By Judith Keim
Real estate agents have
a mantra – Location, location, location! And they’re right. Location can mean
the difference between a successful choice or one that doesn’t quite work out
the way you’d thought.
In writing, a book’s
location is really it’s setting. And that setting can change from chapter to
chapter, sometimes scene to scene. Setting done well becomes a character in
your story. Many writers do a wonderful job of including fabulous descriptions
in their books, making their settings come alive and inviting readers to spend
time there. Even what some might consider ordinary places come alive with good
description that includes use of the five senses.
In BREAKFAST AT THE BEACH HOUSE HOTEL the setting of a property on the beach
encourages all kinds of description:
Stepping onto the
balcony, I gazed down at the pool below. The waterfall at one end sent
glistening ripples dancing across the pool’s surface. The sound of the tumbling
water was almost drowned out by the lapping of the Gulf on the broad, white
beach beyond the house. Peace, such as I hadn’t known for a long time, wrapped
around me.
It doesn’t have to be a glamourous setting. In THE TALKING TREE, setting
is used to show her pain:
My mother’s death
brought me back to upstate Barnham, New York on this crisp April morning.
Chills rolled across my shoulders in paralyzing waves as I stared at the
peeling paint and darkened windows of my childhood home. Cruelty and rejection
had formed its core. I clutched my hands, drew a deep breath, and told myself
this place no longer mattered, but I knew better. Until I could work through
past issues, I’d always be bound in some horrible way to this house and the
people who’d caused such pain.
In FAT FRIDAYS, a suburban Georgia neighborhood looks something like this:
She stood a moment,
admiring her surroundings, so full of promise. Plantings of various sizes and
shapes filled the landscaped spaces between the large houses and served as a
playground for the birds flitting among the budding branches. The trees would
soon leaf out in pale green glory. Bradford Pear trees were about to blossom,
and then their white flowers would coat the branches like fallen snow. Redbud
trees would soon add patches of brilliant pink, making the world seem a fairyland
of spring colors.
As you work on your
book, take a look at the setting around your characters. I’m sure you have a
vision in your mind as to what they’re doing and saying, but make the scene
come alive with enough description of their “location” to pull the reader into
the moment.
Good luck with sharing
your world with others!
______________________________________________________________________
Judith Keim was born and
raised in Elmira, New York, and now makes her home in Idaho with her husband
and long-haired dachshund, Winston, and other members of her family. Growing
up, books were always present - being read, ready to go back to the library or
about to be discovered. Information from the books was shared in general
conversation, giving all of us in the family a wealth of knowledge and a lot of
imagination. Perhaps that is why I was drawn to the idea of writing stories
early on. I particularly love to write novels about women who face unexpected
challenges with strength and find love along the way. As J.S. Keim I write
children's middle-grade stories. I love writing about kids who have
interesting, fun, exciting experiences with creatures real and fantastical and
with characters who learn to see the world in a different way. I have a
story in Chicken Soup to Inspire a Woman's Soul and a story in Belle Book's
Mossy Creek Series - A Summer in Mossy Creek. Some of my stories were finals in
RWA contests and three of my children's stories have been published in
magazines - Highlights for Children, Jack and Jill and Children's Playmate. I hope
you enjoy my stories as much as I enjoy telling them! My Website: http://www.judithkeim.com/
My Facebook Author Page: https://www.facebook.com/Judith-Keim-184013771644484/?ref=aymt_homepage_panel My Twitter Page: https://twitter.com/@judithkeim
My Linked-in Page: https://www.linkedin.com/profile/preview?locale=en_US&trk=prof-0-sb-preview-primary-button
No comments:
Post a Comment