This week's prompt: Describe the perfect writing retreat, real or imagined
I have a folder full of links to writing retreats saved on my computer. When I'm feeling low, bored, depressed, or have itchy feet, I open it up, and go to each link, reading about the venue, the writers in residence, and any blogs that I can find which describe the experience of being at the retreat. Photographs are a bonus. It always lifts my spirits.
I did spend three months at one absolutely wonderful fellowship in Berlin in 2005 - well before I wrote my first non-fiction book, but I credit my time there as being instrumental in getting me to take the very first step onto a long road that led to my writing my books on urban ecology and my fiction books on detection in 1920s Bangalore.
From March to May 2005, I was a Guest of the Rektor at the Wissenschaftskolleg zu Berlin - the Berlin Institute of Advanced Studies. I lived in a lovely, cozy apartment with a work office just a few feet from the main building. The rules were straightforward - on Mondays, Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Fridays, Fellows had to eat lunch together in the main dining hall - on Thursdays, it was dinner. We had a gourmet chef to cook meals, language classes to help us practice Deustch, and I made some very good friends from multiple continents. But most of all, I spent time alone in my apartment, and I read.
I went to Berlin with the idea of working on a book on reforestation - a rather technical book. But every evening, at 6 pm, I took the bus from my apartment down the Kurfürstendamm, a spectacular boulevard that stretches across 3.5 km of Berlin, and is lined with gorgeous plane trees, exclusive boutique stores, and 'happening' coffee shops, disembarking at the very end. Then I took a long walk back to my apartment, 3.5 miles away - stopping for at a bakery for coffee and kuchen. Looking at the people, the shops, the trees, the nearby parks and lakes, and observing the way in which residents from East and West Berlin connected with nature around them - and how very different it was from Bangalore, San Diego, and Bloomington Indiana, cities I also knew well - sparked questions about how people in cities to live with, and experience nature - and what that means for the future of the world.
A couple of years later, I moved back to Bangalore, and became involved with movements to save trees and restore lakes. That's when I started to work on urban ecology. Looking back though, the seeds of my interest in the city as a focal point of study began on those long, solitary walks along the Kudamm. That's what led to my writing Nature in the City in 2016; and the process of conducting archival research for Nature in the City in turn sparked the idea for writing a mystery series set in historical Bangalore, beginning with The Bangalore Detectives Club, published in 2021.
From 2005 to 2021, my books were inspired by ideas gathered from the embers of the city, spiced with the sights, sounds and fragrances of tree blossom and bird song, simmered in the slow cooker of time. And I think my books are the better for it.
Wiko was the perfect place, and Berlin, the perfect city for a retreat. And now that it's been 20 years, I need to look through that folder again - and find another retreat, to incubate ideas for my next series!