When readers think of suspense, they often imagine dark city streets, crowded airports, or remote locations far from civilization.
But some of the most suspenseful
stories happen in the last place anyone expects: a small town.
As a suspense author, I’ve always
been drawn to small-town settings. There’s something uniquely unsettling about
danger arriving in a place that feels safe.
Small towns are built on
familiarity.
People know one another. They attend
the same churches, shop at the same stores, and share generations of history.
Neighbors wave from their front porches. Children grow up together. Families
become woven into the fabric of the community.
On the surface, that sense of
connection creates comfort.
For a suspense writer, however, it
creates opportunity.
Because when everyone knows
everyone, secrets become much harder to hide—and much more dangerous when they
come to light.
In a small town, a crime doesn't
affect strangers. It affects friends. Family members. Neighbors.
The local sheriff may be
investigating someone he grew up with. The witness might be a lifelong friend.
The victim may be someone the entire town loved.
Suddenly, every clue carries
emotional weight.
That's what makes small-town
suspense so compelling.
The setting raises the stakes beyond
solving a crime. The investigation threatens relationships, reputations, and
sometimes the very identity of the community itself.
Another advantage of a small-town
setting is history.
Every town has stories.
Some are passed down through
generations. Some are whispered about behind closed doors. Some are buried so
deeply that people hope they never resurface.
As writers, we can use that history
to create layers of mystery.
Perhaps a decades-old disappearance
still haunts the community. Maybe an unsolved murder continues to cast a shadow
over the town square. Or perhaps a family has spent years protecting a secret
that could destroy everything if revealed.
The past becomes a character of its
own.
And in suspense, the past rarely
stays buried.
Small towns also provide natural
settings that heighten tension.
A lonely mountain road during a
snowstorm.
A forgotten church at the edge of
town.
An abandoned farmhouse hidden among
rolling fields.
A forest trail where no one will
hear a cry for help.
These locations create atmosphere
while reminding readers that danger can exist even in the most beautiful
places.
Perhaps most importantly, small
towns allow readers to become emotionally invested in the community itself.
Readers don't just care about the
hero and heroine. They care about the people around them. The diner owner. The
pastor. The elderly neighbor who knows more than she's saying. The deputy
trying to protect his hometown.
When danger threatens the town,
readers feel that threat personally because they've come to know the community.
That's one reason I continue
returning to small-town settings in my own books.
Whether the story takes place in
Amish country, a mountain community, a coastal village, or a remote town tucked
away from the rest of the world, the setting offers more than scenery.
It creates relationships. History.
Secrets.
And for a suspense writer, secrets
are where the story begins.
One example is my novel Tangled
Past, set on Hope Island, a small coastal community where a decades-old
murder still casts a shadow over the town. Twenty-five years after Police Chief
Raymond Dutton was murdered, his son, Asa, returns home searching for answers.
His only lead is Maya Callahan, the young witness found at the scene as a child,
who has no memory of what happened that night. As long-buried secrets begin to
surface, Asa and Maya discover that someone is willing to kill to keep the
truth hidden. Hope Island may be picturesque, but like many small communities,
its greatest danger lies not in what everyone knows, but in what someone has
spent decades trying to conceal.
For a chance to win an e-book copy
of Tangled Past, tell me, what makes a small-town setting memorable to
you as a reader? Please be sure to include your email in your comment.
Mary Alford is a New York Times and USA TODAY
bestselling author who loves giving her readers the unexpected, combining
unforgettable characters with unpredictable plots that result in stories the
reader can’t put down. Her books have garnered several awards and nominations.
Mary lives deep in the heart of Texas with her husband, two cats, and a dog.
Mary is very active online and would love to connect with readers on Facebook,
Instagram, and X.



people
ReplyDeletebn100candg at hotmail dot com
Yes. Absolutely!
DeleteHelpful and caring neighbors in the small community makes it memorable for me. bobbytobey@verizon.net
ReplyDeleteI so agree. There's something special about a small community.
DeleteI love setting a book in a small town--everyone knows everyone else's business. lol
ReplyDeleteA white 1874 farmhouse with gingerbread trim like mine.
ReplyDelete