Today we welcome back Janis Patterson who writes mysteries
as Janis Patterson, romances and other things as Janis Susan May, children’s
books as Janis Susan Patterson, and non-fiction and scholarly works as J.S.M.
Patterson. Learn more about Janis and her books at her website. -- AP
The Perils
of Having A Writing Wife
I married late, well after my writing career was started, so
The Husband knew exactly what he was getting. Sort of.
A down-to-earth and sublimely practical man of science well
into a long and honorable military career, he knew I was a writer of fiction.
He also knew that writers were thought to be eccentric. He just didn’t know how
much.
Luckily he is a courageous and adaptable man, for as our
marriage progressed, he learned more than I think he ever wanted to know about
the unknown side of writing.
For example, he will leave in the morning after kissing a
pajama-clad me in my office, already sitting eye-to-eye with the computer. He
will come home some eight or nine hours later to find a pajama-clad me in my
office, exhausted and emotional, sitting eye-to-eye with the computer. The
laundry is undone, the bed unmade, dinner is a frozen lump still in the freezer,
and I will look up in surprise, asking if he didn’t leave just a little while
ago.
He has gotten used to me murmuring the name of my hero (or
villain) in my sleep.
He has finally learned to accept that when I am asked what I
do, I smile sweetly, give the questioner my best grandmotherly twinkle and say
in soft, mellifluous tones, “I kill people.”
He no longer becomes alarmed when he finds books on poisons
larded among my cookbooks.
He has become accustomed to my handing out business cards
(with my websites only – no phone or address) prodigiously and has even learned
to carry a few of them in his wallet. Apparently being married to a
multi-published novelist carries a certain cachet.
I’m glad, because on retrospect I’m not sure writing is a
lifestyle I would have chosen. I believe that almost anyone can write, given
enough time, training and work, but that writers cannot help but write – it is
an inescapable part of them, like some sort of birth defect. He has learned
that when I stop in mid-word, my face goes blank and my eyes focus on some
distant point that I am not having a fit, merely an idea. This is usually
followed by a frantic scribbling on anything around, from a cocktail napkin to
the back of my hand. He now realizes that I carry enormous purses not for
make-up or other feminine junk, but to accommodate my tiny notebook computer,
which he calls my ‘purse computer.’
Unfortunately, the creation of worlds and populations on
little more than caffeine and imagination can be an unsettling process for a
non-writer. Currently I am working on a book set in contemporary Egypt about
the race to find a lost tomb. One of the side effects is a profusion of
photographs of obscure archaeological sites blooming all over my office.
Another is that our dinner menu has suddenly leaned heavily towards kushari,
kibbe, hummus and tabouli. Luckily The Husband is as big an Egyptophile as I
(doesn’t everyone know by now that he proposed to me in Egypt?) and he takes
this with equanimity.
I’m not always that lucky. While writing Dark Music before my marriage, I lived
in an apartment. The hero was a concert pianist who specialized in Chopin. I
played Chopin almost 24/7 for the three months it took to write the novel.
Though I tried to be quiet and respectful, before long my neighbors were
begging to know when I would finish the book.
When I was writing The
Hallow House, a cozy mystery set in 1919, I pestered The Husband about WWI
and suitable firearms. Being something of a WWI/WWII historian, he happily
complied.
He was less happy when, at a very crowded local gun show, we
saw an automatic M96 Mauser Pistol Rifle, the firearm I had decided on for my
villain to use. It’s a very distinctive and rather rare piece. I pointed it out
gleefully and said to The Husband, “Look, darling, isn’t that what I used to
kill Jake?” The gun show might have been packed, but suddenly there wasn’t a
single person within arm’s length of me for a long time.
Due to several ancient accidents, I sometimes have a slight
limp, especially when I’m tired. In Exercise
is Murder, my latest release, the heroine has a severe limp, though hers
was caused by a bullet wound. As my tattered and beloved sweatshirt says, “It’s
All Research.” The Husband has become accustomed to my asking all kinds of
sometimes bizarre questions wherever we go.
I’d like to say I’m strong-minded enough to keep control of
my characters, to keep them on the page instead of letting them seep into my
life, but I’m not. As every character, good and bad, shares at least a few
aspects of its creator, so does the creator reflect – at least temporarily – a
modicum of the character. We create our characters from the inside out, and I
believe the scientific fact that when two things touch, there is inevitable
transfer from each to the other, however small.
I realized that The Husband has not only learned but
accepted this, for when I am in full damn-the-torpedoes-and-write-mode, so
submerged in the story that I never get out of my pajamas and we survive on
take-out suppers, he has developed the habit of peering around my office door
and asking, “And who are we today?”
Maybe he’s lucky. He remains faithful, but still gets to
live with a wide variety of women, all in one package. He married a writer.
Exercise
is Murder
Invalided out of the police, Rebecca Cloudwebb has become an
antiques dealer. While delivering some earrings, Rebecca witnesses the brutal
murder of Laura Tyler, a harmless widow. Almost everyone connected with the
murder has multiple reasons to kill everyone else connected with the murder,
but no one had any motive to poison Laura Tyler. A mad mix of politics, big
money, extra-marital affairs, blackmail, strong personalities, gambling and
assorted secrets, the mystery proves almost impossible to solve, but solve it
Rebecca does, and in the process learns something about her own problems since
the shooting that crippled her.
You're husband is not only tolerant but most lucky to have married you! And, at least you have a more then interesting life! Thanks for sharing with us!
ReplyDeleteLynn/MI
Sounds like you are both blessed -- nothing a historian wants more is someone with whom to share the interest!
ReplyDeleteGreat post. You are indeed very lucky. There's a reason a lot of writers tend to live alone with a bunch of cats.
ReplyDeleteWonderful post, Janis! I can relate to the many women in one body. :-)
ReplyDeleteLOL And Tiffany, I am one of those writers living with a bunch of cats...lololol
Hugs and have a great day!
jan
Hi, my always entertaining friend. Your hubby is just so sweet. But the gun show incident is hilarious. Congratulations on the books.
ReplyDeleteah yes, it takes a special man to live with a writer, though i admit yours suffers a bit more than my ever tolerant. the question i hear the most when my eyes go blank is "where are you?" lol.
ReplyDeleteYou are lucky but so is he! As Shakespeare said of Cleopatra: A woman of infinite variety.
ReplyDeleteBest,
Jacqueline Seewald
http://www.harlequin.com/author.html;jsessionid=68CE13F9525505EBEA398F3DEDB06E82?authorid=2189
You are too funny, Janis! Also, much of what you said is too true for all us authors! I believe we all have some form of OCD - some of us more than others!
ReplyDeleteMorgan Mandel
http://www.morganmandel.com
I chuckled all the while I was reading this. Great post! I'm glad I came over to read it.
ReplyDeleteWhat a fun blog--and I'm sure my husband would find lots of it very familiar! BTW, I'm always struck by how many writers seem to be married to math/science guys. My husband is a chemist, but since I write Regency-set historical cozies, I haven't had to call on him for research (yet!).
ReplyDeleteNothing tops a supportive husband! It could be worse. You could write about vampires...
ReplyDeleteMy husband understands that when we're at a restaurant and my eyes grow distant, I am likely trying to eavesdrop on an interesting conversation...for research, of course.
ReplyDeleteLoved your warm insightful look at the distaff side of a writer's marriage. Thanks for sharing so openly.
ReplyDeleteI'm very late in thanking all of you for commenting. (I've been locked in a lost tomb...) It's wonderful to have people who understand what a writer's life is like. - Janis, also known as Susan
ReplyDeleteI laughed my way through this post. Can you set up a call between The Husband and my The Englishman? My hubby would appreciate hearing he didn't fall down a rabbit hole when he married an urban fantasy writer. ;)
ReplyDeleteIt's such fun to read that I am not the only one whose stated job description is "I kill people". My friends and family are immune to the often stated, "ooh, what a great way to kill someone". Great post.
ReplyDeleteJanis/Susan, I think you and your husband were fortunate to have found each other. May the two of you continue to enjoy life outside the lines. Be well and write well, my friend.
ReplyDeleteGreat post Susan/Janis. It's a good thing for all of us that we have tolerant spouses!
ReplyDeleteJ
I don't think I could write without my husband - and the cats!
ReplyDeleteKnowing both members of the marriage, I would add that she does get lost in finding ways to kill people, aloud, glazed-eyed or scribbling, while, concurrently, he is kind enough to keep her from falling up or down stairs and walking into or onto others. The man is a find.
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