By
JOHN SCHERBER
THE ARTIST
TURNS DETECTIVE
A
lot of people would like to paint, and I’m no exception. In high school I had a close friend who
painted, and I always wondered how well he did with it later in life. I took a
run at it myself in those days and bombed badly. Much later I returned to it in
a more methodical way and became fairly competent, but I didn’t quit my day
job.
What
I did learn from painting is that you have to see things differently. There
were exercises where, for example, you’d paint a vase upside down. It helped to
keep you from thinking of it as a vase––putting a name to it––only seeing the
action of light and shadow on the surfaces, which is what you painted. Names
come from a different part of the brain and they get in the way.
Later,
I wondered whether seeing things differently be any use in solving a crime. My
painter character, Paul Zacher, living in Mexico with his historian girlfriend,
doesn’t think so when he’s asked to look into a murder by the widow of the
victim. He knows he sees the relationships of curves and contours to each
other, the different colors within the shadows on human skin. But what would he
pick up at a crime scene that the police missed?
That’s
the premise of my book, Twenty Centavos,
the first of a series of mysteries involving Paul Zacher, his girlfriend Maya
Sanchez, and their retired detective friend, Cody Williams. They are mostly set
in San Miguel de Allende, a colonial mountain town in the center of México with
a large expatriate population. I’ve lived there too for the past seven years.
At
thirty-five, Paul is a guy with an irreverent sense of humor who does fairly
well as a painter, showing at two galleries, and he likes his life. When the
book begins, he is engaged in a series of nudes posed with statues of Mayan
Gods against a jungle backdrop. The show he’s preparing for will be called Gods
and Goddesses. Getting pulled into a criminal investigation, he finds himself
at odds with the local police, and with himself as well, because he sometimes
feels like a snoop. As an outgoing guy with an ironic sense of humor, he’s
uncomfortable with his new need to be covert and even sneaky at times in order
to solve a case.
When
I began this book I was on a painting trip, driving down a long curving
mountain road outside of Taos, New Mexico, when a scene came to me of a woman
coming to pose for a nude portrait at a painter’s studio. She was not an
experienced model, but wanted to preserve an image of herself in her prime at
the age of twenty-eight. She was also wondering whether it might be fun to
engage in a little rendezvous with the painter as well. He was an attractive
guy and she knew he liked women.
As
it developed, I turned this scene over and over in my mind and virtually
memorized it. When I arrived at my hotel in Taos, I immediately sat down at my
laptop and wrote it.
Paul
Zacher, who already knew he was attracted to his new model, is nonetheless
loyal to his Mexican girlfriend. As a painter, he views the naked body as
landscape; hills and valleys, outcroppings of bush here and there. But even
more, for him the studio is a place of discipline and concentration, and to get
involved with a model means chaos. His reaction is complicated by the
recollection of an earlier encounter where he had stumbled in the studio. Upon
this model’s arrival, a fine misunderstanding follows.
Naturally,
solving this case led to others. I found I was already working on the second
book of the series, The Fifth Codex, even
before I was finished revising Twenty
Centavos.
Currently
there are thirteen published and another in process. They fall into two
categories, artifact and relationship. Twenty
Centavos is focused on ancient Mayan ceramics, and The Fifth Codex deals with the discovery of a fifth Maya book,
where only four had been previously known. The fifth one, Strike Zone, is centered on the recovery of a skull cast from the
remaining gold of the Aztecs in the days of the Conquest. These are the
artifact books. The ninth concerns an attempt to steal Mexico’s greatest religious
treasure, the Virgin of Guadalupe.
Brushwork, the third of the series, is
about revenge. Daddy’s Girl, Vanishing
Act, and Identity Crisis focus on
love, loss and greed.
This
is a rewarding series to write. I love the backdrop of the upscale expat community
in San Miguel, and the continuity and developing relationship of the three core
characters. As with so many successful series books, these are the books I want
to read myself.
Find
me on Facebook and Twitter, and please visit my website at: www.sanmiguelallendebooks.com
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