I'm not here! - Jo Carroll
I’m not here.
This is weird, writing this. I’m sitting at
my computer, in my little room at home with a view of the garden. The wind is
fierce – it is very late autumn and the last of the leaves are soggy on the wet
lawn. The sky is unforgivingly grey. Beside me I have Christmas lists: things
to buy, to cook, to pack up and post.
What!! You’re reading this in mid-January!
Christmas is long gone. I know – but when you read this I’ll be in Cuba. I
can’t tell you exactly where, as I don’t know (I’ve not been there before, and
don’t do much travel planning anyway). It will probably be hot; I hope I will
have drunk plenty of wonderful coffee and probably some wonderful rum. I will
have given balloons to children, and tried my wretched Spanish on their
mothers. And I may well have very limited access to wifi (hence writing this so
far in advance).
Which got me thinking – as writers, we spend
hours with our heads in another place. I’ve retraced my steps with every travel
book I’ve written. When I play with fiction I can leap from my Wiltshire Downs
to the wilds of Antrim in a couple of sentences. Those of you who write fantasy
face even greater challenges: at least I can take my mind off to real hills and
valleys, while you have to make the whole lot up. But it must still be real,
and convincing – or the reader will throw up her hands and return to the
reality of her own world.
Do you have 'tricks' to help you? Photos or pictures of your setting on the walls of your writing room, maybe? Do you have maps? House-plans? Do you wait for rainy days to remind yourself of the smell of wet pavements? Or can you hold it all in your heads? I'd love to know - though I'll not be able to join in the discussion till I get home.
Do you have 'tricks' to help you? Photos or pictures of your setting on the walls of your writing room, maybe? Do you have maps? House-plans? Do you wait for rainy days to remind yourself of the smell of wet pavements? Or can you hold it all in your heads? I'd love to know - though I'll not be able to join in the discussion till I get home.
I like to think I’ve got better at these
leaps of imagination. Even so, while I may appear to be in two places at once
today I cannot promise to spend too long wondering about your rain and cold, or
even the state of my soggy lawn. Instead I shall be collecting stories: you
never know, there might be another travel book when I get home …
Comments
Also, I envy you the trip to Cuba. I hope it's going (it went) well.
I find that once I've been living in my imaginary world for a certain amount of time, it becomes at least as real to me as the "real" world. There is a sense in which I'm never entirely "here" (wherever "here" may happen to be at a given time)...