Showing posts with label armchair travel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label armchair travel. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 1, 2019

Wish you were here? by Cathy Ace


CRAFT: When it comes to creating a sense of place in your work, how do you do it? (Research and real places? Invention and fictional ones?) What’s worked for you, and what hasn’t?



I am one of those writers for whom the tales I tell couldn’t possibly happen anywhere other than where they do. They are rooted in place, and – for me – place is often where a story starts, and it’s certainly where it develops and grows. So it’s critical to me.



I’m also one of those writers who will not set a story in a place I’ve known only fleetingly. Because the location is so important to me I’ve only ever set books in places where I have lived, or worked over a considerable time. I know some authors have set books in places they have never visited, or where they’ve had a quick look around over a few days/weeks on holiday (or even on a specific research trip), but I just cannot do that. Even all the far-flung places where Cait Morgan has solved her puzzling closed-circle cases are places I’ve lived or worked. And I've eaten and drunk everything she's eaten and drunk too. All in the cause of research, of course! 
Caviar tasting at the Eiffel Tower Restaurant in Vegas - for research purposes, for The Corpse with the Platinum Hair
It probably means I have a hopeless imagination – but I need to know how a place feels, rather than just how it looks – and I especially like to know how a place smells. Also, you cannot beat knowing a place as a way to get to know its real secrets.



So, since I clearly tend to the “realistic vs fantasy” how do I research the places I use as settings? Well, given that I already know them, my “research” is more about updating my knowledge, or disguising the specifics. For example, if nothing dreadful is going to happen in it I don’t mind using the real name of a restaurant/bar/pub, and the name of the real street it’s on. If it's the scene for a murder, I'll change a great deal about it.

Now, I might have forgotten those specifics (I have a terrible memory for names!) so I find google maps useful for that aspect. The lovely restaurant where they’d cook a whole suckling pig to order in a little back-street in Nice is a case in point – I knew I wanted characters to eat there (in The Corpse with the Silver Tongue), and I know its all-enveloping fragrance of roasting meats and garlic, as well as the weaponized tablecloths that are always stiff with starch, well enough to use them. I could even take you there from my apartment above Mori’s Bar on Rue de France with my eyes closed…but what the heck was it called? And what’s the street name? A few minutes on google earth and I can find it – magic! Then I can decide if I want to use it as it is, or merely as a point of inspiration.



This is the process I have used in all my books. Most recently I set The Wrong Boy in the real clifftop Welsh village of Rhossili – but I changed enough to protect the innocent! As for Budapest (in The Corpse with the Ruby Lips), I used the real city, which I adore. I worked there, off and on, over about five years, and managed to see a lot of the surrounding area, as well as staying at the stunning Gellert Hotel (on occasion).
 
When it came to the Pacific coast of Mexico (in The Corpse with the Emerald Thumb) I used a real location (the rugged coastline between Puerto Vallarta and Bucerias) but a totally fictitious ex-pat development…which I needed to invent because it was inhabited by a particularly suspicious group, and I didn’t want anyone to believe it might be real (though the locals’ antipathy to vacation developments and their concerns about the effect on the local water supply were real enough). 
Posing in the garden of our apartment in Bucerias LOL!


This is a part of the world I’ve visited on many occasions, and I was fortunate enough to be able to spend time with local police PR people (yes, they have them!) who helped me with the procedural elements necessary for a book where the arrest on suspicion of murder of one of my protagonists was a main storyline.



For me, it’s the little details that make the description of place “realistic”: the nature of the light; the way it smells; is it dusty/dank/muggy/stinky/noisy/quiet; how does it feel at certain times of day/night/year; when and how the sun rises and sets; what the rain sounds like there. I might sound utterly pathetic, but I don’t think I could do a good job of representing place in my work if I didn’t know all this…even if not all of it gets into the final version. 

And that's another point -  I really do believe less is more when it comes to creating a sense of place in a reader’s mind. Too much detail and it becomes a bore – but the right details…the ones that would impact the character/s experiencing it…these are what count.



When I was a mere slip of a thing - back in 1995!
And, in case you’re wondering, I based Henry Deveraux Twyst, eighteenth Duke of Chellingworth (in the WISE Enquiries Agency books) on an ex-boyfriend of mine (I met him in Egypt...he took the photo of me here at the temple of Queen Hatshepsut!), so I know exactly what an ancient pile that’s been in the family for many, many generations feels and smells like! 

If you fancy a bit of armchair travel, why not check out my books? You really can travel the world with me and my characters: just click here.





  


Wednesday, May 3, 2017

Location, Location, Location….by Cathy Ace



So it’s time to turn to the question of place and setting in writing…which is great! For me, the setting is critical. It shapes the entire tale. It is, for me, usually one of my critical starting points.

Niçoise book, Niçoise tablecoth! 
For those of you familiar with my Cait Morgan Mysteries, you’ll know each one is set in a different country, and I honestly believe the story I tell in each book couldn’t happen the way it does anywhere else in the world. Each book is completely immersed in, and in many cases springs from, the history, art, architecture, culture, people, food and drink of its setting. The critical framing elements of each story are specifically tied to the location. 

This has been the case since the first in the series, THE CORPSE WITH THE SILVER TONGUE is set in Nice, in the South of France. The mixture of incomers (wealthy non-French inhabitants of a swank apartment block that has a murky past as Gestapo HQ), with those whose entire lives have been spent in the area (a man whose tending of the grounds and gardens has an unexpected reason, and a woman who did what she had to do to survive the war years) leads to tensions and, yes, murder. The nearby Roman ruins play their role, too, as does the fact that the city is one the border between France and Italy. It’s all VERY Niçoise…and this tale could only take place here. It’s the same for the entire series – the last book, The Corpse with the Ruby Lips, being set in Budapest, where a bloody history and an engrained need for secrecy within a population too used to being overseen, and overheard, by authoritarian dictatorships leads to a web of deceit that has tragic consequences…so Hungarian. 

I have always traveled extensively, and every Cait book is set in a city I know well – having either lived or worked there – so that I can smell the place and hear its sounds as I write; even now I’m sitting here with hints of garlic and paprika haunting me as I write about Nice and Budapest, while accordions and zithers battle for my inner aural attention. It’s great fun to “be” in a place when I write – and I hope the feeling of the setting for my work comes off the page for my readers. 

Travels with Cait are great fun, and I have tried to avoid “Cabot Cove Syndrome” (you know, where Jessica Fletcher’s beloved seaside township is blighted with a body-count higher than anywhere else in the world!) by having Cait move from place to place. 

For my other series, I have thrown those worries to the winds, and have set all the WISE Enquiries Agency Mysteries in one small locale – Chellingworth Hall and the nearby village of Anwen-by-Wye in the rolling countryside of Powys, Wales. Why did I take such a chance? Well, a couple of reasons: first of all, because these are stories about professional private investigators, there might not always be a corpse involved and, secondly, I wanted to place a series in Wales because I think my homeland deserves showcasing. Think about it – I expect you have a pretty good visual image of what Ireland, Scotland and England are like, but what about Wales? There really aren’t too many books set there, and I wanted to rectify that. 

I’ve invented Chellingworth Hall, the entire Chellingworth Estate and even the village of Anwen-by-Wye that sits upon the land owned by the Twyst family – but I have been able to use the very real local towns and cities of Hay-on-Wye, Builth Wells, Brecon, Swansea, Cardiff and other areas like the Gower Peninsular (all of which are places I know well, having only left the UK after I turned forty) as well. I want to take readers to haunts I love in my bones, and have them at least see them “fictionally” in my work. Maybe some readers will want to, and be able to, visit them in reality, and, for others, I hope that visiting in the pages of my work proves satisfying, and illuminating. 

Happy reading, and happy armchair travels! 

Cathy Ace is the Bony Blithe Award-winning author of The Cait Morgan Mysteries (#8 The Corpse with the Ruby Lips was released on November 1st) and The WISE Enquiries Agency Mysteries (#3, The Case of the Curious Cook, was released in hardcover in the UK on November 30th and in the USA & Canada on March 1st).  You can find out more about Cathy, her work and her characters at her website, where you can also sign up for her newsletter with news, updates and special offers: http://cathyace.com/