S. S. Van Dine Sets Down Twenty Rules for Writing Detective Stories
| S. S. Van Dine Sets Down Twenty Rules
  for Writing Detective Stories The American Magazine, Sep. 1928 _________ “There simply must be a corpse in a
  detective novel, and the deader the corpse the better….” * “Servants—such as butlers, footmen,
  valets, game-keepers, cooks, and the like—must not be chosen by the author as
  the culprit….” |  | 
| The detective story is a game. It is more—it is a sporting
  event. And the author must play fair with the reader. He can no more resort
  to trickeries and deceptions and still retain his honesty than if he cheated
  in a bridge game. He must outwit the reader, and hold the reader’s interest,
  through sheer ingenuity. For the writing of detective stories there are very
  definite laws—unwritten, perhaps, but none the less binding: and every
  respectable and self-respecting concocter of literary mysteries lives up to
  them. Herewith, then, is a sort of
  Credo, based partly on the practice of all the great writers of stories, and
  partly on the promptings of the honest author’s inner conscience. To wit: 1.     The
  reader must have equal opportunity with the detective for solving the
  mystery. All clues must be plainly stated and described. 2.     No willful
  tricks or deceptions may be played on the reader other than those played
  legitimately by the criminal on the detective himself. 3.     There
  must be no love interest in the story. To introduce amour is to clutter up a
  purely intellectual experience with irrelevant sentiment. The business in
  hand is to bring a criminal to the bar of justice, not to bring a lovelorn
  couple to the hymeneal altar. 4.     The
  detective himself, or one of the official investigators, should never turn
  out to be the culprit. This is bald trickery, on a par with offering some one
  a bright penny for a five-dollar gold piece. It’s false pretenses. 5.     The
  culprit must be determined by logical deductions—not by accident or
  coincidence or unmotivated confession. To solve a criminal problem in this
  latter fashion is like sending the reader on a deliberate wild-goose chase,
  and then telling him, after he has failed, that you had the object of his
  search up your sleeve all the time. Such an author is no better than a
  practical joker. 6.     The
  detective novel must have a detective in it; and a detective is not a
  detective unless he detects. His function is to gather clues that will
  eventually lead to the person who did the dirty work in the first chapter;
  and if the detective does not reach his conclusions through an analysis of
  those clues, he has no more solved his problem than the schoolboy who gets
  his answer out of the back of the arithmetic. 7.     There
  simply must be a corpse in a detective novel, and the deader the corpse the
  better. No lesser crime than murder will suffice. Three hundred pages is far
  too much pother for a crime other than murder. After all, the reader’s
  trouble and expenditure of energy must be rewarded. Americans are essentially
  humane, and therefore a tiptop murder arouses their sense of vengeance and
  horror. They wish to bring the perpetrator to justice; and when “murder most
  foul, as in the best it is,” has been committed, the chase is on with all the
  righteous enthusiasm of which the thrice gentle reader is capable. 8.     The
  problem of the crime must be solved by strictly naturalistic means. Such
  methods for learning the truth as slate-writing, ouija-boards, mind-reading,
  spiritualistic séances, crystal-gazing, and the like, are taboo. A reader has
  a chance when matching his wits with a rationalistic detective, but if he
  must compete with the world of spirits and go chasing about the fourth
  dimension of metaphysics, he is defeated ab initio [from the  beginning]. 9.     There
  must be but one detective—that is, but one protagonist of deduction—one deus
  ex machine [god from the machine]. To bring the minds of three or four,
  or sometimes a gang of detectives to bear on a problem is not only to
  disperse the interest and break the direct thread of logic, but to take an
  unfair advantage of the reader, who, at the outset, pits his mind against
  that of the detective and proceeds to do mental battle. If there is more than
  one detective the reader doesn’t know who his co-deductor is. It’s like
  making the reader run a race with a relay team. 10.  The
  culprit must turn out to be a person who has played a more or less prominent
  part in the story—that is, a person with whom the reader is familiar and in
  whom he takes an interest. For a writer to fasten the crime, in the final
  chapter, on a stranger or person who has played a wholly unimportant part in
  the tale, is to confess to his inability to match wits with the reader. 11.  Servants—such
  as butlers, footmen, valets, game-keepers, cooks, and the like—must not be
  chosen by the author as the culprit. This is begging a noble question. It is
  a too easy solution. It is unsatisfactory, and makes the reader feel that his
  time has been wasted. The culprit must be a decidedly worth-while person—one
  that wouldn’t ordinarily come under suspicion; for if the crime was the
  sordid work of a menial, the author would have had no business to embalm it
  in book-form. 12.  There
  must be but one culprit, no matter how many murders are committed. The
  culprit may, of course, have a minor helper or co-plotter; but the entire
  onus must rest on one pair of shoulders: the entire indignation of the reader
  must be permitted to concentrate on a single black nature. 13.  Secret
  societies, camorras, mafias, et al., have no place in a
  detective story. Here the author gets into adventure fiction and
  secret-service romance. A fascinating and truly beautiful murder is
  irremediably spoiled by any such wholesale culpability. To be sure, the
  murderer in a detective novel should be given a sporting chance, but it is
  going too far to grant him a secret society (with its ubiquitous havens, mass
  protection, etc.) to fall back on. No high-class, self-respecting murderer
  would want such odds in his jousting-bout with the police. 14.  The
  method of murder, and the means of detecting it, must be rational and
  scientific. That is to say, pseudo-science and purely imaginative and
  speculative devices are not to be tolerated in the roman policier. For
  instance, the murder of a victim by a newly found element—a super-radium, let
  us say—is not a legitimate problem. Nor may a rare and unknown drug, which
  has its existence only in the author’s imagination, be administered. A
  detective-story writer must limit himself, toxicologically speaking, to the
  pharmacopoeia. Once an author soars into the realm of fantasy, in the Jules
  Verne manner, he is outside the bounds of detective fiction, cavorting in the
  uncharted reaches of adventure. 15.  The
  truth of the problem must at all times be apparent—provided the reader is
  shrewd enough to see it. By this I mean that if the reader, after learning
  the explanation for the crime, should reread the book, he would see that the
  solution had, in a sense, been staring him in the face—that all the clues
  really pointed to the culprit—and that, if he had been as clever as the
  detective, he could have solved the mystery himself without going on to the
  final chapter. That the clever reader does often thus solve the problem goes
  without saying. And one of my basic theories of detective fiction is that, if
  a detective story is fairly and legitimately constructed, it is impossible to
  keep the solution from all readers. There will inevitably be a certain number
  of them just as shrewd as the author; and if the author has shown the proper
  sportsmanship and honesty in his statement and projection of the crime and
  its clues, these perspicacious readers will be able, by analysis, elimination
  and logic, to put their finger on the culprit as soon as the detective does.
  And herein lies the zest of the game. Herein we have an explanation for the
  fact that readers who would spurn the ordinary “popular” novel will read
  detective stories unblushingly. 16.  A
  detective novel should contain no long descriptive passages, no literary
  dallying with side-issues, no subtly worked-out character analyses, no “atmospheric”
  preoccupations. Such matters have no vital place in a record of crime and
  deduction. They hold up the action, and introduce issues irrelevant to the
  main purpose, which is to state a problem, analyze it, and bring it to a
  successful conclusion. To be sure, there must be a sufficient descriptiveness
  and character delineation to give the novel verisimilitude; but when an
  author of a detective story has reached that literary point where he has
  created a gripping sense of reality and enlisted the reader’s interest and
  sympathy in the characters and the problem, he has gone as far in the purely “literary”
  technique as is legitimate and compatible with the needs of a
  criminal-problem document. A detective story is a grim business, and the
  reader goes to it, not for literary furbelows and style and beautiful
  descriptions and the projection of moods, but for mental stimulation and
  intellectual activity—just as he goes to a ball game or to a cross-word
  puzzle. Lectures between innings at the Polo Grounds on the beauties of
  nature would scarcely enhance the interest in the struggle between two
  contesting baseball nines; and dissertations on etymology and orthography
  interspersed in the definitions of a cross-word puzzle would tend only to
  irritate the solver bent on making the words interlock correctly. 17.  A
  professional criminal must never be shouldered with the guilt of a crime in a
  detective story. Crimes by house-breakers and bandits are the province of the
  police department—not of authors and brilliant amateur detectives. Such
  crimes belong to the routine work of the Homicide Bureaus. A really
  fascinating crime is one committed by a pillar of a church, or a spinster
  noted for her charities. 18.  A
  crime in a detective story must never turn out to be an accident or a
  suicide. To end an odyssey of sleuthing with such an anti-climax is to play
  an unpardonable trick on the reader. If a book-buyer should demand his two
  dollars back on the ground that the crime was a fake, any court with a sense
  of justice would decide in his favor and add a stinging reprimand to the
  author who thus hoodwinked a trusting and kind-hearted reader. 19.  The
  motives for all crimes in detective stories should be personal. International
  plottings and war politics belong in a different category of fiction—in
  secret-service tales, for instance. But a murder story must be kept gemütlich,
  so to speak. It must reflect the reader’s everyday experiences, and give him
  a certain outlet for his own repressed desires and emotions. 20.  And
  (to give my Credo an even score of items) I herewith list a few of the
  devices which no self-respecting detective-story writer will now avail
  himself of. They have been employed too often, and are familiar to all true
  lovers of literary crime. To use them is a confession of the author’s
  ineptitude and lack of originality. (a)   Determining
  the identity of the culprit by comparing the butt of a cigarette left at the
  scene of the crime with the brand smoked by a suspect. (b)  The
  bogus spiritualistic séance to frighten the culprit into giving himself away. (c)   Forged
  finger-prints. (d)  The
  dummy-figure alibi. (e)   The
  dog that does not bark and thereby reveals the fact that the intruder is
  familiar. (f)    The
  final pinning of the crime on a twin, or a relative who looks exactly like
  the suspected, but innocent, person. (g)   The
  hypodermic syringe and the knockout drops. (h)  The
  commission of the murder in a locked room after the police have actually
  broken in. (i)    The
  word-association test for guilt. (j)    The
  cipher, or code letter, which is eventually unravelled by the sleuth. | |
| S.S. Van Dine (1889 –
  1939)—saddled with the ostentatious name William Huntington Wright—wrote the golden
  age detective novels featuring amateur sleuth Philo Vance. Van Dine, much
  like his detective, was—as Otto Penzler wrote in The Detectionary—“a
  poseur and a dilettante, dabbling in art, music and criticism.” The twenty rules
  Van Dine recorded are interesting, and even helpful for writers and readers
  alike, but many exist for no other reason than to be broken by better writers. “S.
  S. Van Dine Sets Down Twenty Rules for Writing Detective Stories” originally
  appeared in the Sep. 1928 issue of The American Magazine. | |



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