At Left Coast Crime in
Portland back in February I scooped a bunch of interesting books off the
swap table. The first three, after a few paragraphs or a few chapters,
wound up on the swap shelf at the library where I work. But number
four was definitely worth a read.
My first surprise was that How A Gunman Says Goodbye
by Malcolm Mackay is actually the second book in his Glasgow Trilogy. I
figured I would give it a try without worrying about the first book,
and that worked out fine.
But the second surprise came halfway through the book when I happened to glance back at this blog I wrote about Long Beach Bouchercon last year and discovered that one of the freebies I scooped up there was the first book in Mackay's trilogy. Maybe at this year's Bouchercon I'll get volume three.
At
the center of the trilogy (said the man who has only read the second
book) is Peter Jamieson, who runs a criminal organization in Glasgow,
Scotland (mostly drugs). He wants to take on one of his larger rivals
but first he has to flatten Shug Francis, a pretender to his throne.
(Little fleas have lesser fleas to bite 'em...)
And
that requires the help of Frank MacLeod, who may be as close as Jamieson
has to a friend. In Britain where guns are not as prevalent as here,
criminal outfits may only have one or two hit men, and Frank is one of
longstanding.
But longstanding is exactly the problem. He's getting old and just had a hip replaced. Can he still do the job?
Without
giving away too much of the plot, it becomes clear he can't, and for
the rest of the book everyone has to debate the question: how can a
gunman be allowed to retire? This is a guy who literally knows where all the bodies are buried.
That's enough about the plot. What I want to talk about is something quite different.
First
of all, the book is in present tense. Generally I don't like present
tense fiction at all. It gets annoying pretty quickly.
Second, the book is multiple point of view, and entirely
POV. I don't think there is so much as a "It was raining" that doesn't
come strictly from inside the skull of one of the characters. That's
not itself a bad thing, but-- Well...
My new book, out
this summer, is multiple point of view. Originally I planned to write a
lot of short chapters, alternating between viewpoints, but I realized
some of the chapters might be only a few paragraphs long. So I opted
for longish chapters, with different viewpoints carefully separated by
spaces.
Mackay scorns such things. When the action
gets going he is happy to follow a paragraph from A's point of view with one from
B's POV, and then back again. It can be confusing. There were a few
points where I couldn't tell who's eyes I was looking through.
Here, for instance, is a meeting between a cop and a killer:
Fisher's
gesturing for Frank to take a seat at the table. To his relief, Frank
does. If this was a fix and he was going to kill him, it would have
happened by now.
'Can I get you a cup of tea, Frank?" he's asking. Being friendly with this old murdering bastard.
"No thanks."
He can see that Fisher's making an effort. He can see the strain that it's putting on the cop, too...
Highly unusual way of writing. But - and here's my whole point - it all works. Those
other three books that I dumped on the swap table were much more
traditional narratives, easier to follow, but they didn't keep me glued
to the page. Mackay did.
It turns out that all those
writers who helpfully provided us with Ten Rules For Writing Great
Fiction were lying. The fact is there's only one rule: Keep the reader turning pages. Mackay does.
One more thing. Last year I wrote about one
way to deal with cliches in your writing. Essentially, when you spot
one you back up and choose a different direction. It feels like Mackay
does that.
You see, there are two hitmen in the book.
Calum is younger, an up-and-comer. Naturally he is jealous of the more
senior Frank and looking for ways to undermine and replace him--
New choice!
That's
the cliche and Mackay dodges it. His Calum is a free-lancer being
reluctantly dragged into Jamieson's orgaization, who would much prefer
for Frank to stay on as gunman-in-chief. So his problem is: does he lie
to protect the other man?
I recommend the
Glasgow Trilogy, but you might want to start with the first book. But
that's not a rule. There's only one rule.