Showing posts with label location. Show all posts
Showing posts with label location. Show all posts

Saturday, May 23, 2015

Location, location: choosing setting for books by Anna Castle





Stories happen somewhere in the world. Characters come from somewhere too. You might have to select a number of locations, all things considered, for your next mystery. You’ll spend a fair amount of time in your main setting, especially if you’re writing a novel. Why not pick a place you like?
This is a corollary to my take on the old adage, “Write what you know.” Better advice, in my view, is to write what you want to know. Follow your curiosity, your whims, and your fantasies. The enthusiasm will fuel your writing. Besides, you might need to visit that location for research. You might as well go some place fun.

Settings help define your genre. Cozies take place in small worlds, even if they’re nestled inside a big city. These will often be appealing locales, places the reader might like to visit. Noir has an edgy urban sensibility, even when the action takes place in darkest Montana. They take their readers into dark alleys and dangerous dens. Traditional private investigators can be found in every corner of the globe and even on board ships at sea.

Sometimes another factor will limit your location options. Francis Bacon was a real person known to have occupied specific places, so my historical series is constrained to London and environs. Alas, I have thus been obliged to spend weeks in that dreary backwater! The characters I invent myself come from Areas of Outstanding Natural Beauty. I’m planning ahead for future books and looking forward to some outstanding rambles.

When I can’t travel, I’m still OK with my UK setting, because the inhabitants of those green and lovely islands have posted pictures of every square inch on the Internet. Try Flickr for setting research. You might not be able to use the photos in your blog, but you can browse them for details for that one great, scene-setting paragraph. I use landscape changes to mark the passage of time, so I bookmark gardening sites and lists of seasonal produce in England sorted by month. Warning: you’ll find more pictures of beauty spots than mean streets in Flickr, although some of its contributors are pretty adventurous.

When I decided to write a cozy series, I went looking for my own small world. Since I enjoy academic mysteries, I considered my alma mater, the University of Texas at Austin. Unfortunately, UT has the population of a mid-sized city and its own police force; not exactly cozy. The social sub-cultures I inhabit didn’t ring bells for me, so I decided to follow in Agatha Christie’s far-reaching footsteps and invent my own small town. Now, where to put it?

Well, I like to hike. I love flowers and the beauties of the natural world. Lucky for me, I live on the eastern edge of the Texas Hill Country, with its charming old towns and spectacular wildflowers. Austin is a boom town, one of the fastest growing cities in America. Growth has its pros and cons... hey, conflict! Just what we need in our mystery novels! I decided to put my small town out at the western edge of the Hill Country, too far for a day trip from the big cities. All my characters have big dreams; now my town does too. Lost Hat wants to put itself on the map as a tourist destination, if only it can figure out an angle.

When you’re location shopping, follow your whimsy. You might start with this list of mysteries by location, although just because it’s been done before doesn’t mean you can’t do it too—and better. Then you can try searching for “Most popular destinations in Iowa” or wherever it is you want to hang out. Search for images of “San Francisco Tenderloin district” or “wine country France” in Flickr or Google images and zoom in on whatever catches your eye.

You could pull out your bucket list and pick a place you’ve been meaning to go. Traveling with a book in your head is enormous fun. But even if you’re only travelling by keyboard on the information superhighway, places that tickle your fancy will inspire you more than the ones that make you yawn.

Anna Castle writes the Francis Bacon mysteries and the Lost Hat, Texas mysteries. She’s earned a series of degrees—BA Classics, MS Computer Science, and Ph.D Linguistics—and has had a corresponding series of careers—waitressing, software engineering, assistant professor, and archivist. Writing fiction combines her lifelong love of stories and learning. Find out more at www.annacastle.com.

When the Internet service provider in a small town in Texas blackmails one client too many, murder follows. Photographer Penelope Trigg has to rattle every skeleton in every closet in Lost Hat to find the  killer and keep herself out of jail.