Suspense and Secrets : The Double Life in Contemporary Fiction

The ‘double life’ or secret identity is a recurring theme in contemporary fiction. Characters conceal their true selves or roles, leading to complex relationships and suspenseful narratives. 

Contemporary fiction borrows themes and tropes from the classics. In Oscar Wilde’s The Picture of Dorian Gray, a portrait serves as a visual representation of Dorian’s double life and the consequences of his choices.

Whenever I needed to get inside my reluctant 3rd-generation funeral director’s head I’d walk around the atmospheric fishing village of Kalk Bay.  On that winter’s night, through an altered reality crack, I ‘saw’ a man back from a late night guitar gig, staring into a mirror at his dandruff, not able to see any escape from the burden of the past. The following day I wrote a short story about an undertaker called Anthony Loxton, who secretly liked hats and guitars, and led a double life, until his two lives collided.

I write contemporary suspense fiction about apparently normal people with a hidden double life. And in the way of the best suspense fiction there is always a love dilemma at the centre of the mystery.

A boy sleeps in a coffin and plans his escape from the family business funeral parlour. How does one escape one’s own family history? Lily the redhead is an unlikely catalyst for change, but adult Anthony surprises himself by breaking his own rules.

A woman enters a world of sexual and emotional abandon in order to find her lost husband. Paola Dante is ambitious, not the sentimental or motherly type, but the universe has other ideas. Daniel de Luc is the mystery man on the station platform she fell in love with a long time ago. Along the way, as she follows the mystery of her determinedly awol soul mate, she finds a daughter but things are complicated. 

The people in my novels exist on the border between real and unreal.

They confront talismanic forces as they walk a tightrope between their everyday lives and another plane of existence where forbidden secrets are currency.

We all have secrets. Some are more forbidden than others.

(Author photos credit for this blog on location in Kalk Bay, Bernadine Jones)

 

LADY LIMBO: chilling ‘out there’…

‘Out there’ means Lady Limbo is dancing up and down the land in her dancing shoes. Friends and family are sending me photographs of bestseller bookshop shelves and saying nice supportive things.

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One of the photos thrills me. Sharing a shelf with J.K. Rowling feels amazingly good; until the niggling thought arrives that maybe the bookseller was just looking for a good contrast of cover colors so that readers could spot the J.K. Rowling book quicker!

This is what happens to us small fish after a while; one loses that brazen swagger and becomes a self-pitying mess. But wait, it’s crazy, I mean there are a lot of blue novel covers around this year, it’s pretty much a blue cover year; they could have chosen one of those other novels, but they didn’t, they chose Lady Limbo. So I revert to feeling pleased as punch which is a far better feeling!

Occasionally I open up one of the photos I’ve been sent of Lady Limbo on a bookshelf and test myself – Is there an awkward  umbilical connection? Do I feel the need to protect? The answer comes easily; it’s “no”. I recognise the feeling of separation.

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This teenager doesn’t need me to hold its hand any longer; it’s grown up enough to go out to rave book shops on its own; and in the hectic book world of bestsellers nobody says “Hey, I know your mom, she’s a really cool person, no wonder you’re so well put together!” No, in that world you arrive dressed to kill, and you float there chilled in blue champagne, and a frisson of excitement passes through the book crowd, the true sign of a good killer thriller!