuse
http://courageinpatience.blogspot.com
Chapter 1 is online!
I will buy my copy when I see you at your May 3 signing--I look forward to reading it!
Sophie,
It will be such a treat to meet you in person! You just made my day.
Cheers,
Karen
Dear Karen: Your novel is definitely right of the front pages. I remember the mother who killed not just one of her children, but several of them. Three or four as I recall. The husband came across as very bland, unemotional despite all that he had to be feeling. I came to the conclusion, perhaps unfair, that he wasn't covering up, that he may well have been emotionally weak and, therefore, unable to provide his wife emotional support during their marriage. He may have unwittingly contributed to the deaths of his children by not being involved emotionally with his wife. Marital stresses can certainly lead down some very troubling roads. Best wishes on your timely and thought-provoking novel.
Hi Karen,
You pose an interesting question for all writers. Do you have to like your protagonist? It's tough to keep slogging through the writing of a novel if the person you spend all those desperate hours with is someone you don't care for very much. Then there is the question of whether you agree with them, with what they do and why they do it. In some ways, that's even tougher.
I've found that my experience as a journalist--hopefully an objective one--helped my fiction in both those areas. I've interviewed plenty of people I don't care for without betraying that to them or to my readers (I hope). It also didn't hurt that I went through college (a million years ago) on a debate scholarship, which meant I had to examine and present both sides of every question to earn my tuition.
Good luck with Janeology and thanks for posing an interesting question.
--Dave Donelson, author of Heart of Diamonds
I can't imagine a theme or question more provocative and difficult for an author to explore. I read your book in one sitting and absolutely couldn't put it down. Congratulations on taking on this important issue, and handling it with sensitivity and genuine compassion. I can see this as a movie.
Derek Armstrong
I'm looking forward to reading Janeology!
This topic is strangely compelling yet hard to comprehend. How can people not recognize a dangerous woman? Wouldn't the signs be there?
Unfortunately, I was best friends with one--for a very short time and prior to the murder of her son. It has always made me wonder so many things. Aside from the obvious one of 'how could I have missed the signs?', I wonder what makes someone lash out at an innocent child, and murder them?
It's so sad. I'm glad someone is addressing this and I think your novel may open some eyes, just as I wish mine had been opened years ago.
All the best in success!
~Cheryl Kaye Tardif, author
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