41 pages • 1 hour read
Harlan CobenA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
Suspense, a combination of anticipation and anxiety, is achieved when a reader cares enough about characters to want them to succeed, while their obstacles are great enough to threaten this success. The reader continues reading in order to relieve the anxiety provoked by obstacles. The suspense thriller differs from other subgenres in that it maintains the interest of the reader strictly through emotional investment in the protagonist.
Subgenres like the legal thriller sustain reader interest through legal maneuverings. In these stories, the minutiae of the law are the primary obstacle, and the reader follows twists and turns alongside the protagonist. The action thriller sustains reader interest through physical threats to the protagonist. There is often a time limit in addition to an antagonist who directly opposes the protagonist. The action thriller frequently employs a “MacGuffin”—a desired object that the protagonist must find or protect. The stakes are often raised by making many lives dependent on the protagonist’s success. Like the suspense thriller, the psychological thriller sustains reader interest through emotion. The movement of the story is mental more than physical, employing mood and tone to create a sense of anxiety. The world of the story is written as unpredictable and unreliable, with the gradual reveal of information relieving this tension.
I Will Find You is a suspense thriller, its title inspiring anticipation: The reader is meant to ask who, how, and why before starting. Again, a suspense thriller relies on the reader’s emotional investment in the wellbeing of the protagonist: David is wrongly convicted and in constant physical peril, but the story further engages the reader’s emotions by placing David’s son, a child, in unknown peril. The reader is meant to rage at the injustice of their situation, and suspense is maintained by giving David a time limit through police pursuit. The fallibility of the law, a human and thus flawed system, is a source of anxiety—even without corruption like Nicky’s influence or the Paynes’ wealth.
By Harlan Coben
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