YOU LOVE ME.
“I am working on the fourth You novel now and he’s so in my head that I can hear Joe saying that we are all ‘flawed’ and that Dr. Hannibal Lecter cared about Clarice and saw her strength of character,” Kepnes says, conjuring her criminally charismatic creation. Joe makes his much-anticipated return in You Love Me, following 2016’s Hidden Bodies and a hit Lifetime-to-Netflix series also called You.
“The likability for me, with a character like a Joe or a Hannibal—omigod when they are [mentioned] in the same sentence!— stems from the fact being that this guy is rooting for you,” the New York Times bestselling author says. “You being Clarice Starling, you being the intelligent woman who thinks she has met a good, bookish guy, and then, through the writing, you being the reader.”
And, in turn, audiences have lionized their favorite villains; after all, they appear to be as interested in you as you are in them.
“Hannibal wants to know about Clarice. He is a listener, a thinker, and a cannibal. Joe wants to know about the women in his life. He is a listener, a thinker, and a murderer,” Kepnes says. “Listening to someone as if they are the most important person on the planet can get a guy really far in this world.”
You may know this to be true.
A Cape Cod native and Brown University grad, she began her professional writing career as an entertainment journalist, first at Tiger Beat (“a small staff and no fact checkers”) and later Entertainment Weekly—an editorial juggernaut by comparison.
Denne historien er fra Summer #168 2021-utgaven av Mystery Scene.
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Denne historien er fra Summer #168 2021-utgaven av Mystery Scene.
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent? Logg på
6 New Writers to Watch
Wiley Cash’s debut, A Land More Kind Than Home, about the bond between two brothers landed on the New York Times Best Sellers List and received the Crime Writers’ Association Debut of the Year.
ANN CLEEVES
British author Ann Cleeves has an affinity for remote areas and how these isolated regions affect her characters.
CARLENE O'CONNOR
“Anyone can play Snow White. It takes real talent to play the Wicked Witch.”
Mystery Scene MISCELLANY
FIRST USE OF FINGERPRINTS
PANIC ATTACK
The newest entry in my Pittsburgh set series of thrillers is called Panic Attack. It’s the sixth book featuring Daniel Rinaldi, a psychologist and trauma expert who consults with the Pittsburgh Police.
LAIDLAW'S LEGACY
During the pandemic, Ian Rankin stepped away from Rebus and into the shoes of friend and literary hero, the “Godfather of Tartan Noir” William McIlvanney.
HILARY DAVIDSON
Call it The Case of Life Imitating Art.
Thomas Walsh - The Unusual Suspect
Any paternity test on the sub-genre of police procedural will identify the DNA of Ed McBain and Lawrence Treat, as well as the 1948 movie The Naked City and the radio and TV series Dragnet…and of course Thomas Walsh.
S.A. COSBY
In Razorblade Tears, two aging men—one Black, one white, both with criminal pasts—join forces to seek revenge for the murders of their gay sons. The themes of fathers and sons and toxic masculinity will be familar to fans of Cosby’s 2020 breakout Blacktop Wasteland.
VIPER'S NEST OF LIES
A slip of the tongue is a dangerous thing. Not only does it expose indiscretions, it also can lead to murder. The latter especially applies to me.