Another fun story from Child #2. He was telling me a couple of weeks back about when he was six. "But I thought you were three, almost four," I said. He replied, "I grew back down to three." My youngest sister did the same thing as a kid - talking about all the stuff she'd done when she was older.
We as writers do something similar. For example, I was watching Flyboys last night (James Franco used to be my movie crush), which takes place in France during WWI. One of my novels takes place in the same country three years later. But as I watched the show, I kept thinking how familiar it felt. Though I didn't live then, I've experienced that place, that time period through my story and research.
As writers (and readers) we get to be "six" before we even turn "four," or visit London in 1868, or rescue a runaway stage out West. I think that's one of the cool things about being a writer - how real our stories, our characters, our settings can become.
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Stacy Henrie
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Friday, July 9, 2010
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- Stacy Henrie
- I'm a stay-at-home mom to three kids and an author of inspirational historical romance. I love laughing with my family, reading, interior decorating and chocolate.
5 comments:
YES! We live vicariously through our stories, and experience a lot of deja vu of sorts because we really have "lived" those other lives.
Too funny about your boy, lol :)
That is so true! And it's a great feeling. PS. I love Flyboys and James Franco? YUM.
I love when time is used with skill in a novel. A fav of mine is ' When We Were Orphans' by Kazuo Ishiguro - an interesting mystery novel where the narrator refers to events as they come to him, time is salient and it's smoothly portrayed. Good post :-)
I know! Some days I feel like such a southern girl (where my novel is set), though I've never been. Interesting.
That was such a lovely thought. I love the idea that I can live experiences through the people I create. I enjoy it. Think about how many lifetimes I'll have lived by the time I'm eighty.
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