I know this is probably a common topic. For me, I’m not sure if it’s a “trope” or just totally misinformed writing, but it’s how many authors approach alcoholism. Some examples are Girl on the Train and The House Across the Lake, among HUNDREDS. If anyone else here has struggled with alcoholism, you know it’s not just "i woke up after downing an entire bottle of whiskey but was able to shower, down a cup of coffee, and solve a murder. "

  • quackenfucknuckle@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    Maybe this is more films/tv than books but i’ve def read it too, it’s a trope i pithily call “it wasn’t actually a murder they just had a fight and the victim banged their head on the whatever and the ‘perpetrator’ decided to completely cover it up and thereby made it way more murdery than they were probably legally liable for for no good reason”

    • marveljew@alien.topB
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      1 year ago

      I remember one story where this was actually justified because >!the criminal thought he murdered the person (when the victim actually survived).!<

    • Charlotte_Braun@alien.topB
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      1 year ago

      There is a Ruth Rendell novel, The St. Zita Society, where this happens. But it’s darkly humorous. Two people saw it happen, and they go through all this farce of moving the body, moving it again, lying to the police, lying to people they know…And one of them does point out that they could have just said “There’s been an accident” and then stepped back.