| "It was 10 chapters long and
it was put in the library at Sherwood school. My
cousin in Nova Scotia took it and showed it to
his teacher and it was put in their library too. "I
go back and read it now, it's such a terrible
story. Good for a nine-year-old I guess,"
she says, laughing at what was to be the
beginning of many penned mystery adventures.
"Most of my stories were mysteries. My
mother used to tease me when I was little because
I'd write those sort of stories that left you
hanging at the end. You'd turn the page and say, "And
"it" was there!" That would
be the end of the story. She didn't like that,
she doesn't like the cliffhangers."
Fortunately for Bingley's mother, who helped
her daugheter edit The Night She Came Home, there
was an ending, and to the author's credit, one
that catches most readers by surprise.
However, this novel's conclusion actually
reamined a mystery to the Charlottetown writer
until almost the very last page.
"I had in mind exactly who I thought the
killer would be, but as I continued writing, I
thought that's just not going to work. I can't do
that," says Bingley, who has a bachelor of
arts and a degree in early childhood education.
"Actually, in about the last 10 pages I
had picked somebody and I had this person confess
and everything. Then I thought, 'You know what,
I'm not ready to finish the book.' So that's when
I came to the conclusion, 'Lets have another
twist here - take it a couple of chapters
farhter.'
"And then I had to go back through the
book and make sure this worked."
After years of mystery movies, rapt viewings
of television series like Matlock and Murder She
Wrote and devouring novels by the suspenseful
likes of Mary Higgins Clark and Sydney Sheldon,
formulating her own complicated plot lines seemed
to come naturally.
However, the research end of it can be a
mind-boggling process of laying out the
groundwork to make sure the story works.
"This particular book is set in New York
City, so I had to go on the Internet, find New
York, find where I was going to have it placed,
download some maps and print them off. Then I had
to go and find out what was on this particular
street, whether it was a diner or a restaurant,
townhouses here or there. I'd have to have that
all marked."
Even settings such as the main character's
house in which the murder occurred had to be
meticulously researched and designed in her mind
so that she would be able to consistently
describe it to readers and they could imagine it
to life.
"I had to write down the furniture in
each room, what colour the couch was, if it was
hardwood floor or carpet," says Bingley.
"So I was surrounded by all these pieces
of paper. I also had a notebook that I kept and
every time I said something about somebody, I'd
write it down so that I could go back and double
check. I couldn't say this guy was married and is
35 and at the end he's 42 and he's a widower. So
that really helped me to be organized."
Organization is the name of the at-home game
when it comes to balancing motherhood and writing
time. Some days, her Charlottetown household,
which also includes husband Joey Bingley, is
bursting at the seams with the younger
generation, especially since she also watches
children during the weekdays.
"It's a lot of late nights because I
never write during the day ... The book I'm
writing now, I had my mother kind of track it
with me. She was teasing that I must have been up
late because I had the main character married to
three or four different people. I'd changed
peoples names," Bingley says, smiling.
"That's me sitting there at 2 o'clock in
the morning, typing away. So you really need
people to check up on you."
Two other mystery novels she has written over
the years are now in the to-be-published process,
but not in the normal softcover novel sense. One
is being considered by an e-book company in the
United States which allows its readers to
download a book's contents from the Internet.
The other, tentatively titled One Eye in the
Darkness, is being released in CD-book form by a
Texas company which is also read on a computer.
It's due out in March.
"The first one I swore I didn't care
anything about the money or anything like that, I
just didn't want to have to pay for it. I wanted
it to be that somebody thought it was good and
was willing to publish it. Now I'm working harder
trying to get with a company that people
recognize."
Recognition for The Night She Came Home has
also come in positive review form.
As one reviewer, Darlene Howatt from Escape to
Romance adroitly put it: "If ever a book was
written that screams movie of the week this book
would get my vote ..."
As for Bingley's son James, he has his own
words of novel summation.
"When people ask him, 'What is your
mommy's book about?' He rolls his eyes and says,
'She loves Murder She Wrote and Matlock, so you
can be pretty much guaranteed somebody died in
it,' "Bingley says with delighted laughter.
"That pretty much sums it up right there.
Leave it to a nine-year-old to just sum it up
like that."
The Night She Came Home is available at Indigo
and the Bookmark in Charlottetown. Online it ca
be found at www.chapters.com,
www.amazon.com,
www.barnesandnoble.com,
www.walmart.com
and www.publishamerica.com.
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