By Natalie Walters,
Author of Living Lies
If you’re a reader or
writer, then you probably know the importance of setting. Where the story takes
place can have a direct impact on the character’s journey. It can become the
character’s enemy: Titanic, Deep Water Horizon, Twister. It can
force the character to change: Sweet Home Alabama, Made in
Manhattan. Or, it can become the character’s ally: Die Hard,
the Nakatomi Plaze became John McClane’s ally as he wreaked havoc on the
terrorists and Willy Wonka used the Chocolate Factory to help him find a child
of noble character.
Settings have the
power to become a character. And they should. When I began writing Living
Lies, I didn’t really have a setting in mind until we moved to the
coastal Georgia area near Savannah and I began to imagine how I could use my
new surroundings as an antagonist.
In Living
Lies, I have a character, Miguel Roa, who is a Vietnam veteran and
lives among the dense Live Oaks along the river. Unstable after his return home
from war, he becomes a recluse and has blackouts that force him to relive the
terror of his past. Talking with my uncles (three of them served in Vietnam)
and watching documentaries, it was easy to imagine how the swampy marshland,
tucked deep beneath the gnarly limbs of giant Live Oaks layered in long boughs of
Spanish moss, might bring back the memories of a land not so different.
And so,I used it. I used the setting to haunt my character back
into his past.
Here are three
questions to consider regarding your current project:
1. How does my setting
affect my plot?
2. Am I describing my
setting enough my readers get a good feeling of place?
3. Where can I use my
setting to increase tensions in my story?
As writers, we have a
fabulous opportunity to create a setting that can challenge, terrorize, define,
or manipulate characters. We can deepen the experience readers have in our
books by helping them visualize and experience the setting through description
and deep point of view.
In Living
Lies, this meant being able to describe Savannah and the Live Oaks—visually
but also experientially. I had to describe the giant, mossy trees and convey
their earthy scent. I had to capture the essence of a small town in the south
and use it to the advantage of the plot.
I urge you to consider
how setting plays into the books you read, the movies you watch, and even in
your own life! The next time you’re walking through the decrepit hallways of an
old prison (I’ve done this twice), or hunkering down with your family as tear
gas and bullets fill the air around you (true story), or canceling your
sister’s bachelorette party due to warnings of an impending tsunami (true
again), take notes on how you can use your setting to immerse your characters
and your readers into a story they’ll never forget.
_____________________________________________________________
Natalie Walters is a military wife of 22 years and currently resides in Hawaii with her
soldier husband and their three kids. She writes full-time and has been
published in Proverbs 31 magazine and has blogged for Guideposts online. In
addition to balancing life as a military spouse, mom, and writer, she loves
connecting on social media, sharing her love of books, cooking, and traveling.
Natalie comes from a long line of military and law enforcement veterans and is
passionate about supporting them through volunteer work, races, and writing
stories that affirm no one is defined by their past.
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