Today’s
guest blog is by T R Richmond who is an award- wining journalist. What She
Left is his debut novel and he talks to Shots about choosing a 25 year-old
female as a character.
People
talk about their childhood and teenage years as a time of wonder and change,
but our 20s are the most formative years of our lives.
It’s
only then that we pass properly from child to adult. We might leave university,
get full-time employment, change jobs, share flats with different people and
relocate around the country. We might get into – and maybe get out of – our
first serious relationship or relationships. It’s still also often the decade
when people get married and have kids. Everything changes in your 20s and change
is a writer’s bread-and-butter. For this
reason, I was keen that the protagonist in What
She Left, Alice Salmon, would be a woman of this age.
I
tried to make her like a lot of people in their 20s – changing and changeable,
likeable, difficult, still trying to establish who they are and where their
place is in the world.
It’s
a wonderful, terrifying decade, when we still sometimes act like kids, but have
the responsibilities of adults. Our bodies (and disposable incomes) are those
of grown-ups – but, if what I was like at 25 is anything to go by, our brains
can still be childlike. We’re let properly loose on the world for the first
time.
What
better material for a novelist than someone in this maelstrom?
Creating
Alice presented me with two immediate challenges, however. Firstly, I’m no
longer in my 20s. Secondly, I’m a man.
Both
were problematic at times but, as a writer, my job is to imagine. If we can
transplant ourselves into, say, the head of an serial killer in America or a
cop in a faraway dystopian future, then changing our age by a mere few years
and giving ourselves a temporary gender reassignment should be a relatively
simple business. Besides, it can be unhelpful to view your characters in
predominantly male or female terms. They’re people. Human beings. Individuals.
When
I was writing from Alice’s perspective, I wouldn’t ask: How would a man or a
woman specifically respond to this situation? I’d ask: How would Alice respond?
That
said, I did find myself asking many questions of my wife and female friends.
They must have got heartily sick of me. A lot of this material never made it
directly into the book; it was background that helped me establish a sense of
Alice. What would her politics be? What radio station would she listen to? What
food would she like eating? What would she drink? What would her favourite book
be? What would she think about the war in Afghanistan? It helped hugely, as
well, to have a female literary agent, who acted as a constant sense-check on
the authenticity of dialogue and story.
I
also read lots of women’s magazines while I was writing the book and, while I
wouldn’t claim for a second that such “research” qualified me in itself to
write a female character, it was certainly eye-opening. It also earned me a few
strange looks on trains.
Ultimately,
a writer’s job is simple. It’s to watch, to listen, to read, to ask questions –
and then to write stuff down. This process is the same whether you’re male or
female, just as it’s the same whether you’re 9 or 90.
A
few years ago, they used to say that men were from Mars and women were from
Venus. I disagree. We’re definitely from the same planet – even if occasionally
we do inhabit different corners of it.
A
Facebook page for Alice Salmon can be found here.
A
fictional blog for Professor Jeremy Cooke where he is gathering information
about her death can be found here.
You can follow him on Twitter @trrichmondbooks
----
What She Left
Who
is Alice Salmon?
Student.
Journalist. Daughter.
Lover
of late nights, hater of deadlines.
That
girl who drowned last year.
Gone
doesn't mean forgotten.
Everyone's
life leaves a trace behind.
But
it's never the whole story.
"I will stand up and ask myself who I am. I
do that a lot. I'll look in the mirror. Reassure myself, scare myself, like
myself, hate myself. My name is Alice Salmon."
When
Alice Salmon died last year, the ripples from her tragic drowning could be felt
in the news, on the internet, and in the hearts of those closest to her.
However,
the man who knows her best isn't family or a friend. His name is Professor
Jeremy Cooke, an academic fixated on piecing together Alice's existence.
Cooke knows that faithfully recreating Alice, through her diaries, text messages, and online presence, has become all-consuming.
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