YellowBarroned
Experienced
- Joined
- Apr 1, 2014
- Posts
- 63
how do you find a good location for your story?
should cold places be avoided? are hot and humid places the best?
should cold places be avoided? are hot and humid places the best?
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how do you find a good location for your story?
should cold places be avoided? are hot and humid places the best?
I have difficulty writing generic-location stories. Location IS critical in many of my pieces. But even total inventions need a sense of place. One way I write: I set-up characters within an environment and set them loose to act-out the story. If the setting is someplace I know, I can easily 'see' where the characters are, and thus paint a richer word-picture. That's my goal: to play the story like a movie in the reader's mind.Random details provide for extra realism supposedly, but good, tight writing doesn't spend time on wasted words. If a particular climate or weather type is important for the plot, that makes your decision for you. If the weather has no bearing on that plot at all, then you may not even need to specify a location.
Again, a generic urban or rural location can be rather sterile, storywise. When I set an episode in a Midwestern farming town, a Oaxacan village, a Mojave desert rock-pool, or a Los Angeles suburb, I visualize (but don't name) specific locales. I don't describe in detail -- only enough to give the reader a taste of the place. Generic locations are bland, tasteless, unsatisfying.Sometimes regional culture can be a factor, you can imply a certain culture by using a location. Suburbs are different from cities. The American midwest is different from down south, out west, and the New England area. Does your story work better in a densely populated area or is isolation better?
Pick a place. Put characters in it. See what they do. Some of my pieces have beach settings. Events have different consequences if the beach is on the warm Pacific Coast of Southern California, or the colder coasts north of San Francisco, or the lower Colorado River in midsummer, or a mountain lake, or the Salton Sea -- not just for appropriate dress (or lack thereof) but because different populations (cultures) manifest in different places. Nudists strolling San Diego's Black's Beach, or surfers wave-riding off Santa Cruz, wouldn't be comfortable at a Redneck Rendezvous at Salton Sea or Lake Havasu. That sort of thing.How about geography? Do you need a beach, a river, a lake, mountains, farms?
Must say i love beach or nudist camp locations,either loving wives or incest when there is a lot of teasing and rubbing of sunscreen