Today on the blog author Simon Toyne talks about his new thrilling novel Solomon Creed and how he goes about doing research for a novel.
So far on the
Solomon Creed Blog tour I’ve dealt with ideas and character, now I’m going to
talk about how I go about researching a novel.
Research is fun
- all writers love research - it’s the grist to the mill, the gathering of the
string, the delving into interesting topics and places that takes place before
you have to sit yourself down and start the process of turning all that yarn
into - well …another yarn.
There’s an old
axiom that says you should write what you know, but I think that’s incredibly
misleading. In truth, all you really need to know in order to write a piece of
fiction is human behaviour, and we’ve all been studying that from the moment we
were born. Everything else you can research: guns, cars, locations, history,
police procedure, language, local customs, everything - it’s all just an email,
a phone call, a google search or a research trip away.
I try hard not
to get too bogged down in preliminary research. It’s not an exam, remember, you’re
allowed to look things up as you go along. In fact I often don’t really know
exactly what I need to research until I start writing. I let the story tell me
what I need to know, not the other way round. Having said that there are always
some things I need to know about before starting writing, the foundation upon
which the rest will be built. With Sanctus it was the inner workings of a
medieval monastery, with The Key it was lost languages and how viruses spread,
with The Tower it was space telescopes, and for Solomon Creed it was Mexican
drug cartels and the history of copper mining in Arizona. I start by Googling
things, reading articles, Wikipedia entries, blogs about the subject and start
collating a document with these useful links on it for future reference. This
initial reading tends to throw up names of books and authors and I’ll make a
note of these too and order titles that seem to deal with whatever I need to
know.
One of the
things I did for Solomon was go on a research trip to Arizona to try and find
an
old mining town to set the story. I also wanted to feel what the desert was
like in the height of summer, and smell the rain and listen to what it sounded
like. This is the sort of stuff you can’t get from Google. I took lots of
pictures too, some of which I’ve put up on my Pinterest board. I use these photographs for
reference throughout the first draft, studying and re-studying them, pulling
out different details to help pin my story to the page.
The great thing
about fiction, of course, is that you are making it up, so it doesn’t have
to be factually accurate. Obviously if you can get the details right then you
should because that helps sell the lie at the heart of your story. Using the
correct terminology when describing someone assembling a gun, for example, will
help tell your story and stop people who know that stuff (and there are a LOT
of them) from being jolted out of the narrative. Going into too much detail,
however, will do the same and this often comes from doing too much research. I
have a post-it fixed to the edge of my screen in my office with a Tom Stoppard
quote on it that says ‘Just because it’s true, doesn’t make it interesting.’
Once you have
enough to get started I’m a firm believer in the rule that you should get
started and keep on going, even if you come to something that needs checking. I
used to look things up as I went along but have now stopped doing this because
research is too distracting. What I do now is when I hit a fact that needs
checking is I make it up and write those bits in CAPITAL LETTERS so it’s easy
to see what needs researching for the second draft. Often the thing I made up
to suit the story is fairly close to the truth anyway. Sometimes the truth is
wildly different and extremely boring so I stick with my made up version and
brace myself for the inevitable emails.
So, once the
initial research is done, the only thing between me and the first draft is the
outline, and I’ll talk about that tomorrow on the next stop of the blog tour.
Solomon Creed by Simon Toyne is out now (Harper Collins, £14.99)
A plane crash in the Arizona desert. An explosion that sets the world on
fire. A damning pact to hide an
appalling secret. And one man bound to
expose the truth. He is Solomon Creed.
No one knows what he is capable of. Not
even him. When Solomon Creed flees the burning wreckage of a plane in the Arizona desert,
seconds before an explosion sets the world alight, he is acting on instinct
alone. He has no memory of his past, and no idea what his future holds. Running
towards a nearby town, one name fires in his mind – James Coronado. Somehow,
Solomon knows he must save this man. But how do you save a man who is already
dead?
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