within someone we’re close to. A random murderer or other criminal is bad enough but when people we know and are intimate with start acting strange and in threatening ways, we are particularly terrified. That’s why I made my two characters lovers.
The fourth fear I use in my writing is our own lack of self-control. I mention the inexplicable drive to throw ourselves off a bridge or cliff — an urge that we’ve all experienced in one form or another. Marissa fears giving in to this specific impulse but in my story I use the impulse as a metaphor for a broader fear: of her loss of self-control with regard to Antonio. I also ply Marissa with drugs to further weaken her self-restraint.
The fifth fear is actually a broad category, which I call the icons of terror. These are the images (often cliches) that make us afraid either because they’re imprinted into our brains or because we have learned to fear them. Some of the icons I used in this story are:
These are just a few of the hundreds of icons of terror that can be used to jangle readers’ nerves.
Finally I wish to mention two more rules I keep in mind when creating fear.
One, I enhance the experience of horror by making sure that my characters (and therefore my readers) stand to lose something important if the threatened calamity comes to pass. This means the people in my stories — the good characters and the bad — must be fleshed out and must themselves care about losing their lives or about suffering some loss. Marissa wouldn’t be afraid if she didn’t care about living or dying, and readers wouldn’t be afraid for her if they didn’t care about her as a character.
Two, I always remember that my job as a suspense writer is to make my audience afraid but never disgusted or repulsed, as happens when there’s graphic gore or violence against, say, children or animals. The emotion that fear engenders in thriller fiction should be cathartic and exhilarating. Yes, make your readers’ palms sweat, and make them hesitate to shut the lights out at night — but at the end of the ride make sure they climb off the roller coaster unharmed.
“A Dish Served Cold” previously appeared online in
“Born Bad” previously appeared in
“Chapter and Verse” previously appeared in
“The Commuter” previously appeared in
“Copycat” previously appeared in
“Double Jeopardy” previously appeared in
“Interrogation” previously appeared in
“A Nice Place to Visit” previously appeared in
“Ninety-eight Point Six” previously appeared in
“The Poker Lesson” previously appeared in
“Surveillance” appeared in
“Tunnel Girl” appeared in
“The Westphalian Ring” appeared in
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
A former journalist, folksinger and attorney, Jeffery Deaver is an international number-one best-selling author. His novels have appeared on a number of best-seller lists around the world, including
His next novel will be
And, yes, the rumors are true, he did appear as a corrupt reporter on his favorite soap opera,
ALSO BY JEFFERY DEAVER