by H.R. D’Costa, @scribesworld
Handling the stakes in a mystery with an unlikeable victim isn’t entirely a straightforward affair.
On one hand, when the victim is unlikeable, you’ll have puh-lenty of suspects, which should make your plot more engrossing.
On the other hand, because readers don’t care much for the victim, they might not care whether the sleuth achieves justice on the victim’s behalf.
But if you can’t fuel your mystery with stakes of justice…what can you do?
That’s the question we’re exploring in this four-part blog series on handling the stakes in a cozy mystery. (By the way, although the illustrative examples are cozy-centric, many of the tips in this series can be applied to mysteries with a harder edge.)
To give you an overview:
- In Part 1, we covered methods to bolster the stakes that emphasize the sleuth.
- In Part 2 , we’ll cover methods to bolster the stakes that emphasize other storytelling elements that readers care about. (You’re reading Part 2 right now.)
- In Part 3 (forthcoming), we’ll discuss considerations to take into account when applying these story stake tips to cozy mysteries in a series.
- In Part 4 (forthcoming), you’ll see these considerations in action when I share a sample lineup of stakes for a hypothetical cozy-mystery series.
So. It’s agreed. Your readers don’t care much for your unlikeable victim. Even so, there are lots of other story elements that can entangle their emotions.
If you emphasize these elements in your cozy mystery (perhaps saving them for this very book in your series, when you know the plot is going to involve an unlikeable victim), then this emotion may be enough to carry readers forward.
In other words, when readers start to ask themselves—Why should I care about finding out who killed this guy when he’s such a jerk?!—you will have provided them with a satisfactory answer.
Below are three suggestions to get you started:
Focus on Your Series Hook
A great definition of a series hook comes courtesy of our very own blog host, Elizabeth Spann Craig.
As defined by Elizabeth, hooks in a cozy mystery are:
Special themes, meant to appeal to the primary reading demographic, as part of the series brand.
Through personal experience with, or extensive research into, the arena of your hook, you are bound to uncover intriguing details that you know will fascinate your readers.
Save these juicy tidbits for this book, where the victim is unlikeable.
Think of the murder mystery Gosford Park. The exploration of class differences is the hook—and it’s just as interesting as the mystery.
A detail that still sticks with me to this day: servants below stairs are not referred to by their own names, but by the name of their employer because “it saves confusion.”
Here’s another example of what I mean. Cozy-mystery author Ellen Jacobson lives on a sailboat with her husband, and sailing is the hook of her Mollie McGhie cozy-mystery series.
One day, when Ellen and her husband were sailing around New Zealand, a dolphin swam alongside their boat and “sprayed us with something. I think it was dolphin spit and Scott thinks it was dolphin snot.”
Years later, Ellen used their debate in a scene in one of her cozy mysteries.
This is just the kind of unusual detail that your own target audience might enjoy discovering. Thus, it makes sense to incorporate it into the plot—especially when you’re writing about an unlikeable victim. Why?
Even when readers are feeling rather non-committal toward the mystery, they could keep on turning the pages to see how your sleuth and her friends resolve the dolphin debate. Brownie points: the ongoing dolphin debate could give the sleuth the insight she needs to solve the case!
Focus on a Reoccurring Subplot
By the end of the mystery, the case must be solved. But when you’re writing a series, you can leave a subplot open, and develop it over multiple series installments.
Is your sleuth involved in an on-again, off-again romantic relationship?
Consider saving a major development—e.g. after months of absence, the sleuth’s love interest returns on-scene—for this book, where the victim is unlikeable.
Because your readers will be heavily invested in the subplot, they’ll be compelled to keep on reading even when their curiosity over who killed the unlikeable victim starts to wane.
As an added bonus, readers will also be compelled to buy future installments of your series due to their emotional investment in subplot developments. Score!
By the way, click on the following link if you’re looking for tips on subplots. That’ll lead you to an “easy as pie” guide dedicated to this topic.
Focus on Likeable Associates of the Victim (E.g. Friends, Family, etc.)
Emphasizing the effect that solving the case has on the victim’s family is always a good technique to use when developing the stakes in a mystery.
But when the victim is unlikeable, it becomes extra valuable.
Because the victim’s family members are likeable, you can cultivate a relationship between them and your readers. Hence, readers become invested in the case—and keep turning the pages of your cozy mystery—not because they particularly care about the victim, but because they want to see the victim’s family experience closure.
You can even use this approach to create a ticking clock that’ll generate increased urgency. For instance, the victim is the town’s resident troublemaker who, before his death, caused all sorts of headache for the grandmother who raised him.
Before the murder of her grandson, the grandmother’s health wasn’t that great. After the murder, her health took a turn for the worse. The sleuth must solve the case in time in order to provide relief to the grandmother before the grandmother passes away.
The Animal Factor
In cozies, animals oftentimes become characters in their own right, staking their claim on readers’ hearts. So, as another option, you could get readers to invest in solving the case due to their affection for the victim’s pet.
Actually, when you think about it, the pet’s attachment to its owner dilutes the victim’s unlikeability to a certain extent. After all, if the pet loved the victim, the victim couldn’t be all bad now, could he?
To mine this sentiment further, you could have the victim’s pet show up on your sleuth’s doorstep, seemingly pleading with the sleuth to solve the case. Perhaps, due to some twist of fate, the sleuth is even entrusted with taking care of the pet until other arrangements can be made.
Again, it’d be good to have this development occur right around the midpoint, when the sleuth (and readers, too) are becoming frustrated over all the effort expended to solve the case for a victim who is, through recently uncovered evidence, revealed to be even more of a jerk than originally thought.
Also, it might be a nice touch to bring back the victim’s pet at the climax of the novel, to help apprehend the murderer at the end of the story.
* * *
If you, like many cozy-mystery authors, are writing in a series, you have to be strategic with how you use the story stake tips from Parts 1 and 2 of this blog series. Some work better if they’re saved for later books in a series.
I’ll go into more detail in Part 3, where I’ll share guidelines for mapping out the stakes in a mystery series. Stay tuned!
In the meantime, if you’d like to dig deeper on your own, download this cheat sheet with 11 types of story stakes. It might (a) give you additional ideas for how to make readers emotionally invested in the outcome of the case as well as (b) help you generate a variety of motives to match your healthy list of suspects.
You can also check out my writing guide Story Stakes: Your #1 Writing Skills Strategy to Produce a Page-Turner That Transforms Readers into Raving Fans of Your Screenplay or Novel. See below for details on how you could win a paperback copy…
Win a Paperback Copy of Story Stakes
For every post in this blog series, you have a chance to win a paperback copy of Story Stakes ($15.95).
Described as “a must-have in your top 10 books on writing” by one Amazon reviewer, it’ll show you how to use story stakes to elicit the maximum degree of emotion from readers as well as how to raise the stakes (even when they’re already high!).
For a chance to win today, answer this question in the comments: Which series hook, reoccurring subplot, or animal character have you found particularly appealing?
Elizabeth will randomly select four lucky winners by Monday, August 19.
Note: This giveaway is only open to residents of North America, South America, and Europe.
Good luck and happy writing!
About H. R. D’Costa
A graduate of Brown University, H. R. D’Costa (a.k.a. HRD) is an author and writing coach who specializes in story structure and story stakes.
Known for her “deep dive” instruction style, she is the author of 8 writing guides including Sizzling Story Outlines , Story Stakes, and the 4-volume Story Structure Essentials series .
For practical, actionable writing tips designed to help you keep readers glued to your pages, visit her website scribemeetsworld.com, which is also home to the Ultimate Story Structure Worksheet (downloaded over 37,000 times by writers from around the world).
3 Tips for Handling an Unlikeable Victim in a Cozy Mystery (by @scribesworld ): Share on XIMAGE CREDITS: Coffee & book by Amariei Mihai; Misty lake by Dominik Dombrowski; Sailboat by Karla Car; Friendly dolphin by Pablo Heimplatz; Pen nib by Art Lasovsky; Girl reading on a dock by Bethany Laird; Elderly woman by Cristian Newman; Smiling dog by Seb
That can work well for any genre.
Dolphin snot! That is disgusting, Ellen.
You’re right, Alex. Focusing on the series hook works well for all genres, not just cozies.
Thanks for stopping by!
Thanks for this. It was insightful. In my first cozy, both victims were unlikeable, as that was the reason the ultimate villain went after them. I hadn’t considered all of this when I wrote the book. What I’ve found that people like most about that book and its sequel, and what I hope will bring them back around to the third book that’s been a long time coming, are my hook, a focus on the extended families of my sleuths and the reoccurring subplot of historic building preservation and restoration in the small village where the stories are set. As much as readers liked the mystery in the second story and commented, I got an equal amount of feedback about progress versus history and restoration.
So glad you enjoyed this post, Anne!
I really like your subplot of historic building preservation and restoration. I can see why your readers responded well to it.
Good luck with your third book! Hmmm, if the victim is unlikeable maybe you could use the animal factor in this one (along with the building preservation, etc.)
These are good ideas, for which thanks. I especially like the idea of using friends and family members who are sympathetic characters to shed a different light on a character who isn’t.
Thanks for coming by, Margot.
Yes, no matter how nasty a victim is, there’s always sympathy for the people who loved and lost him…which mystery writers can use to their advantage!
That is a very good point about the victim’s pet. Animals love unconditionally and it shows a soft side of the victim.
Glad to hear you liked this tip, Diane.
It seems to me that many cozy-mystery readers love animals unconditionally too!
Who would have known that our dolphin encounter in New Zealand would have provided fodder for a cozy mystery years later :)
Thanks so much for the shout out, HRD!
It’s funny how life works out like that, isn’t it?
Oh, Ellen, I’ve been meaning to ask you…have your sailing friends weighed in on the debate, settling it once and for all?
We have had some interesting discussions over this, but no consensus yet on whether it’s spit or snot :)
A writer could incorporate two of your elements by writing animal-themed mysteries and having an adorable cat or dog as the protagonist’s pet! Lots of great pet shop, grooming, pet sitter, etc. mysteries out there. :)
That’s a good suggestion, Elizabeth.
Plus, you’d get to make use of that special animal-themed subcategory on Amazon…which might boost your visibility.
As I recall, a commenter (I wish I could remember her name) mentioned she was writing cozies where the sleuth was a pet sitter for exotic animals. Sounded like a fun series to me!
Great tips! I’ve thought about adding a pet, perhaps a ghost dog or cat. That would be fun!
A ghost dog! Love it, Gwen. Great idea!
I have always found Snoopy intriguing . He can do things that even most humans can’t do.
I agree, Melody. The charm of Snoopy is timeless!
Ellen’s books make me smile! Dolphin snot is hilarious :)
Great tips – loving this series!
Thanks for the kind words, Jemi. So glad you stopped by!
PS: Good to know where you stand on the dolphin debate :)