To be clear, I have no issue with self defence. I also have considerable sympathy for anyone who kills to escape unlawful imprisonment. It happens - and it tends to be what's going on when women kill their abusive partners. Otherwise, the standard reasons for murder are really crappy when you look at them. Jealousy, greed, revenge. For the domestic abuse escapee, the point at which you get out is the point at which you are at most risk of being killed, because loss of control over a person feels like a reason for murder, for far too many people.
As a starting point then, I have problems with books that present murderers as interesting or sympathetic. I have a particular distaste for the 'clever serial killer who toys with the police' trope. I've read and watched enough murder mysteries to have developed a certain amount of unease. I also struggle a lot with the 'amateur detective who just happened to be there' model, with all due reference to Murder She Wrote, and things of that ilk.
I am perpetually uneasy about the way murder can be presented as a mental health issue - as is often the way of it in the news. On one hand I think a person has to be a particular kind of unhinged to think that killing someone is a good option in most circumstances. On the other hand, stigmatising mentally ill people is cruel and unhelpful. Most people with mental illness are a danger to themselves and not to anyone else.
It has therefore come as a bit of a surprise to me to find that I'm co-writing a cosy murder series. I like a challenge, and it's a good opportunity to look at my beliefs and assumptions around the genre and to also consider whether I could do this on my own terms. I do want to explore what the hell has to be going on in a person's head to make murder seem like a reasonable choice. Not to validate that choice, but to make people question the kinds of thinking that might take you there.
I don't believe that the inclination to murder is innate, or that it comes out of nowhere. The choices we make, the beliefs we adopt, the entitlement we feel and the way we justify things are all going to contribute to a trajectory. If it isn't an accident, and it isn't in self defence then there's been a journey to the point where it seems like a good idea. That's something I'm interested in exploring.
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