At least, it has for me. I would have posted this yesterday, the first day without having to worry about finals/homework/school, but a certain person (whose first and last name begin with the same letter) who shall remain nameless would have posted a comment saying something to the effect of "I hate you. Beezy!"
Anyways.
So it's vacation-- hooray! I went to Borders yesterday and bought two books, which I will be perfectly content to spend all day reading while eating chocolate covered raisins as if they were bon-bons. Somewhere in between there will be parties and presents, not to mention the party of the year: Christmas Eve at the Casa Cubana.
At Borders, two things happened that made me realize something. The first is that, given free rein to wander the bookshelves on my own, I went straight for the mystery section. No premeditation, no plan of attack, I saw the sign and that was the end of it.I bought two mysteries, one of which is not really a mystery but a how-Sherlock-solved-the-mysteries type thing. So it's not exactly literature, but I couldn't help it-- it was sitting right there on the display because of the movie, and the cover was so pretty and old fashioned, and...
The second is that, even though I had already made up my mind as to which books I would take home, I stopped and looked at the Agatha Christies anyways. On the back cover of one of them, a critic wrote something about how she was the greatest female mystery author ever, how she blazed trails for future writers, et cetera, and I suddenly thought, "I wonder if I could do that. Is it possible to write anything better? Wouldn't it be fun to try?"
Preposterous? Yes. Blasphemy? Most likely. And yet I could see it all, the little blurbs on the backs of books declaring that not since the great Agatha Christie has anyone mastered the craft of mysteries so fully, or something strange like that. In reality, I know full well that Agatha Christie is untouchable. No matter-- that momentary delight and fleeting image convinced me that if I really am going to make a living writing books, creating and solving mysteries will be the way I do it. I've thought of before, but this sealed the deal. When I was little I thought I was going to write about princesses and knights in shining armor. By the time high school started, I was doing the contemporary fiction/teen thing. And now, I think I've finally figured it out. Mysteries it is! (Not to say that I can't/won't write other things. I can. But you get the picture, right?)
Funny that my favorite things are detectives and spies, who have to pay extreme attention to detail to survive, when I can't even tell you the name of the street behind my own.
