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Friday, May 1, 2026

WHAT IS YOUR CHARACTER IS WRONG


One of the hardest things to do as a suspense writer isn’t creating a clever twist or a chilling villain. It’s allowing your main character to fail.

Not just stumble. Not just hesitate. Fail


As writers, we spend so much time building competent, capable protagonists – especially in suspense. Detectives, profilers, investigators – these are people who are supposed to notice what others miss. Readers trust them. We trust them. So, when they make a mistake, when they follow the wrong lead, trust the wrong person, or come to the wrong conclusion, it can feel uncomfortable. Even risky.

But here’s the truth: those mistakes are often where the story comes alive. A character who gets everything right may be impressive, but a character who gets something wrong becomes human. And more than that, it raises the stakes.

In suspense, being wrong isn’t just embarrassing. It can be dangerous. It can cost time. It can cost trust. And sometimes, it can cost lives. That kind of weight changes everything in the story. It deepens the emotional impact of the novel. It forces your characters to question themselves. And it gives readers something powerful to connect with, because we all know what it feels like to realize we were wrong about something that mattered.

In the second book of my new series, “The Holmes and Watson Files,” my protagonist comes face-to-face with that reality. What he believed was settled isn’t settled at all. A man who spent years in prison – because of a case Detective Nate Holmes helped build – may be innocent. As Nate begins to see the truth, the pressure of his possible mistake presses in from every side. He learns that sometimes the past doesn’t stay buried – and sometimes it turns out we buried the wrong truth.

For an author, the key, of course, is balance. The mistake has to make sense. It has to come from who the character is, their past experiences, their biases, their fears. When that happens, it doesn’t weaken the story. It strengthens it. It also opens the door for one of the most satisfying elements in suspense: redemption.

When a character recognizes their mistake and chooses to face it – to correct it, learn from it, and keep going despite the cost – that’s when readers become engaged with your story. That’s when it stops being just about solving a mystery and becomes about something deeper.

So, the next time you’re tempted to let your character be the smartest person in the room, consider this:

What if they’re not?

What if they’re wrong?

You might just find that’s where your story truly begins.


Leave a comment, along with your contact information, and you could win a copy of either SHATTERED SANCTUARY or DARK DESIGN.









64 comments:

  1. So true! Even Hercule Poirot made a mistake early in his career. Perfection is unrelatable - except in our Savior. Have a great weekend. Becca12901 at yahoo

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    1. Great comment. Yes, Hercule did make a mistake. (And I thought he was perfect! LOL!) Hope you have a wonderful weekend too.

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  2. I think it makes the characters more relatable and realistic if they make mistakes. We all make mistakes

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    1. Yes, although sometimes it's hard to admit to them. I agree about making the characters more relatable. Hard to understand perfect characters. Thanks, Nance.

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  3. Oh... I loved this. Yes! I prefer a human "hero" to a "perfect" unrelatable robot who never makes a mistake. Jesus taught us in parables because we identify with those characters. I will definitely get this new series (pre-order this one), and sharing this post. 🥰

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  4. For me, it depends on the type of mistake/failure. The one you mentioned - making a mistake in thinking - is something that doesn't bother me as a reader. In fact, it makes it more exciting usually, as you mentioned.

    More bothersome to me are when the protagonist makes a moral mistake. Such as John Smith having adultery in Stephen King's "The Dead Zone," or James Bond killing in what seems to be cold blood in several of the movies. My state of disturbment (is that a word?) is increased when that moral failure is presented as not being a moral failure.

    And then, there's where you can say the character is making obvious mistakes and by pure dumb luck stumbles onto the true killer. I read a two part series where in both books I figured out who the killer is no later than halfway through the story because there's one suspect who has motive and opportunity, but the detective dismisses that they're the killer (both times, that character learns the truth when her policeman brother shows up to arrest the villain. No, I don't care for that kind of mistake.

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    1. I almost forgot contact notification - jandbreynolds@gmail.com

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  5. In a way, seeing the protagonist make a mistake and ‘forgiving’ them as a reader, helps me to cut myself some slack when I too come to the wrong conclusions or say the wrong thing or make the wrong choice. Stephanie.Rodda@yahoo.com

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    1. Exactly! That's what it should do. Great insight. Thanks!

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  6. Thank you for this post your books sound amazing Sarahbaby601973@gmail.com

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  7. We all make mistakes and it is an important part of growth as a person and in your faith, so it makes sense to have it be part of a story. cherierj(at)yahoo(dot)com

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  8. interesting post
    bn100candg at hotmail dot com

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  9. Both look very exciting

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  10. I also enjoy human characters who make mistakes! It definitely makes the story and characters more relatable!

    Heather Mitchell crhbmitchellfam@duck.com

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    1. I completely agree. Thanks for your comment.

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  11. I love when characters in a book follow the wrong "lead". It makes them seem more human. deborahdumm(AT)yahoo(DOT)com

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  12. I love when characters are more human you can relate to them. I love your books. jenningsask@verizon.net

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  13. My favorite stories are ones that include second chances with forgiveness and redemption, because that is what God gives us through Jesus Christ. frazierhlhs@yahoo.com

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  14. Thank you so much for the giveaway! I agree with all the points you made. I find a book kind of boring if the characters are perfect with no flaws, etc. And, for a character to be relatable, they have to have flaws as that's a part of being human.

    One of the things I love reading about is when the character(s) overcome difficulties caused by their flaw(s) and learn from them. Our loving Lord included several examples of this in His precious word including King David, Peter and several others who were flawed and sinned, faced some sort of hardship or conflict due to their sin, repented and overcame it with the Lord's help.

    Reading about these people in the Bible and flawed characters in Christian fiction help me to recognize and understand my flaws thus realizing, even more, my need for my Savior, Lord Jesus.

    Thank youagain for the giveaway! God bless you!
    wileyluvstabby(at)comcast(dot)net

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    1. Beautiful comment. I agree completely. Thank you for posting.

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  15. . Perfect is only for fairytales. I “need” real, flawed, healed heroes…..Carol ..sneakersmom90@yahoo.com

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  16. Mistakes make a character relatable Thank you for the giveaway opportunity alysap at yahoo dot com

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  17. Characters have to have flaws or the book is boring. cheetahthecat1982ATgmailDOTcom

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  18. I think it makes them more relatable. We all make mistakes and nobody is perfect . lindadashhendersonatattdotnet.

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  19. Many times things can go as not planned

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  20. Hear alot of wrongful convictions

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  21. That make so much sense! I love reading a good suspense.

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  22. I think it makes them more relatable. kittygirl15401@yahoo.com

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  23. I really like it when we can relate to the characters, everybody makes mistakes and we always will, and for sure nobody is perfect. Thank you I enjoyed reading your post. Have a great weekend. Alicia Haney. aliciabhaney (at ) sbcglobal ( dot ) net

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  24. The character development is often the most interesting to me, more than the plot.

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    1. I like developing characters. it makes the readers care more about what happens.

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  25. Good stories require character growth. Characters who are static are not realistic.

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  26. Thank you for the reminder that everything that I read may not be true except the Word of God. It is written by human authors. This is true in fiction as well as anything that is read. We all make mistakes in this world due to sin. God bless you. dpruss@prodigy.net

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    1. Thank you for the comment. And God bless you, too!

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  27. I enjoy reading this wonderful piece of writing. In fact, I love reading main character who has some flaws and could make some unwise decisions in a split of second that could cost them dearly. Yes, it's frightening, frustrating and inexcusable; but, we all are human, and human makes mistakes! Such character always adds some charm and essence to the story! cwkuen(at)yahoo(dot)com

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  28. Thanks for a really interesting post.
    dianah7272@gmail.com

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  29. Everyone makes mistakes, it's what makes us human. It also makes the story more real when characters work through their mistakes too.
    msredk@aol.com

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  30. A flawed character is some much more relatable.

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  31. Sarah EvankovichMay 4, 2026 at 2:28 PM

    This makes me think about Rex Stout's Nero Wolfe books. While Wolfe is the smartest person in the room, even he gets stumped sometimes & that's where Archie Goodwin steps in to harass & haranguel him back into problem solving mode. It's also the point where like you said, you see them both as human beings & relatable, able to learn from their mistakes & grow. To me seeing the characters learn, grow & handle that change is the best part of a book & what makes me want to read more about them.

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  32. I can see where the balance is very important. Thank you for the post.
    kykla99ATgmailDOTcom

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