Sheri Cobb South is our special guest blogger for Author
Expressions. Be sure to check out her wonderful mystery novels on Amazon,
B&N Online, and many other booksellers.
And now, here’s Sheri.
First of all, the
title of this article is false advertising: No one else can write like Mary
Stewart, any more than they can write like any other author. Still, her books do
have certain elements in common, and these can be adopted in order to evoke the
tone of that heyday of romantic suspense. So, without further ado, here are my
Top 10:
#1. Be British.
(Well, rats. Moving right along . . .)
#2. Give your
book an exotic location, and describe it vividly. Mary Stewart took her readers
on literary jaunts not only to her native Britain , but also to France , Austria , Greece , and Damascus . I credit her
books with giving me a lifelong craving for travel, so it’s only fitting that
my own book follows the itinerary of a Mediterranean cruise I took with my husband
a couple of years ago, including stops in Italy, Greece, and Turkey.
#3. Set your book
in the late 1950s or early to mid-1960s. This was when Mary Stewart and the
romantic suspense novel were at the height of their popularity, so setting a
book there is, in essence, returning to the genre’s roots.
#4. Give your
book a young but intelligent heroine, who narrates the tale in the first person
as it unfolds. I realize there are readers for whom the first-person point of
view is a deal-breaker, but in a suspense novel, the almost claustrophobic
constraints of this point of view give a greater sense of immediacy and danger,
as it eliminates the “middle man” of a third-person narrator who stands between
the heroine and the reader. And while young/ingenue heroines have fallen out of
fashion in recent years, the heroine’s youth means we can forgive her for
errors in judgment that would be eyeroll-inducing in a more mature woman.
#5 Plunge your
heroine into danger through accidental, even random, circumstance: she sees
something she’s not supposed to see, she’s inadvertently given something that
belongs to someone else, etc., and at first she may not recognize the
significance of the event. (It’s interesting that romantic suspense heroines
seem to share this element with many of Alfred Hitchcock’s heroes—a plot device
Hitchcock dubbed the “MacGuffin”; perhaps it’s no coincidence that there is a
significant overlap in Stewart and Hitchcock’s peak years.)
#6 Give your book
a hero with something to hide, preferably something that ties into the mystery.
Perhaps the heroine isn’t sure if he’s a good guy or bad guy, but even if she
never mistakes him for the villain (or, if she does, soon realizes her error),
he may still be a bit of an enigma that she must “solve” along with the
mystery.
#7 The developing
relationship between the hero and heroine relies on sexual tension rather than
sex. Granted, part of this is because of the time Stewart was writing, but I
think it makes sense in this genre in a couple of other ways, as well. For one
thing, there’s the matter of trust: If she things he might be the villain, or
otherwise fears she can’t trust him, she would be stupid to go to bed with him.
Later in the book, any trust issues may have been resolved, but by this time
the sense of danger is heightened. If her life, and perhaps his too, is in
danger, and they stop everything for five to ten pages of hot sex, they
probably deserve whatever the villain has planned for them! (But at least
they’ll die happy? Hmm…)
#8. Let glimpses
of humor show through. Besides helping maintain sexual tension (especially in
the absence of actual sex), humorous moments allow readers to catch their
breath between dangerous/suspenseful incidents.
#9. Sprinkle
literary references throughout your book. I think it is this, more than any
other element, that lifts Stewart’s work over the other romantic suspense
authors of her day. It’s also the one I found the most daunting. Fortunately,
the fact that my heroine was an English teacher meant she would have a knowledge
of literature at her command. Furthermore, my own background as a writer of
Regencies meant I was familiar with the Elgin Marbles and Lord Byron’s
vociferously stated opinion of Lord Elgin’s removing them from Greece , both of which
made their way into my book.
#10. Begin each
chapter with an apropos quotation. Three words: Bartlett ’s Familiar Quotations. This can be
time-consuming, but I’ve found readers respond to it very well. It gives them a
little “mystery” at the beginning of each chapter, as they form their own
theories as to how the quotation will relate to the action, and then read on to
see if they were right.
And there you
have it. Even if my tips won’t turn you into Mary Stewart overnight, I hope
they will enhance your reading of romantic suspense novels, or assist you in
writing your own.
Note: Sheri's latest novel is in the Mary Stewart tradition:
Comments for Sheri welcome here!

