I recently read a mystery that had me completely riveted.  I wasn’t able to put it down for three days, and I was bummed when I finished.  Fortunately, a sequel is coming.

The title: “A Killing in the Hills” by Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist, Julia Keller.  The prose is distinctive and original, the characters intense yet believable, and the story is artfully compelling.  But when I analyze why I am so enjoying this book, I have to say, it’s the location.  It takes place in a small, poverty-ridden town in West Virginia.  Keller paints a grim and sorrowful image of a backwards country town thrown into chaos by a horrifying triple murder.

dark rainy night The idea made me think of other books in which the location kept me turning the page.  Peter May’s “The Black House” takes place on the Isle of Lewis in Scotland’s Outer Hebrides.  A forbidding and dark, cold place and perfect for murder.  Then there are TV series like “The Killing.”  The Killing takes place in Seattle, but somehow the filmmakers managed to film only on days when it was raining — pouring buckets, actually.  Bleh.

I guess I have a penchant for dark, cold, wet, poverty-stricken and forbidding places.  It seems like crime would be rampant.  But crime is pretty darn rampant in Las Vegas and Los Angeles and they’re not exactly dark and cold locations.

I also like big city grit.  New York, LA, Chicago but there’s something about small, isolated towns that calls to me.  To prove that location is an important factor for me, I’ve tried three of Louise Penny’s books now and really haven’t been thrilled.  But I keep trying because they’re set in Québec and I’m fascinated by the area.

I’ve enjoyed the Amish series by Linda Castillo, which takes place in a small town, Painters Mill, in Ohio.  Love the backdrop.  And Stieg Larsson’s  “The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo” Trilogy.  I guess I love cold and snow as well as dark, dirty and cold.

snowy placesObviously, my feelings about location feed into my own writing.  First book, the poverty-stricken tenements of the Lower East Side in NYC, second, the Civil War battlegrounds with its dead and dying, and third, Nazi Germany and France during the occupation.  Can’t get much grimmer than that.

How about you?  Does location fit prominently in your choice of where to set your stories?  Do you pick places that are familiar, or those that are foreign and exotic, so you have to learn about them?  A good trick for getting a travel write-off.  How do you select the books you read?  Does location play a role?  Think about it.

Now, lest you think I live in one of these cold, dark, grim places . . .  you’d be wrong.  I don’t want to live there.  I just want to read about them.  Jeez, in San Diego, if the sun isn’t out 350 days, I’m depressed.