Tag Archives: hands-on research

Where was your character when…?

It’s not that I didn’t know that she had a history. It’s just that I hadn’t thought much about how my character interacted with history at large. I’ve been plumbing some of Adelle’s past experiences — the standard stuff like family experiences and traditions, childhood friends and fears, the things that make her who she is in the today of the novel. It turns out one of the early influences that set her on her career path as an architect is regular trips to New York.

I pulled out Chamber for a Memory Palace, a book of letters between architects Donlyn Lyndon and Charles Moore. They explore several buildings in New York, including the Twin Towers. When I discovered this, I flipped back to check the copyright. 1994. The observations in the book came eight years before the attack on the World Trade Center.

My story is not about 9/11, but tonight it occurred to me for the first time that my character would be significantly affected by it. A 31-year-old architect living in 2010, Adelle grew up making trips to New York and inspired by the buildings there. While 9/11 is not the story of Adelle, her story cannot be told without it. What an interesting challenge, to include such a pivotal event without making it the pivotal event. I wonder what other influences history will have had on Adelle? I see some timeline construction in my future.

photo credit: http://www.flickr.com/photos/mrs_logic/3438079226/sizes/z/in/photostream/


The Royal Dunce

 

I met Sam a few months ago when my character Adelle walked into a Walgreens and there he was, buying a pack of Marlboros. Since then, my writing group has helped me see how much more I need to know about Sam. Yesterday I took a walk around my neighborhood — a generally respectable place with a multicultural, multi-economic population and some great yards and historical houses. But on my walk, I saw some exterior decor that didn’t quite fit in. It made me smile; these sorts of things usually do, and I thought of Sam. I realized that this was his house growing up. I’ve moved it to Fairfield, Connecticut, and have begun to get to know his mother a little bit because of the house. I have no idea whether this paragraph will make it into the novel, but I’m having an awful lot of fun with it!

The Royal Dunce

When I was ten, my mother jacked a traffic cone and spray painted it gold with silver bands. She screwed it into the metal awning that perched over our front window, marking our house with a royal dunce cap. She grew salvia because it was legal and more potent than weed. She would take a drag off her hand-rolled doobie and exhale into my face, turning the world ochre for a moment. When the haze cleared all the colors were brighter and Mom would be singing about walking the hills in a black veil, about the night winds that wail. She’d scoop me up, or, when I grew too heavy, put an arm over my shoulder and rest her other hand in mine, pretending to let me lead the dance while she sashayed us around the living room and her cluttered studio. Her work didn’t sell well in Fairfield. People who could afford it didn’t want psychedelic rabbits and bad Jackson Pollock imitations. She’d stick her squarish chin out when a gallery rejected her, which was often, and celebrate the rejection by taking me for falafel and grape leaves at the food court in the mall. “They’re all trapped in the lines. The rules own them. They aren’t artists,” she’d explain between bites of the deep-fried chickpea flour.

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Photo credit: http://flic.kr/p/t9W3f


The Fun Side of Research

photo credit: http://flic.kr/p/aDX3VL

One of the things I love about summer is that I get to make it an extended, hands-on learning experience. My daughter Zoie’s summer doesn’t begin for another month, but we’ve already started taking field trips together, and I have a few planned to do on my own between now and mid-June.

This summer, my learning focus will be on areas that will help me develop my character Adelle. Adelle is an architect with a quirky memory: she can recite trivia perfectly but can’t always recall her own experiences. My trip to Chicago for the AWP conference in February gave me the opportunity to take some architecture tours and begin developing first-hand experience with the work Adelle does. You can see the photos here: http://wp.me/p2aDAm-27. This inspired me to spend the summer seeking out architectural and educational experiences to inform her character further.

On Sunday, Zoie and I spent Mother’s Day in St. Augustine, the oldest city in the United States. It’s one of my favorite day trips, and I’ve been many times, but I got to see it with new eyes this weekend because it was the first time I’d taken my daughter. Not only did we get to experience the Colonial Spanish architecture, but we also visited the Lightner Museum for the first time. The Lightner Museum, http://www.lightnermuseum.org/, is full of early twentieth century ephemera. They arranged a portion of the exhibit as a 1920′s shopping district, grouping hats, shaving supplies, housewares, and toys behind storefronts to give visitors a sense of what it would have been like to stroll the downtown streets a hundred years ago. We saw a nickelodeon, a gramaphone, a player piano. We visited the natural history side of the museum to discover glass steam engines, a mumified child, and the method Native Americans used to shrink shrunken heads. It’s fun to see a city like this through my character’s eyes. I now have so much more architectural knowledge and trivia to draw from when I sit down to write Adelle.

While in Chicago, I toured Frank Lloyd Wright’s Robie House. I had studied and even taught Wright’s work before, but never saw any of his buildings in person. So one of my field trips this summer will be to Florida Southern University https://www.flsouthern.edu/fllwctr/. It’s a little over an hour away from where I live, and its campus consists of the largest single-site collection of buildings designed by Wright.

I will also try to make it to the Thomas Edison House http://www.edisonfordwinterestates.org/ in search of more trivia for Adelle. I plan to visit as many museums and botanical gardens as I can, including the Morse Museum of Tiffany glass which is about fifteen minutes from my home: http://www.morsemuseum.org/.

And, of course, I plan to tour the world to view different styles of architecture. Only, there is a financial hangup there because right now I just can’t afford to go to Paris, Tokyo, Morrocco… So I’m going to do the theme park version. For Christmas last year, we got the family annual passes to Disney. I plan to make full use of Epcot’s World Showcase and the fantastic reproductions of African architecture at Animal Kingdom. It’s far and away from visiting the real countries. In many ways, this is the cartoon version of the world. But it’s in my backyard and a life-size model is so much better than a three-inch photo in a history book.

So what are you doing to enhance your work this summer?


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