Perhaps
"research" doesn't sound like something magical, but I'm here to tell
you it can be. Some of the most magical moments of my life have been directly
related to research I was doing for a book at the time. Really, truly!
Right now I have
two projects fighting for space on top of our dining table, which also sports a
few mugs of tea, a container of hot sauce, and somebody's math textbook. Both
manuscripts are for the MMGR (Marvelous Middle-Grade Reader), but one is a
fantasy called The Wrinkled Crown,
coming from HarperCollins in November, and the other is a historical novel, Cloud & Wallfish, coming from
Candlewick in 2016.
One is set in a
world I made up myself--the other set in Berlin in 1989. So you'd be tempted to
think that I, fueled by tea, lolled back in my chair and pulled the made-up
world for The Wrinkled Crown right out
of thin air, and then locked my imagination away in a safe-box while gathering
the facts that fuel Cloud & Wallfish.
But no! Both stories, the fantasy and the historical novel, are the product of
both imagination and research.
Let's start with
the obvious: It is true that writing a historical novel requires a lot of
research. Yes, it does. But I find that that research feels more like a
treasure hunt than anything else. I happened to live in East Berlin in 1989 and
had hundreds of pages of notes on daily life behind the Iron Curtain.
Plus my
inner archive-rat (very like a pack-rat, but with longer, more elegant
whiskers) had carefully collected newspaper clippings, souvenirs, scraps of
interesting paper. So when I started work turning all of this wonderful debris
into novel-stuff, I had to turn to my fictional characters to guide me through
it. "Is this part of your story?" I asked them, pointing to some
little piece of history, or picture of the Wall, or a description from my diary
of the East Berlin donut stand. "How about this? Or this?" And we
figured out together how to weave all the random facts and details into a true
story--into fiction.
Here's the funny
thing: when I write a novel about magic, I do a huge amount of research, too! For
The Wrinkled Crown, for instance, I
read a very long book from the nineteenth century about instrument making.
And sometimes,
while doing research, magic happens. I wrote the first draft of A Box of Gargoyles when I was living far
from France, which means I did a lot of choosing locations by means of internet
maps (which are pretty magical things, themselves).
But once the book had been
written, I found myself back in Paris, and so of course I wanted to go take a real-life
look at some of those places where Maya and Valko had had so many adventures. One
scene in the book is set in the forest of Fontainebleau, outside Paris.
Fontainebleau is a wonderful, magical place full of old trees, shady paths, and
huge boulders, on which people like to practice rock-climbing. I'm no good at
climbing rocks, but on the internet I had found pictures of one of those great
rocks, a boulder called the "Salamander Rock," and so I knew that I
had to send my characters, Maya and Valko, who had already had adventures in a
spooky Salamander House in The Cabinet of
Earths, out into the woods in Book Two.
I wrote that
chapter thousands of miles away from Fontainebleau, but I really, really,
really wanted to put my actual hand on the actual Salamander Rock, just to
convince myself that such a wonderful thing existed. So I dragged my entire
family--husband, children, and ninety-year-old father-in-law--out into the
woods to find that one particular boulder. (You can imagine the dialogue as we
tromped through the woods: "Just a little further. The map says this way.
No, through these bushes. No, over here!" "Mooooooommm!") But
eventually the kids were shouting and pointing, and there it was, the real-life
Salamander Rock, looking exactly as salamanderish as a Salamander Rock could
possibly look.
I was so happy! I took photographs and walked around it and
admired it--and then I remembered that in my story, there's a treasure box
hidden away in a secret hollow at the base of the rock. I was so carried away
by having found the rock at all, that I went right up to where the hiding place
had been in my story--and there was a little hollow there, just the right size
for the hidden box of the Fourcroys! For the first moment, I wasn't even
surprised at all, because of course there
should be a hiding place there. And then I realized what an amazing,
fantastical, unbelievable coincidence this was, and I sat down with a thump and
started to laugh.
Hi Anne! I like reading about your research tales. And the Salamander Rock was an amazing find. Thanks for sharing!
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing, Anne, yes, we fiction writers do research a lot more than we get credit for (when you're not in the historical area)
ReplyDeleteI think in my case, though, it's tricky to balance the factual with the fantastical in my animal stories, which aren't 100% true to life, but they aren't ultra-cartoony either. (Sigh)
Just because I'm not "National Geographic" accurate about EVERYTHING doesn't mean I don't incorporate facts into my fiction.
I like how you compare historical research to a treasure hunt. You're pretty sure what you're looking for is out there somewhere. You just have to find it. (And sometimes, it doesn't feel very treasure-y after you've found it.)
ReplyDeleteResearch for fantasy is a little more FUN.
It might take me two hours of researching historical railroads to find the name of a town that could be reached in a certain time period by train from the setting of my story. And then what do I have? The name of a town to stick in my sentence.
But after reading a website describing "the secretive Lemurian race that lives in a cavern under Mount Shasta" -- well, there are endless possibilities for how I can weave those legends into my story!
Thank you all! Taurean, I can imagine that it might be tricky when writing about animals, because (like Dianne's search for the name of a particular town in a particular place that can be reached by train) there's always the potential to get something WRONG. Of course, fantasy writers can be dinged for inconsistencies, too, but it's not quite like someone saying, "You know, they didn't HAVE cell phones in 1867." :)
ReplyDeleteI enjoy all the attention to detail that you put into your stories. For instance with the Wrinkled Crown, how you include all of these details about instrument making, sounds delightful.
ReplyDeleteI love this! I love doing research for fantasy novels. I spend a decent amount of time on pinterest looking at fantasy landscapes and imagining up settings or reading costuming blogs. So fun!
ReplyDeleteAnne, this is such a magical post - and yes, even when writing fantasy we can use research (and it is fun!) to fuel our own imagination. I love your trek to find the salamander rock - and dragging your family with you. My book coming out has Greek Olympians in it and that required research but then I put my own spin on it. The next series I'm plotting will have a medieval flair so I am saturating myself in all sorts of medieval books. But my favorite one (quite witty!) is The Time Traveler's Guide to Medieval England.
ReplyDeleteYour fun research tale shows people that we can indeed make our stories up from real places - and even become our own character in the story of researching the story (and family members too!) and that we can breathe magic in our writing by becoming an active participant in it.
How wonderful! I was with you every step of the way, searching for Salamander Rock.
ReplyDeleteAnd how wonderful that you lived in East Berlin at such a pivotal time. Now I can't wait until CLOUD AND WALLFISH comes out.
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ReplyDeleteI have a friend who lived in East Berlin. She was 13 when the wall came down. I'm sure she'll be interested to see Cloud and Wallfish!! Thanks, Anne
ReplyDeleteResearch may be my very favorite thing about writing.
ReplyDelete