When
I sat down last September to start writing Fatal Sign-Off, I expected to
feel right at home. After all, I’d written two books in my Book Blogger
Mysteries series, spent countless hours dreaming up the coastal town of Copper
Bay, and lived alongside Winnie Lark and her friends through every twist and
turn of their fictional lives. How hard could it be to dive back in?
Turns
out, way harder than I thought.
More
than two years had passed since I’d last worked on creating stories for this
series. In that time, I’d written other books, told other tales, and spent my
days with different casts of characters. When it came time to return to
Winnie’s world, I discovered that I’d lost the easy familiarity I once had with
her. Her voice wasn’t leaping off the page the way it used to. Her motivations
were hazy. I couldn’t quite pin down what she wanted out of life at this stage
in her journey.
It
was a strange feeling. These were characters I had created. I knew their
backstories, their quirks, their favorite coffee orders. And yet, sitting at my
desk, staring at the blinking cursor, I realized I didn’t know them anymore.
That
realization was… unsettling.
Writing
a series is a lot like nurturing a long-term friendship. You build trust and
intimacy over time, layering shared experiences until you can practically
predict each other’s reactions. But if you go years without seeing that friend,
the dynamic shifts. You might wonder, will it still feel the same? Will we
still laugh at the same things? Will we still “get” each other?
With
Fatal Sign-Off, I had to face those questions about my own fictional
friends.
At
first, I tried to force it. I told myself, You know Winnie. You know her
best friends and her brother. You know Copper Bay inside and out. But every
sentence felt like it was wearing a stiff, ill-fitting jacket. The rhythm
wasn’t there. The spark was missing. And worse, I started to doubt whether I
could find it again.
So,
I took a step back. Instead of pushing forward with the plot, I decided to
spend time with my characters without the pressure of getting everything
“right” on the first try. I wrote little vignettes—moments that would never
appear in the final book—just to remember what it felt like to be in the room
with Winnie and her crew. I reread scenes from Over My Dead Blog and Dearly
Deleted to hear their voices again. I chatted with readers about what they
loved about the characters and what stood out to them the most.
Slowly,
the familiarity started to return.
I
began to remember the way Winnie teases her brother when his “Hollywoodness”
begins to show, how her internal monologue is laced with equal parts snark and
self-awareness. I remembered her friends’ quiet loyalty, the way they’ve always
got Winnie’s back even when she doesn’t ask. I remembered what Copper Bay
smells like after a storm, and how the harbor wharf sounds under a pair of
boots in the chilly spring.
And
then, one day, I realized I’d stopped “trying” to write in their voices. I was
just… writing.
That’s
when it hit me: these characters had been waiting for me all along. They hadn’t
gone anywhere. They were right where I’d left them, frozen in that in-between
space that only exists in fiction, patiently holding their mugs of coffee and
waiting for me to show up again.
Coming
back to the Book Blogger Mysteries after such a long break felt a lot like
running into an old friend from high school. At first, you’re awkward, fumbling
through small talk, not sure if you’ll have anything in common anymore. But
then you remember the inside jokes, the shared history, the comfortable
silences. Before you know it, you’re laughing like no time has passed at all.
That’s
what happened with Winnie and the rest of the Copper Bay crew.
Once
I stopped worrying about “getting it right” and just let us hang out together
again, the groove came back. The plot threads started to weave themselves
together. The dialogue felt natural. I could see what each character wanted and
feared. It was like the door to Copper Bay had been locked for a while, and all
I needed was to jiggle the key in just the right way.
Writing
Fatal Sign-Off taught me something I’ll carry into every future project:
even when you feel disconnected from your characters, the bond you’ve built
with them doesn’t just disappear. It might get dusty from lack of use, but it’s
still there, waiting to be rediscovered.
And when you do find it again, it’s magic.
By the time I typed “The End,” I didn’t just feel like I’d finished another mystery. I felt like I’d reconnected with old friends—friends I know I won’t leave behind for so long again. Because while I may write about murder and mayhem, at the heart of every story are the relationships that make it worth telling. And those bonds? They’re worth coming back to, no matter how much time has passed.
Fatal Sign-Off launches August 26th on eBook and paperback. Available at your favorite bookish retailer!
Completely agree.
ReplyDeleteGlad I'm not alone in this thought!
DeleteThank you for sharing your writing journey! Congratulations on your latest book!
ReplyDeleteThank you, Heather!!
DeleteCongrats and so happy you reconnected with your friends/cast of characters.
ReplyDeleteThank you! It was such a rewarding experience in the end.
DeleteI've had the same experience -- and it's magnified because I write my stories in "real" time, meaning characters age. So if the last story with the character was in 2020, and I'm writing a 2025 story, I need to understand how those five years have changed the character to become who she is today. It takes time, but it has always worked. Congrats on your newest release.
ReplyDeleteI can imagine that five years adds a lot of layers to anyone, fiction or real!
DeleteI do think sometimes my characters sulk when I'm not paying attention to them. They are like the cat who, when I returned from a trip, would deliberately sit in front of me, her back to me, and give her paws and face a leisurely bath, 'proving' that she didn't care if I'd ignored her. But she always came around in a few days.
ReplyDeleteHehehe, I can totally picture this!
DeleteI hear you, Sarah. I had a 3-book series in between my Endurance mysteries, and now I'm working HARD on getting back to those Endurance characters. But it gets easier the longer you write. Good luck!
ReplyDeleteGood luck to you as well, Susan! It's like riding a bike in that way, too. It comes back to you.
DeleteWonderful blog, Sarah. I'm visiting with old friends, too, writing a short story with the characters who appeared in most of my stories in Alfred Hitchcock Mystery Magazine. I haven't hung out with them in about 15 years. Warm feelings all around!
ReplyDeleteWhat a wonderful tribute to the Copper Bay gang! Congratulations on getting your groove back.
ReplyDeleteExcited to read what Winnie and the crew shared with you!
ReplyDelete