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thrillers with bags of emotion...
When out with friends for a chat and catch up, we often talk
about the books we have read (or not read as the case may be). My friends sometimes think I’m a bit ‘nuts’
as I tell them I often don’t finish novels.
I am a person who hates to waste time so I will only carry
on reading a book if the writer has caught me up in a story (involved me
emotionally). If I am not enjoying a book I will cast it aside and not waste
further time on it. It doesn’t even have to be a really bad book for that to
happen – it may simply be that it is boring me a bit. I know that sometimes if
I continue it will get better but why should I bother when there are so many
other juicy books to get stuck into. On the other hand I know people who will
persevere with a book – provided it is not that bad! The engine that turns so-so
fiction into well-loved and remembered books? Emotion!
When I ask friends what a book is actually about and they
cannot remember I know it wasn’t that good. For me the plot has to hang
together well and the story must engage some kind of strong emotion in me.
Whether that is horror, happiness, sadness or sorrow an emotion of some kind
must be there. When I think back to books I read as a child/young woman I find
it is the emotion I remember most clearly about the story.

No, I know they were not really thrillers but there ARE plenty of thrillers who are awash with emotion (both love and heart warming terror to name but two). In fact I would say thrillers cannot be good stories (no matter how much of a roller coaster ride) without that all important connection to the reader. Take for example the stories of Stephen King, Dean Koontz, Tess Gerritsen, and even Jodi Picoult. They are all chock full of supense but they also look at our very human frailties and our relatinships with each other. Great reads every one of them!!!
Of course Charles Dickens may have been the best ever for injecting masses of emotion into his stories as well as suspense... Who could ever forget the image of a small thin boy holding out a bowl and asking meekly for more?
Do certain stories have a big impact for you?