Fellow expat Alison Morton whose debut novel, Inceptio, is out now shares her thoughts on why we read.....
Wandering into
strange territory
Why do we read? Often the answer is to experience how others
acknowledge, deal with and recover from a challenge in their personal and
professional lives. We want to share and perhaps learn from their dreams and
struggles. More than anything we want to share their passion, their excitement,
perhaps their fear, as they discover the kernel of their own humanity. But aren’t
there only seven basic stories? Why then do we read an eighth, ninth or tenth one?
For me, the reason is to explore something different,
whether it’s setting, theme, viewpoint, genre or language. Something may jolt
me, arouse my curiosity, make me smile or even laugh aloud, or push me into
changing a view I thought fixed. Every reader has been handed a book by a
friend, glanced at the back cover and thought ‘This is not for me’ but smiled
politely at the friend and thanked her. And one day, you pick it up and open
it, thinking you’ll read a few pages just to see what motivated your normally sane
friend into buying it. Several hours later, you put it down, numbed, entranced,
exhausted, uplifted, the different world having invaded your head.
So it is with writing. Reaching into the past means not only
researching a period in meticulous detail, but getting inside the heads of the
characters, imagining what they see in their everyday world, what they smell,
eat and touch. If you set your story in a different country, you apply the same
process, but at least you can visit the places the characters would live in,
smell the sea, touch the plants, walk under the hot blue sky, or freeze in a
biting wind.
But if you invent that country, then your task is doubled.
You have to get the geography right. Were you asleep in class when Mrs Turner
did rainfall in Africa or the mountains that stretch across Europe? Now is the
time to catch up on the history of the region around your imagined country. Next, there’s the social, economic and
political development; this sounds dry, but every living person is a product of
their local conditions. Their experience of living in a place and struggle to
make sense of it is expressed through their culture. It’s an easy comparison,
but J K Rowling is said to have filled notebooks with details of Harry Potter’s
world, only a small proportion of which appeared in print.
The key is plausibility. Take a character working in law
enforcement. Readers can accept cops being gentle or tough, enthusiastic,
intellectual or world-weary. Law enforcers come from all genders, classes,
races and ages and stand in different places along the personal morality ruler.
But whether corrupt or clean, they must act like a recognisable form of cop.
They catch criminals, arrest and charge them and operate within a judicial system.
Legal practicalities can differ significantly from those we know, but they must
be consistent with that society while remaining plausible for the reader. But a
flashing blue light, or an oscillating siren on a police car, is a universal
symbol that instantly connects readers back to their own world.
Almost every story hinges upon implausibility – a set-up or
a problem the writer has purposefully created. Readers will engage with it and
follow as long as the writer keeps their trust. One way to do this is to
infuse, but not flood, the story with corroborative detail so that it verifies
and reinforces the original setting the writer has introduced. Even though my book is an alternate history
thriller set in the 21st century, the Roman characters still say things like 'I wouldn't be in your sandals when he finds out.' And there are
honey-coated biscuits (honey was important for the ancient Romans) not
chocolate digestives in the squad room.
Another way to connect to readers when writing from an
unfamiliar setting is to ensure the characters display normal behaviour. Human
beings of all ages and cultures have similar emotional needs, hurts and joys.
Of course, they're expressed differently, sometimes in an alienating or (to us)
peculiar way. But a romantic relationship, whether as painful as in The Remains of the Day or as instant as
Colonel Brandon when he sees Marianne in Sense
and Sensibility or the careful but intense relationship of Eve
Dallas and Roarke in J D Robb’s Death
series set in 2057 New York, binds us into their stories.
My protagonist, Karen, is born and raised in the US
(although not quite the same US we know) and arrives in the imagined European country
of Roma Nova, founded sixteen hundred years before by Roman exiles.
Experiencing culture shock and adaptation through her eyes adds another layer
of exploring difference for the reader. Karen stumbles along an all too-familiar
rocky path in her relationships, but her chief concern is to stay alive when a US
government enforcer is hunting her – a classic plot familiar to hundreds of
thousands of thriller readers.
Blending the recognisable with the unusual, whether an
imaginary setting, an alternative version of reality, or crossing from one culture
to another, or even all three, allows us to expand our choices beyond our usual
ones and perhaps find new pleasures.
Buy links:-
For more information about Alison and her books...
3 comments:
Thank you so much for having me as a guest on your blog today, Liz.
I loved writing the post for you and I hope your readers enjoyed reading it.
HI Alsion. It's a great post and I'm so excited for you! Can't wait to read Inceptio!
lx
Thank you, Liz. I hope you enjoy it.
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