I used to think that location was not important, that human encounters and interactions were the interesting part and they could happen anywhere. When I was reading, I even used to skip past the description at times. But then I moved to California. It’s different here. From back East, we used to say California was ‘far out.’ It’s not the same, that’s clear, although I’m not sure it’s really far out. But there’s a flavor of difference. Where we are matters.
Reading Joan Didion’s description of evil greenery growing in the Inland Empire where I live, or her description of the isolation and impersonality of driving on the freeways, I find the mood she creates resonates with the characters and the story. Moving the action to New York would not fit. I’ve been reading Willa Cather’s fictionalized life of Bishop Lamy recently, and New Mexico is a character in the story without a doubt. It interests me that the location can determine a lot of the shape of a story. Character and plot can arise from it, rather than location serving as Windows Wallpaper for a story that could take place anywhere.
What of the universality of human conditions? It’s true, but part of it is that we’re made to be tuned to our environments. So, West Coast Writers must be different in their assumptions. Maybe it’s being laid back, not wanting to argue with that East Coast guy who’s blowing his horn or butting in. We’ll all get there in the end, right? Or maybe it’s the assumption that we can jump in our cars (on our horses) and go anywhere. Or that nothing ever closes, no blue laws exist. Or the closeness of natural places, the ocean, the mountains. Or the hokey way the rivers have been made into Disneyland concrete channels painted with glorious and horrible graffiti. Lots of things are incorporated into our unconscious assumptions about daily life.
So, I think there’s a West Coast viewpoint that writers have, maybe not all writers, but a lot of writers who are out on this edge of the country. And reciprocally, I think people who write in other parts of the country or world have an intrinsic viewpoint too. Do you agree? Let me know what you think.
Sunday, May 27, 2007
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5 comments:
Nice blog, mom!
Absolute agreement here, Laura. Sometimes the story only makes sense when you consider the location and get a sense of where someone is coming from. Congradulations on the book! The website! The blog! Wow! Aurora
I agree! I've read (can't remember where) that the location can actually be as important as another character in a book.
Denise Hamilton says that Los Angeles is a character in her books.
Yes, Kathryn, I heard Denise read from her work at the Poyter workshop last month and LA was a force for sure. Parachute Asian kids attending high school, etc, v important to the story.
Laura
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