The Villain Goes on a Journey

by Debbie Burke

As writers, we send our characters on long, convoluted journeys to solve mysteries and create exciting compelling stories.

Today I’m going to tell the story about the journey of a book that traveled from point A to point B to point Q to point G to point X to point D to…you get the idea.

In July, my book The Villain’s Journey-How to Create Villains Readers Love to Hate was published.

My custom is to send print copies by snail mail to people who helped develop my books. They may have contributed research, beta read, or otherwise supported the growth from a teeny-weeny seed of an idea to a finished product. Without their help, my books wouldn’t exist. So I’m grateful and want to say “thank you” in a small way.

Let’s back up to 2022. The teeny-weeny seed for The Villain’s Journey came from a comment made by TKZ regular Marilynn Byerly. In response to a post I’d written about villains, she mentioned the hero’s journey was well known but was there a corresponding book about villains?

That sent me down the rabbit hole.

Amazingly, I only found one book devoted to the villain’s journey and it focused on sci-fi and fantasy.

During a conversation with TKZ emeritus Steve Hooley, he said, “Why don’t you write that book?”

Sounded like a great suggestion since there did appear to be a gap in the crime reference library that I could fill.

I wrote a proposal and sent it to TKZ’s wise guru Jim Bell to see what he thought of the idea. He encouraged me to go for it.

Fast forward to summer 2025. I finished the book. Jim wrote a wonderful blurb for it, as did Christopher Vogler, author of The Writer’s Journey: Mythic Structure for Writers.

These two respected powerhouses gave my book invaluable credibility in the writing craft world. I’m overwhelmed with gratitude to Jim and Chris for their support.

When the print books arrived, of course, I wanted the first two copies to go to Jim and Chris. I inscribed them, packaged them in padded envelopes, and took them to the post office. The clerk double-checked the addresses in the computer, printed out labels with bar codes, and off they went. Easy-peasy.

More than a month later, the post office returned Jim’s copy to me. A label said: “Return to Sender, address unknown, no such number, no such zone—” Oh, wait, that was Elvis.

This label claimed insufficient address, unable to forward, return to sender. Someone had written in red marker “Wrong address” above the printed post office label.

I double-checked the mailing address with Jim. Yup, I’d used the correct one and the post office label was indeed correct.

So why did the book come back to me?

I typed the tracking number into the search box for usps.com. The shipping history showed a long and winding road.

On August 13, the book began its journey from Kalispell, MT where I mailed it. It then travelled to distribution centers in Missoula, MT, Spokane, WA, Los Angeles, Santa Clarita, and landed at Jim’s neighborhood post office on August 18. So far so good.

Then the journey started twisting.

On August 18, the book was delivered to an address with a notation in the tracking history “delivered, front door/porch.”

On August 27, the next notation said, “insufficient address” followed by a notation “return to sender processed.”

Huh?

It then traveled back to the Santa Clarita distribution center and arrived August 29 in Aurora, CO. The same day, it was sent on to the Billings distribution center.

Okay, Billings is in Montana.

Two days later, it apparently took the wrong freeway off ramp, headed south, and arrived at the Phoenix, AZ distribution center.

Uh, Phoenix is not in Montana.

It sat in Phoenix for two days then was sent back to Aurora, CO distribution center. It sat there for two more days.

Then it went to Billings again.

Okay, at least it’s now back in the right state.

Then it took another wrong freeway exit. Whoops.

A day later, it shows up at the Denver, CO distribution center.

Three days later, it’s at the Missoula, MT distribution center. Then it’s sent 120 miles north to Kalispell and arrives there to be processed.

Whoops, U-turn back to Missoula for another day.

Another U-turn from Missoula back to Kalispell.

Finally, more than a month after the book began its journey, it was returned to me in Kalispell as “undeliverable, insufficient address.”

This poor villain had been on a journey that was a cross between Where’s Waldo and Mr. Toad’s Wild Ride.

 

Cyril Thomas, CC BY-SA 3.0 <http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/>, via Wikimedia Common

Putting on my Sherlock Holmes’ deerstalker hat, I’m guessing a mail carrier delivered the package to someone else’s house in Jim’s neighborhood. That resident probably wrote “wrong address” on it. If the carrier had rechecked the address, they should have realized, “Oh, shoot, that’s the house down the street” and delivered it. Instead, they dumped the package into the system.

This Villain’s Journey should have been 1350 miles. Instead, it turned into an epic road trip of 7700 miles.

I wish the lost, wandering package qualified for frequent flyer miles—I’d have enough miles for a plane ticket from Montana to California to personally deliver Jim’s book. After all the years of following TKZ, I would have finally enjoyed the pleasure of meeting Jim in person.

The villain is now on its second journey. I hope by the time this post goes live, Jim will have received his book.

In our stories, we send our characters on long, convoluted journeys to solve mysteries. 

The mystery of why the post office sent this book on a 7700-mile journey may never be solved. If only the book could talk…

~~~

TKZers, do you have a story about unexpected detours courtesy of the post office? Please share.

~~~

This blurb makes me very proud:

Debbie Burke has filled a critical gap in writing craft instruction…authors of any genre will benefit by using The Villain’s Journey to take a deeper dive into the antagonist of their story.” – James Scott Bell, International Thriller Writers award winner, author of more than 30 bestselling craft of writing books.

 

If you’d like a print copy of The Villain’s Journey, Amazon and Barnes & Noble have good track records of delivering books without unexpected side trips.

This entry was posted in #amwriting, #writers, #writerslife, Christopher Vogler, Writing by Debbie Burke. Bookmark the permalink.

About Debbie Burke

Debbie writes the Tawny Lindholm series, Montana thrillers infused with psychological suspense. Her books have won the Kindle Scout contest, the Zebulon Award, and were finalists for the Eric Hoffer Book Award and BestThrillers.com. Her articles received journalism awards in international publications. She is a founding member of Authors of the Flathead and helps to plan the annual Flathead River Writers Conference in Kalispell, Montana. Her greatest joy is mentoring young writers. http://www.debbieburkewriter.com

13 thoughts on “The Villain Goes on a Journey

  1. This was a timely post for me. I’m working on my 26th book and I’m 20K words in and have no idea who the killer is or why. I just bought your book in hopes of finding the answers to those questions. Yes I’m a pantser and that’s how my writing brain works, lol.

    • Alec, I’m also a pantser. One epiphany included in the book that is the villain, not the hero, drives the story. Once you nail the villain’s motive and reason, everything else falls into place. I’ll bet your subconscious already knows who the killer is. When you reread you’ll find breadcrumb hints it’s dropped for you

      Thanks for buying Villain’s Journey and I hope it’s helpful! 26 books is amazing!!!

  2. A few years ago, someone from the town I live in mailed me a check the day after Thanksgiving. It arrived on Valentine’s Day. I wish now I’d tracked it. lol
    BTW, I’m loving The Villain’s Journey!

  3. The book arrived safe and sound a couple of days ago! Thanks, Debbie.

    We’ve had a few letters and packages delivered to our home over the years. I always walk them over to the house they belong to. How hard is that?

  4. Some of my mail has taken round-about journeys, but none were ever that wild. Glad to see from Jim’s comment that he finally got the book.

    Sometimes I wonder about the people who work at the post office. Thank goodness I’ve chatted with my rural postal carrier many times and she does everything she can to get my mail to me. She even gave me her phone number. That’s Montana for you.

  5. So confusing! I mailed a package from West Des Moines to my daughter in Woodbridge, Virginia. Two days later, it was at the distribution center a few miles from her house. She didn’t get it. I checked the tracking number, and saw it had been sent to a distribution center in North Carolina. Then it went to another dc in NC, then, after ten days, it popped back to her dc. She didn’t get it. Back to tracking, I found it had been sent to a dc in Maryland. From there, it went back to NC. It went to Arlington, close, but no banana, and then back to NC. After 37 days, she finally got it. The address was correct. The package was beat up, but miraculously, the contents were okay.

    We get mail that isn’t ours on a regular basis. We, too, take it to the correct address. Our mail carrier is usually deep in a conversation on his phone, and probably doesn’t notice what he puts in the mailboxes. Fortunately, we do all of our financial transactions online, but we have gotten other people’s credit card statements, bank things, and medical things. It’s too bad a job gets in the way of the employee’s social life.

  6. Another tail from life in the Pizza. Had a regular customer who lived on the corner of two streets. He ordered every day quite literally seven pieces of wheat. His front door and mailbox faced street a but his address was really on street B. When we mailed them coupons half of them would come back as no such address so we would just tape them to the box the next time you ordered.

    • Alan, I can kinda see how corner houses are confusing with the address on one street but the door and mailbox on the other street. But you’d think the carrier would get used to watching for that.

      Nice of you to tape coupons on the pizza box cuz for sure that will be delivered to the right place.

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