Remembering Versus Imagination
I often alternate
the stories of my recollections and expressing my ideas of fantasy when I
write. I try to keep them separate but occasionally my real life occurrences
manage to wander over to be woven into the plot of a story or two. One example
was a trip driving through the northeastern states of America, the provinces of
southeastern Canada, and a voyage on a ship named the “Northern Ranger.” The
voyage traveled the length of the Newfoundland/ Labrador coast. It became the
basis for a story I wrote for the Greensburg Writers Group. The members were to
write a tale to include their favorite sleuth and his/her muse. The compilation
of stories that were written were included in a book that was to have amateur
detectives getting involved solving a crime while on vacation. My sleuth was Luigi
Garibaldi, a professional gambler attempting to escape the wrath of a cuckolded
casino owner. While aboard the ship he reluctantly became involved as a witness
of a smuggling ring and a murder.
My
several day voyage on the Northern Ranger gave me insight to the activities of
the shipboard routine and the knowledge of the many small towns, fishing
villages, and ports where the ship stopped to load and to unload its cargo. I
described the scenery that I saw so well that a fellow writer said I should
write travel brochures. I still haven’t figured out whether she was paying me a
compliment or not.
In the
books of the Tommy Two-Shoes series my trips to West Virginia and the ride on
the trains there became an integral part of several chapters of these
mysteries. Again the experience added flavor and helped to shape the direction
of the story.
In my
book titled “Addie” my familiarity of the local terrain of the hillsides of
Confluence, Pennsylvania and land between to Mt. Pleasant was essential for the
plot. I am barely old enough to remember the things of the 1940’s. But I used things
of that time period to keep the historicity of the era correct although the
plot was fictional. It’s often necessary for me to do research to keep my
fictional writings believable. My readers expect the plot to have a foot in
reality. Places, food, weapons must have details that are correct. An example
of one small detail I researched in the book “Addie” was, when was wax paper
invented? Or was the topography and details of the terrain from Confluence to
Connellsville and Mt. Pleasant correct.
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