Did you base any
characters in your books on friends or family?
To all my
friends and family – the answer to this question is…if I did, I only did it for
the nice characters!
To everyone
else reading this…I have to admit, yes, I did. However, in the spirit of
fairness, before I lay bare any secrets about other people, I’ll do it to
myself.
Me, myself,
and even I, are very much the basis for Cait Morgan: she’s facing fifty (I was
52 when the first book was published, just fifty-and-a-half when I wrote it); she's a
short, overindulgent Welsh Canadian foodie who teaches at a university in
British Columbia (this was me when I began writing the series, though I have
since left that day job); she’s quite bossy, judgmental and self-centered
(sadly me); she has a difficult past when it comes to men (definitely me)
including a dead
ex-boyfriend (unfortunately me – though I wasn’t arrested on
suspicion of his murder, as Cait was); she finds herself with a chance of
happiness she’d never expected and marriage to a wonderful man who balances her
life in ways she never knew it needed (happily me).
Cait and I
are from the same part of Swansea, went to the same school (Llwyn y bryn), attended the same
university from which we both graduated in psychology, then we even took the
same job – working in a marketing communications agency on a variety of
advertising, PR and media accounts. At that point our career paths went off in different
directions: I stayed in the world of marketing communications setting up my own
business (at the idiotically tender age of 28) which I eventually grew to be
the largest of its type in Europe. I sold it and “retired” at 40, only then
entering the world of academe as an adjunct professor of marketing on the MBA
course at the University of British Columbia and then at Simon Fraser
University. Cait left the world of marketing communications in her early
twenties – irritated by the folks she worked with – and took her Masters’
degree at Cambridge. She left the UK for Canada to escape the tabloids (I
didn’t have to do this, thank goodness) and wound up at the University of
Vancouver (a mash-up of UBC and SFU…because I can’t afford any lawsuits!). We
both belong to Mensa, enjoy the company of Labradors and will always try
something new to eat or drink, even if it’s a nose-wrinkling experience.
Neither of us enjoys the idea of exercise, let alone doing it, and I like the
fact she solves whodunits with her brain, not using any sort of a weapon (okay,
maybe she’s resorted to bonking someone on the head with a champagne bottle,
but that’s about it).
Having
exposed myself – what about anyone else? Cait has a sister, so do I. Cait’s
sister is Sian, and she has some elements of my own sister in her: a love for, and
deep understanding of, opera and classical music; a particular enjoyment of the
voice of Jonas Kaufmann; an enviable ability to knit; Sian lives in Perth,
Australia – my sister did so for years. That said, my sister isn’t married with
children, so I gave Sian some “additions” my sister doesn’t have.
Me with "half of Annie Parker" |
In the WISE
Enquiries Agency Mysteries I have a few people in mind when I’m writing. Annie
Parker is a mixture of two good friends: the real Londoner Annie has been my
very good friend for more than twenty years and brings the clumsy elements of
the character (even she’ll admit this is true), while Eustelle (of St Lucian
heritage, with a love of hot sauce and an acrimonious relationship with her
backside) was my next door neighbor in London for almost two decades – I’ve
pinched her name for Annie Parker’s mother. Carol Hill is also a synthesis of
two people I know well: Carol, who’s not Welsh but is lovely and wonderfully
bright when it comes to anything to do with numbers, and Chris with whom I
shared a flat at university, who came from a Welsh farm and was the gentlest
person you could wish to meet, with a warm, ready smile and always ready lend a
helping hand. Mavis MacDonald is a mix of another of my university room-mates,
Jennifer, who was a sharp, intense Scot with a deeply-held belief that a life
lived in the service of justice was the best way to be, and Rose, who was the
lady who cleaned the office I had at UBC – she was doing it so she and the
family could enjoy a couple of months in a condo in Maui every year…her
reputation for not taking any nonsense from anyone (whatever their title) was
well-earned. Christine Wilson-Smythe is based upon three people…all of whom
will remain nameless, but with whom I used to spend a fair amount of “social
time” in London during the ‘eighties and
‘nineties. It was the heyday of the Sloane Rangers, let’s just leave it at
that.
The favorite hot sauce of "the other half of Annie Parker" |
I hope no
one comes after me with a knife for this! Honestly, even when I find myself
using elements of someone I know for a character – be it a quirk of their movement
or a phrase they use often (sometimes unwittingly) – I do it with love. If I
didn’t enjoy spending time with my characters I’d never visit them again. I will
also admit that the characteristics of many more friends and family members probably
also seep into my writing – unbidden and often unnoticed by even this author
herself.
5 comments:
Great to hear the makeup of some of your characters and how parts of them overlap with people you know in real life. (I've only drawn from two real life characters, and both were cats.) An entertaining take on an interesting past.
I recognised the Llwyn-y-Bryn badge immediately! As worn on the bottle green blazer in the 70's :)
Glad you enjoyed it Allan (I can;t seem to reply directly to your comment!) I will also admit that Cait and Bud's dog Marty might have a little in common with my two chocolate Labradors! :-)
Thanks you, Anonymous - ah yes, those blazers. I didn't have one, personally...I was one of the navy blue cardigan mob! :-)
Cait Morgan is on my list - especially now that I have this angle on who she is!
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