This is definitely not Judy's fashion style, but it might just be something her character Keisha would wear. |
Judy Alter spent thirty years at TCU Press, twenty of them
as director, while raising four children as a single parent and writing novels
about the American West. A lifelong mystery reader, she always told herself she
wanted to publish one mystery and she’d be content. She now has eight mysteries
in print. Learn more about Judy and her books at he website and blog.
A Fasionista I’m Not
My twelve-year-old granddaughter is a fashionista. She knows
how to layer, how to fling or drape a scarf just right, how to combine the
unusual and have it come out perfectly. One morning I caught her dancing into
the bathroom happily singing, “Makeup time.” Of course, it helps that she’s
tall, thin and drop-dead gorgeous. She got none of that from her grandmother.
I almost always wear stretched-out knit pants and a T-shirt
when I’m home alone working; often it’s the T-shirt I slept in. In public, I
try to class it up a bit with leggings and blousy tunics. But I know my sense
of fashion is behind the times. I do manage makeup, though I’m no expert at it.
And my hair has a cut I really like, so maybe I’m not completely hopeless.
I tend to dress my protagonists—those amateur female
sleuths—the way I like to dress. Kelly O’Connell, of the mystery series with
her name, is a bit out of date, choosing tailored slacks and blazers for the
office, a silk shirt if she really wants to dress it up. Loafers whenever she
can. For dinner out with Mike, she may wear a loose, long shift—she favors
beige with turquoise jewelry. At home, she wears my outfit—stretched-out
slacks, a T-shirt, and raggedy slip-on tennis shoes. Her daughters are
sometimes embarrassed by her clothes, a feeling I know well from my own two
girls. Her style is my style—casual.
Kate of the Blue Plate Mystery series wears jeans or khakis
and often a white shirt under her chef’s apron, and Susan Hogan of The Perfect Coed usually wears slacks
and a shirt, though sometimes she teaches a college class in jeans and running
shoes. She, too, can spiff it up for dinner at an upscale restaurant, but it’s
not her preferred style.
One or two minor characters break out of this rather
ordinary mold. Miss Lorna, the reclusive former diva in the Kelly O’Connell
Mystery Series, wears embroidered Japanese housecoats with dragons on them—one
even showed up on the cover of Deception
in Strange Places.
And then there’s Keisha, Kelly O’Connell’s capable office
assistant. I think my fashion imagination went wild with her. She’s young,
large (not fat, just a big-boned girl,) African American, and given to flashy
outfits to match her larger-than-life personality. She wears loose tunics and
even muumuus to the office, with matching high-heeled sandals (and thong
sandals hidden under her desk.) If the day’s color is turquoise, her tunic,
sandals, toenails, and fingernails are also turquoise, and bits of turquoise
color highlight her upswept hair. She doesn’t follow fashion; she defies it.
In one episode she has cut her hair into a spiky, short
style—she appears with it highlighted in pink to match the flowing tunic and
high heels. Everyone is stunned, and she’s a bit taken back by the reaction,
but nothing stops Keisha. In a book forthcoming this spring, Desperate for Death, she buys an
outrageous wedding dress and outfits for Kelly’s daughters who will be her
junior bridesmaids. Kelly is, shall we say, dismayed! I would so love to have a
picture of Keisha in her wedding dress. I can see her clearly in my mind’s eye.
I think my fashion sense for my characters says something
about my personality—going along in my own staid way but longing for an occasional
something flamboyant. It’s sure fun to play with characters’ clothes.
Skeleton in a Dead
Space, a Kelly O’Connell Mystery
Kelly O’Connell never thought real estate was a dangerous profession,
until she stumbled over a skeleton in a dead space in an
early-twentieth-century Craftsman house she was transforming into a coveted
modern home in an older urban neighborhood in Fort Worth, Texas.
From that moment, she runs into teen-age
gang members, a manipulative ex-husband, a needy and single pregnant friend, a
cold-blooded murderer, and a policeman who wants to be more than her protector.
As free-spirited as the chocolate-peanut-jalapeƱo candy she craves, Kelly
barges through life trying to keep from angering her policeman-boyfriend,
protect her two young daughters, pacify her worried mother a thousand miles
away, and keep her real estate business afloat. Too often she puts herself in
danger, and sometimes it’s the girls, not Mike, who come to Kelly’s rescue.
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8 comments:
Hi, Judy! I think it is more important to have a self style than be a fashionista. Look how glamorous we think of Grace Kelly and Audrey Hepburn. Classic.
I wear t-shirts, jeans, plain white shirts, some skirts. I layer on a great sweater, jacket or scarf. But you know me, I have to have my FUN handbag.
Hi Judy, loved this! I wouldn't dare dress my characters like I dress, flannel jammies and a tee or jeans and a sweater. But I dress them in what I'd like to wear--if I were 50 pounds lighter and forty years younger, LOL. Skirts and silk tops for Amy Hobbes, the newspaper editor, and high couture for Maxie Gwenoch, the magazie VP who hangs around with vampires in The Kandesky Vampire Chronicles.
Thanks, Vicki and Michele. I do think it's important to have a style. But I don't aspire to be Grace Kelly or Audrey Hepburn. At my age, I put comfort before style, haven't word a skirt but a few times in years. I find in so many ways my characters reflect me.
Clothes can be costume, comfort, and/or camouflage, it seems. For me, comfort usually wins out. Thanks for making me think about this more, Judy. I will have to add more clothing detail in my current WIP.
Enjoyed the post, Judy! Thanks!!
I really loved this. Lets me know more about Kelly and Keisha who I have come to love. Couldn't you put a picture of how you want them to be inside the next book? lol
Susan, glad you can't see me now! But its snowing and cold, and I'm comfortable.
Thanks, Angela.
Elaine--no pictures in books but if I ever get someone to draw Keisha, I'll put it on Facebook. Really not like the picture with this blog--more flowing chiffon, and of course a big girl, as in oversize.
I tried to post a comment yesterday but couldn't sign onto Blogger. Clothing can tell more about a character than written description. My series character dresses like a slob at home but he cleans up nicely in public. He's a former teen idol and for his concerts he wears tight leather pants and glitter shirts cause that's what real teen idols of that era wear (I have photos of Bobby Sherman in such an outfit!). In my last book I put him in a tux, which he hates, and he went to a costume party dressed as Robin Hood. Now that's style! Now I'm looking for an excuse to put him in a kilt.
Sally Carpenter
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