• Café Life is the Colony's main hangout, watering hole and meeting point.

    This is a place where you'll meet and make writing friends, and indulge in stratospherically-elevated wit or barometrically low humour.

    Some Colonists pop in religiously every day before or after work. Others we see here less regularly, but all are equally welcome. Two important grounds rules…

    • Don't give offence
    • Don't take offence

    We now allow political discussion, but strongly suggest it takes place in the Steam Room, which is a private sub-forum within Café Life. It’s only accessible to Full Members.

    You can dismiss this notice by clicking the "x" box

Let’s Get Lost

Invest in You. Get Full Membership now.
Status
Not open for further replies.

Paul Whybrow

Full Member
Joined
Jun 20, 2015
Location
Cornwall, UK
LitBits
0
The phrase ‘Getting lost in a book” is familiar and true. It applies to reading and writing a book.

'It's a delicious thing to write. To be no longer yourself but to move in an entire universe of your own creating.'

Gustave Flaubert

iu


At present, I’m one-quarter of the way into writing my sixth crime novel, wondering how to give a homicidal Russian female mercenary a love interest. All of my villains have sympathetic traits, partly to round out their characters, but also to wrong-foot the reader. It’s a challenge to make this woman appealing, as she’s killed hundreds of times and is currently chopping off the hands of big game trophy hunters. She’s dominating my thoughts.​

As an antidote I’ve been getting lost in the previous two stories, reacquainting myself with the lives of the detectives, so I can continue their story arcs.​

Their world is more real than my own when I’m writing.

My current reading matter is taking me away to Tudor England (C.J. Sansom’s Tombland), 21st-century Nigeria (Oyinkan Braithwaite’s My Sister, The Serial Killer), 20th-century Canada (Michael Crummey’s Sweetland) and into Kerry Hudson’s memoir Lowborn about growing up in Britain’s poorest towns. It’s a privilege to time-travel and shape-shift in this way.

How are you getting lost at the moment?

In your writing and in your reading?

For no other reason, than it has the right title and it’s charming and romantic:



Chet Baker - Wikipedia
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Further Articles from the Author Platform

Latest Articles By Litopians

  • If the Protagonist Had Slept in
    The PROTAGONIST’S room. Chapter One’s bloodstained clothes still cover the floor. The DIRECTOR s ...
  • A Fresh Start
    There comes a point in life* when you must admit that you were wrong. A story is trundling along at ...
  • The Book They Actually Wanted
    Writers need feedback, and I have found the perfect focus group*. It offers raw, physical reactions, ...
  • People Like Those: Aigneis
    Aigneis is a diminutive lady in her 80s, still sharp of mind, though frail of limb. She moved to Bir ...
  • Where it all started
    When Alphonse de Lamartine said “music is the literature of the heart,” I’m pretty sure he was ...
  • If Genre Were A Custody Battle
    A conference room. Two GENRES sit fuming on opposite sides of a table. The DIRECTOR sits at the head ...
  • A few of my favourite things
    I like skidding along a slippery floor in just my socks. And sending my shopping cart spinning on it ...
What Goes Around
Comes Around!
Back
Top