
Lee Loffland's The Graveyard Shift blog a few days ago spoke about how hard it's getting for writers to find good murder spots.
So difficult these days, he says. He suggests to take a weekend road trip to find those pesky, hard-to-find murder scenes.
Lee says "Not all murderers choose to do their dirty work in the comfort of someone’s warm and cozy brick rancher on So Sweet Lane in Lovelytown, USA. Sometimes, assassins are a bit creative when it comes to disposing of the fruits of their labor. In fact, victims have been found in really odd places, like…old, rat-infested, abandoned factories, dilapidated houses, inside rusty farm machinery, lying miles-deep in the woods, a railroad car, inside discarded barrels, inside water towers and tanks, under water, a chimney, and hanging from the rafters in a barn. So why not be creative when writing your murder scenes? The real killers sure are."
Lee's in law enforcement.
Our blog writers fit that bill. We think global and creativity abounds in Brazil, Iceland, Greece, the UK, Bangkok, France, Africa and make use of our distinctive landscape for a good killing. For me, it's an extended road trip over the big pond.
In my case, Paris, a densely populated city, poses sometimes unique issues - a spectrum of difficulty in where to put that body. My constant challenges are those annoying passersby, the curious concierge at the window, the late night
reveler's stumbling in a passage...nuisances really when you need to kill someone and hide their body.
So I ask my friends for help. Carla, the 'victim' in the orange-red raincoat above took some persuading over a chocolat chaud to agree. But what are friends for I asked? I needed to visualize the setting, the distances, the greenery and put a body there. Turns out I used this house in Paris (unknown to the owners and plan to keep it that way) and moved the body to the back near the shrubbery. Carla's often called on to give 'service' and help out in a variety of circumstances. Most recently in climbing over a metal spiked fence into a park near Place de la République and seeing if she could do it in under two minutes. It worked and I can't thank her enough. It totally changed a plot point in the story.
Now of course if one uses interior locations - an apartment, chateau in the country, museum, or the catacombs they offer distinct possibilities but tie more directly back to the perpetrator. Whose apartment or chateau?

An abandoned phantom Metro station?



Of course underground tunnels in Paris always make a good body stash

What about you? Any friends you call on for that hard to pinpoint murder location?
Cara - Tuesday
