ratherastory: ([SPN] Writing Is Hard!)
Okay, fellow writers, I have a question.

How do you handle real-life settings with which you're not familiar? I've been reading (dangerous, I know), and many of the books on writing all agree that having a strong setting will add richness and depth to your story.

On the surface, I totally agree. I am a big fan of good world-building when it comes to sci fi and fantasy, for instance. I also love books in which I get a real feel for the setting, the stench of a city's underbelly or the stark beauty of the cityscape at night, the fragrant smells of farmland, etc. I can usually tell when an author is writing about a setting they've lived in or experienced first hand.

The few times I've used setting to good effect, it's been when I was familiar with the locale. In my long-abandoned zombie novel, I was able to follow the characters from street to street and describe in very accurate detail not only what they were seeing, but the kind of weather they were experiencing, the colour of the buildings, etc. In another story, The Built in a Day Job, to be precise, I used my recent trip to Rome in the springtime to evoke all the sights and sounds and smells of the city that were vital to what I was trying to accomplish in my story.

So what am I supposed to do when I need to set my story in one or more places with which I'm not at all familiar? Somewhere I've never been? I can give overall impressions of a place based on research, but I have no idea how to get the level of detail I would like to put into a story. Is there really a shop on that street corner in Memphis? Is that a one-way street? What bus routes should my characters be taking in Calgary? Is there even reliable public transit? What's the weather like in Colorado in March? What did Cambridge smell like in summer in the late 1800s?

So how do you handle it when you have to write in an unfamiliar setting? Any advice?
ratherastory: (Default)
Does anyone know of good books and/or resources that would explain the technical aspects of the preservation and, more importantly, the restoration of art works? More specifically paintings, but I am not especially picky about the medium if it comes down to it.

I am trying to write a story and realized that my plot kind of hinges on my understanding the ins and outs of how to restore paintings, which I emphatically do not. In fact, this is so far out of my league I don't even know where to start. /o\

Halp? Anyone? Bueller?

Meme time!

Oct. 26th, 2011 12:25 am
ratherastory: (Default)
I did it 'cause I saw [livejournal.com profile] harrigan do it and I thought it looked fun. Here's how to play:

Comment to this post with "THE VERY NERVE!" (that's all you need do to start, seriously!) and then:


  • I'll respond by asking you five questions so I can get to know you better.

  • You update your journal with the answers to the questions.

  • You can include this explanation in the post and offer to ask other people questions (but only if you want to).


Questions from harrigan and my answers. I am long-winded, apparently. )

Meme time!

Oct. 26th, 2011 12:25 am
ratherastory: (Default)
I did it 'cause I saw [livejournal.com profile] harrigan do it and I thought it looked fun. Here's how to play:

Comment to this post with "THE VERY NERVE!" (that's all you need do to start, seriously!) and then:


  • I'll respond by asking you five questions so I can get to know you better.

  • You update your journal with the answers to the questions.

  • You can include this explanation in the post and offer to ask other people questions (but only if you want to).


Questions from harrigan and my answers. I am long-winded, apparently. )
ratherastory: (*headdesk*)
My Delicious account is back from the dead, except it has amnesia. ALL my links have vanished.

I am so pissed off, I can't even. All of [livejournal.com profile] harrigan's hard work is gone.

I guess I'll get back to it eventually, figure out what the hell these "stacks" are. I like pancakes, but I don't see what the point of stacks are otherwise.

Delicious is also being a prissy bitch and informing me that I must not have "opted in" when I was supposed to. Hah. I did it for both my accounts, so they are full of it.

Any other bookmarking sites out there that people like? I am willing to switch over at this point, since I have to start from scratch.
ratherastory: (*headdesk*)
My Delicious account is back from the dead, except it has amnesia. ALL my links have vanished.

I am so pissed off, I can't even. All of [livejournal.com profile] harrigan's hard work is gone.

I guess I'll get back to it eventually, figure out what the hell these "stacks" are. I like pancakes, but I don't see what the point of stacks are otherwise.

Delicious is also being a prissy bitch and informing me that I must not have "opted in" when I was supposed to. Hah. I did it for both my accounts, so they are full of it.

Any other bookmarking sites out there that people like? I am willing to switch over at this point, since I have to start from scratch.

Meme!

Nov. 17th, 2010 12:44 am
ratherastory: (Books)
Nicked from [livejournal.com profile] bellatemple and [livejournal.com profile] roque_clasique.

The Rules: Don't take too long to think about it. Fifteen authors (poets included) who have influenced you and will always stick with you. List the first 15 you can recall in no more than 15 minutes, and they don't have to be listed in order of relevance to you.

Like [livejournal.com profile] bellatemple and [livejournal.com profile] roque_clasique, I include musicians.

1- Paul Verlaine

2- Charles Dickens

3- Jack London

4- Bob Dylan

5- Émile Nelligan

6- Victor Hugo

7- Sir Arthur Conan Doyle

8- The Beatles

9- Emily Dickinson

10- Samuel Taylor Coleridge

11- Hergé

12- Guy de Maupassant

13- Edgar Allan Poe

14- Bram Stoker

15- Bernard Cornwell


Okay, there are, like, a bazillion others I could name. *sigh* 15 seems awfully limiting.

Meme!

Nov. 17th, 2010 12:44 am
ratherastory: (Books)
Nicked from [livejournal.com profile] bellatemple and [livejournal.com profile] roque_clasique.

The Rules: Don't take too long to think about it. Fifteen authors (poets included) who have influenced you and will always stick with you. List the first 15 you can recall in no more than 15 minutes, and they don't have to be listed in order of relevance to you.

Like [livejournal.com profile] bellatemple and [livejournal.com profile] roque_clasique, I include musicians.

1- Paul Verlaine

2- Charles Dickens

3- Jack London

4- Bob Dylan

5- Émile Nelligan

6- Victor Hugo

7- Sir Arthur Conan Doyle

8- The Beatles

9- Emily Dickinson

10- Samuel Taylor Coleridge

11- Hergé

12- Guy de Maupassant

13- Edgar Allan Poe

14- Bram Stoker

15- Bernard Cornwell


Okay, there are, like, a bazillion others I could name. *sigh* 15 seems awfully limiting.

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