During a recent panel discussion at a nearby bookstore, a member of the audience asked the usual question about how we began our books. The three of us answered in various ways, but all of them were what you might call writerly replies. We began with a character or a scene. I said I began with a situation, a scene that came to me that made me curious about the people in it. My beginning is a little more complicated than that in the case of the Anita Ray mysteries.
I first went to India in 1976, for a year, with thirteen return visits since then, but the last one was in 2014. That seems like a very long time, and it is, even though I stay in touch with friends. Family issues have kept me from returning since then, but I’ve kept writing the Anita Ray series. The fifth in the book has come out in trade paperback and Harlequin will publish the mass market paperback soon. Right now I’m working on the sixth book in the series. So, how do I begin a new mystery set in India after not having visited for so many years? Before I begin with a situation, I look at photographs, to get a feel of the country I love and the area I think I know well. The city of Trivandrum has changed enormously over the years, and I notice large and small changes during every visit. Sitting with images of places I know well—certain shady lanes, small corner temples, old traditional doorways—evoke the ways of living that are so different from how I live here in the States and that may play a role in the story I’m working on.
Many of the photographs suggest story ideas, such as the shop selling as well as exporting homeopathic medicines located on a busy street just at the end of the lane where I lived for a year in the 1980s. Every time I return I walk down Statue Road, and there it is, the homeo shop, near the end, and the elementary school diagonally across the street from it.
One of my favorite photographs is of the laundry hanging among the coconut palms. There is a saying in India. If you’ve only been to a city in North India, you haven’t seen India. If you haven’t been to South India, you haven’t seen India. And if you haven’t been to a village, you haven’t seen India. There is truth in this. The village is the heartbeat of the country, a place encompassing great beauty and unconcealable poverty. Cities of India have on display vast wealth, just like other countries, and unimaginable poverty just around the corner. But in the part of the country I write about, old traditions still live. I learn more about a house and its inhabitants by how the gateway is decorated than I can from any of the nameplates we put on our mailboxes in the States.
These are some of the details I pull together from some of my photographs to get myself back into the setting of my story. When I write, I want to feel I’m there, and I want the writer to feel she is there with me, so I review my pictures, think about the layout of the city, and imagine my characters walking through a village or resort or the capital of the state. A story I’m working on now is based on a festival held in India in late winter. Pongala has been called the largest gathering of women in the world. Over three million women descend on Trivandrum to make an offering to their deity, to bring good health to the family for the coming year. My photographs of this festival will be on display in the Beverly Public Library in February 2024, while I’m working on the story.
In the fifth book in the series, In Sita’s Shadow, Hotel Delite welcomes a tour from the United States, five guests instead of the six expected. Auntie Meena is soon fussing over them, determined to see them happy while in her hotel though she’s a bit confused by their non-touristy conduct. When the tour leader is found dead in his room, poor Auntie Meena is terrified that his spirit will haunt the hotel, and calls her astrologer at once. Anita calls the police, as is expected, and then begins to worry the death is unnatural. Trying to break the news to the members of the tour proves harder than expected. But one tour member seems uninterested in the death, and rarely uses his room in the hotel. This is not what Auntie Mean expects from a proper guest.
Auntie Meena throws herself into the investigation into the tour leader’s death, to Anita’s dismay, in a determined effort to protect one of her guests from the danger Meena is certain is lurking just around the next corner. Nothing good can come from a young male student sparking a friendship with an older foreign woman. Anita, however, is more concerned about the odd behavior of one of the hotel’s suppliers, a woman who makes airy delicious pastries.




Susan, I have enjoyed Sujata Massey and Nev March’s series which are set in India. I thought I had read one of your books, but I guess not since I don’t remember it being set in India… I’ll have to go grab one. Good post!
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Thanks, Paty. I too love those series, and look forward to new books in them. I’ve written three series, and you may have read something else. Hope you enjoy the Anita Ray book.
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I just ordered it. 😉
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I really enjoyed reading your response. It is difficult to narrow down for many writers how we begin our stories, but this helped me with direction of how I began my novel.
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I’m glad you found this useful. I often wonder how other writers think about my particular take on things. Good luck with your novel.
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It is out there already-The Bayou Heist. At work on a new one continuing with a main character. Thank you!
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Thank you, Heather, for your thoughtful reply. When I was getting ready to leave for a year in India, I admitted to my professor that I had qualms about visiting a country where my research grant could feed half a village for a year. I feared the poverty would be overwhelming. He admitted to feeling the same way before his first visit. The poverty is always there, but the people are fabulous, love meeting foreigners and are always ready to lend a hand. I soon got used to strangers walking up to me in a village and asking something like, Do you know my cousin? He lives in Alaska. This often leads to a chat, and we both learn something. I’m glad you look more favorably on India. It has much to offer.
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What a great article! It’s easy to see your love for India, not only in your article but in the pictures. For years I never wanted to go to India. I thought there was not enough to offset the poverty. But writers such as you have changed my mind. India has much to offer. It may never happen, and I may never get there, but my admiration for the people and their culture grows each day. Thanks so much for sharing your work and your heart.
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My reply is above, somehow disconnected from your comment.
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