Yeah, but that wasn't sex. Romantic yearning I get, but I don't write it.
There has to be a strong mystery element, which means a crime, which means said ghost died bloody, probably.
Dr. Walsh ,'Potential'
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Yeah, but that wasn't sex. Romantic yearning I get, but I don't write it.
There has to be a strong mystery element, which means a crime, which means said ghost died bloody, probably.
Deb, if you could do a quick story with or somehow related to Broomfield Hill, it would be a fabulous intro to the books for readers who haven't discovered them yet. If they'd let you do that.
And as for otherwise, yes, I'd say you could do it splendidly. I'm thinking of your Darla in Italy and your Ripper in London stuff. Change the names a bit, and there you are. Easy-peasy. Any pay would be okay, but it would be more name recognition and PR for the books.
That's just my take.
ETA: "Wish You Were Here"
I would try, but that's why I've got so many unfinished things.
Hmmmmmmm. That's a thought - I should probably run it by Jenn.
In fact, the more I think of it, the more I like it. I wonder if I can pull it off?
"Mysterious relationship" makes me think that the relationship is the object of mystery. Why are those strange bedfellows abed?
A person's curiosity about a ghost's attachment to someone/something seems to qualify.
The detective observes the relationship for us, perhaps, rather than being a member of the relationship. As long as the profile of the ghost's relationship was interesting, it would be worth a go.
The first anthology (which I'd try for) is going to be edited by Harlan Coben
ABout whose work I know diddly.
OK, pondering. Hmmmm.
Gus, I'd be extremely unlikely to write a straight detective, unless I had him doing it a la Josephine Tey: bored, investigating a historical unsolved mystery, stumbling across the ghost story.
My mystery-solvers aren't detectives, they're just people who accidentally come across a situation.
Deb, I added it to the previous post, but I just thought of "Wish You Were Here." Sort of made to order, isn't it? If the length is right?
I wonder if I can pull it off?
Sure you can.
My mystery-solvers aren't detectives, they're just people who accidentally come across a situation.
Well, sure. I was using the term generically. It seems that the role is core to mystery writing, carrying a badge or license or not.