A Good Use for a Dead Darling – Catriona McPherson

Sparkle Abbey’s guest – Catriona McPherson

 

I was at a two-and-a-half hour Zoom meeting earlier today (the UK Society of Authors’ AGM) and in the montage of the year’s highlights there was a wee tiny clip of another Scottish writer, Damien Barr, talking about how he no longer minds cutting stuff out of his drafts, now he’s published, because he can always return to the cut subject in blogs.

How, how, did that never occur to me in the course of writing thirty novels and mourning the stuff that ended up in the bin?

So, Stiletto Gang, here goes: you are the captive audience for my first resurrected-darlings blog post. Hope that’s okay.

SCOT IN A TRAP (Last Ditch Motel Book 5) is set in the present day but it concerns a time almost twenty years ago when Lexy Campbell was a school and then a university student, falling in (and out) of love for the first time. I wrote her first date, her first [billowing curtains] and the party at which her romance hit the skids. Inevitably, in the over-written first draft, I catalogued everything she wore. (I say “inevitably” because, if anyone can write about twenty years ago and not get there by visualising the fashion,  I never want to go shopping with them.)

In the first draft, however, I made a rookie mistake. I cast my mind back. When I was at school, we were in the height of  New-Romanticism. We crimped our hair, sewed brocade on shoulders and tied scarves round our legs. (Why did we tie scarves round our legs? We had necks.) By  the time I got to university, I was dressing like Bruce Springsteen: sawn-off checked shirt, tight jeans, work boots. I stole my dad’s old cardigans. He didn’t mind: he had moved on to fleeces because it was modern times.

The trouble with mining these memories for Lexy’s look is that she’s twenty years younger than me. Oops.

So, in the second draft, she had ironed hair and wore low-rise boot-cut jeans, hanky tops, and rocked many a barely-there sandal – remember those bloody things? Like a slice of toast with a single piece of string glued to it?

She also wore the ubiquitous gap-year chic of a dress and trousers. I still remember the first time I ever saw someone in a dress and trousers. It was one of my students at the University of Leeds – literally just back from her gap year. Note, I don’t mean a salwar kameez; lots of Pakistani diaspora women wore them throughout my childhood in Edinburgh and, in Leeds, men wore them too. But a western dress over wide-leg jeans? Mind blowing. That was the first time I ever felt old. I genuinely thought she’d been in a rush that morning and got mixed up about what she meant to wear. Like the time I put my skirt on the ironing board, left the iron to heat up, grabbed some toast, brushed my teeth, put my coat on and went to work.

Once I’d got used to the idea, I embraced the dress and trousers trend enthusiastically. And Lexy looked fantastic in the second draft, wearing hers. She was slightly under-dressed in the third draft and, by the time I’d got to page-proof stage, I wasn’t relying on clothes to ground the story in its time at all, which freed up her fashion choices to play a role in the plot. (No spoilers.) It was fun while it lasted, though.

Have you got happy memories of the fashions of yore? Anything you swore you’d never wear and ended up loving? Anything you still swear you won’t be caught dead in if it comes back? I’m not sure I could go round by flares for a third time, but you never know . . .

 

SCOT IN A TRAP

A mysterious object the size of a suitcase, all wrapped in bacon and smelling of syrup, can mean only one thing: Thanksgiving at the Last Ditch Motel. This year the motel residents are in extra-celebratory mood as the holiday brings a new arrival to the group – a bouncing baby girl.

But as one life enters the Ditch, another leaves it. Menzies Lassiter has only just checked in. When resident counsellor Lexy Campbell tries to deliver his breakfast the next day, she finds him checked out. Permanently.  Shocking enough if he were stranger, but Lexy recognises that face. Menzies was her first love until he broke her heart many years ago.

What’s he doing at the Last Ditch? What’s he doing dead? And how can Lexy escape the fact that she alone had the means, the opportunity – and certainly the motive – to kill him?

 

Catriona McPherson (she/her) was born in Scotland and immigrated to the US in 2010. She writes: preposterous 1930s detective stories, set in the old country and featuring an aristocratic sleuth; modern comedies set in the Last Ditch Motel in fictional (yeah, sure) California; and, darker than both of those (which is not difficult), a strand of contemporary psychological thrillers.

Her books have won or been shortlisted for the Edgar, the Anthony, the Agatha, the Lefty, the Macavity, the Mary Higgins Clark award and the UK Ellery Queen Dagger. She has just introduced a fresh character in IN PLACE OF FEAR, which finally marries her love of historicals with her own working-class roots, but right now, she’s writing the sixth book in what was supposed to be the Last Ditch trilogy.

Catriona is a proud lifetime member and former national president of Sisters in Crime.  www.catrionamcpherson.com

20 replies
  1. Catriona
    Catriona says:

    Thank you for having me, Gang. I started singing “Love and murder, love and murder, go together like …” as I was posting this on m’socials. And it occurred to me for the first time that nothing rhymes with “murder”. Cozy writers have been labouring under that burden without complaint all this time.

  2. Gay Yellen
    Gay Yellen says:

    So lovely to see you here, Catriona! Fashion regrets? Not being young enough to pull off wearing crazy things like I did when I was a twenty-something. I have an item or two from the big-shoulder 1980’s that felt great on me back then. Not going to wear them anytime soon, yet I cannot bring myself to toss them. I’m still keeping a closetful of memories.

  3. Donnell Ann Bell
    Donnell Ann Bell says:

    Welcome Catriona! ! I grew up in Go-go boots era and saddle oxfords. Need I say more? How fabulous you had an opportunity to pull a draft out of mothballs! And what was up with those scarves tied around our legs? I also remember those barely there sandals. So painful. I have fat toes 🙂 Looking forward to Scot in a Trap!

  4. Saralyn
    Saralyn says:

    Nice to meet another admired author here, Catriona! Love the idea of resurrecting characters for blogposts. As for fashion of yore, how about long straight hair with colorful scarves wound around the forehead? Or, later, short curly locks in front of each ear?

  5. Mary Lee Ashford
    Mary Lee Ashford says:

    Thanks for visiting with the gang, Catriona! I love the idea of using the items in my “Cut Scenes” folder as fodder for blog post ideas. Brilliant! As far as fashion, I don’t remember the scarves around the legs bit. I must have missed that trend. But I so wish I could wear platform shoes again. It was my only chance to be tall enough to see in a crowd. (Don’t tell but I have a lovely lavender suede pair that I can’t seem to toss hidden in the dark recesses of my closet.) And about that “Love and Murder” ditty. I have one word for you – “herder.”

    • catriona mcpherson
      catriona mcpherson says:

      Thanks for having me, Mary Lee. My interenet or at least my access went a bit bleh later yesterday and I lost comments so here I am back again! About the rhyme? I drew a complete blank and then was innundated with suggestions. In my defence, murder and herder don’t rhyme for me. But girder and birder are good.

  6. Cath Hoffner
    Cath Hoffner says:

    Hi Catronia
    My favorite fashion from way back was my leather skirt and red silk shirt. Would love to wear that skirt. My least favorite were the tube tops that were almost crop tops in my teen years plus hot pants (very short shorts).

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