Readers in the know
will smile.
Last week I found an Easter egg. Not the type that gets hidden in the spring, but the kind some authors place in books.
In Death on a Vineyard
Beach, Philip R. Craig needed a detective on Cape Cod.
So on page 72, he writes the client had hired “a man named Aristotle
Socarides.”
For most readers, that’s just
another name. But for those in the know, “Soc” is the protagonist of a Cape Cod detective series by fellow New Englander Paul
Kemprecos.
In the course of a novel, you
need many supporting characters. So why not include some people you know?
When he was learning the
craft, now-bestselling author Steve Berry met regularly with a writers group.
Two of its members were Nancy Pridgen and Daiva Woodworth. In Steve’s second
published novel, The Romanov Prophecy, his protagonist works for an
international law firm: Pridgen & Woodworth.
For years, thriller writer
Jack Du Brul has known book collector Wayne Valero. When Jack needed a name in Corsair
for an Undersecretary of State for Mideast Affairs, the assignment went to Wayne’s wife, Cristie.
Though Wayne
knows all the co-writers for thriller grandmaster, Clive Cussler, he’s still
waiting to find his own name in a novel.
That could be a good thing. There’s
a well-known quote attributed to Mary Higgins Clark: “When someone is mean to
me, I just make them a victim in my next book.”
The prize for the
most-included name may go to Leigh Hunt. In a dozen or more of his Dirk Pitt
novels, Cussler included his friend—often as a character who got killed in the
prologue.
Or you could even include
yourself in your own books, much the way Alfred Hitchock gave himself cameos in
many of his movies. If you want a precedent for this, look again to Clive
Cussler.
I was typing a description of Pitt and a classic car
he was exhibiting at a concours meet. In the scene, he walks over and extends
his hand to the old white-haired, bearded man who was exhibiting the car next
to him. I wrote, “Hello, my name is Dirk Pitt.” The old fellow shook his hand
and said, “I’m Clive Cussler.”
I immediately thought, Why did I do that? I meant to
change the name, but the more I thought about it, the more it seemed fun to
leave it in. ... Now readers wait for me to show up.
You might not want to go that
far, but your novel does have room for quite a few names. As long as you don’t
defame someone, why not?
3 comments:
Fun post Andy. I have come across a few things like this in my favorite authors titles and enjoy it when I do.
I love this! yes, I have three friends who are all dentists and in a PI series, I have them as the PI firm:
Borlas, McCracken, and Cumby. Yes, love to do that.
As Mary Poppins sang, "in every job that must be done, there is an element of fun."
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