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I guessed correctly that a lot of people in the audience would not be mystery fans and since this is an educational institution, I figured I should educate them a little on the field. When you ask someone not familiar with the genre to think about mysteries they tend to conjure up Agatha-Christie style whodunits so I explained that there are also hardboiled, police procedurals, inverted detective stories, noir, caper, and so on.
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Well, you could say, he wrote Elmore Leonard novels. That's not as silly as it sounds. He wrote a novel called Touch, about a man who acquired the ability to heal people by touching them. At first publishers didn't want it because it was not a crime novel, but by 1987 they were willing to take a chance on it because it was an Elmore Leonard novel, and readers knew what that meant.
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So, what am I talking about? A third person narration story from multiple points of view, and most of those characters are criminals, each of whom has a nefarious scheme going. The main character might be a good guy or just a slightly-less-bad guy.
You know I love quotations, so here is one from Mr. Leonard: "I don’t think of my bad guys as bad guys. I just think of them as, for the most part, normal people who get up in the morning and they wonder what they’re going to have for breakfast, and they sneeze, and they wonder if they should call their mother, and then they rob a bank."
Is there a name for this category of book? Crime novel is useless. Suspense doesn't really cut it.
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So that's three category names for my novel. But I'm still thinking about Leonard's.