I am here to distract you! |
A
cozy mystery isn’t complete without the use of “red herrings.” A red herring is
a false clue the author uses to send readers and the fictional sleuth in
directions that don’t lead to the real villain. It is simply a tool to distract
from the real culprit.
In
the literal sense, no fish called a red herring exists; rather, the term refers
to a fish that’s been strongly cured in brine or heavily smoked. The process
makes the fish smell and turns the flesh a reddish color.
There
is some debate about the etymology of the term red herring. The most common
theory is that the strong smelling fish were used to train hunting dogs. The
red herring would be dragged along a trail until a puppy learned to follow the
scent. Later on, the trainer would drag a red herring perpendicular to the
trail of the animal being hunted, and the dog would eventually learn to follow
the trail of the animal. Another theory points to escaping convicts who used
red herring to throw off hounds in pursuit.
No
matter how the term came about, a cozy mystery wouldn’t be complete without red
herrings to compel the book’s sleuth to go in directions that don’t point to
the real villain. The cozy author can do this in several ways. The red herring
used most often is giving other characters a motivation to kill the victim.
Another technique used is to lead the sleuth astray with gossip or by planting
false evidence at the scene of the crime. Sometimes the wrong victim is killed
by accident—another red herring.
Cozy
authors owe it to our readers to provide enough red herrings to make a story
interesting. We also need to make sure all the red herrings are explained at
the end of a book; for instance, if the sleuth uncovers a potential murder
weapon at a possible suspect’s house, but that suspect turns out to the
innocent, we need to know why the weapon was there.
One
notable example of the use of a red herring is the convict Seldon in “The
Hound of the Baskervilles” by Sir Author Conan Doyle. The reader believes that
Seldon must be involved in the murders, but he was just in the wrong place at
the wrong time.
I'd love to hear from our readers. What is your favorite red herring from a cozy you've recently read?
Candice, thanks for posting the etymology of the red herring. Though I've employed red herrings in my stories, I've never really understood the origin of the term. Really interesting!
ReplyDeleteGood post - my Twitter feed loved it!
ReplyDelete~Nancy Jill