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ADDING THAT SPECIAL DASH OF RESEARCH
Dear Karyn/Elizabeth,
How do you effectively interweave your research into a story, whether
historical or contemporary, without overwhelming the story with details?
Thank you,
Patty
Dear Patty,
Using research in narrative is like cooking with Cayenne pepper --
largely a matter of taste and
good judgment.
Before you start cooking with literary cayenne, you must do two things.
The first is to research
until you know what your character knows and until you feel part of his
world. The second is to
use research to shape the plot and characters at the planning stages of
your book. Both of these things will add veracity to your novel and make
stirring research into the mix easier and more believable.
Back when I was a puppy writer, I went to a workshop where a published
author told us, "You should only use about ten percent of the research
you do for your novel." I suspect the percentage is lower than since it
is light, humorous books that are so popular in the romance
market today, and in literary historicals like COLD MOUNTAIN and THE
DRESS LODGER or E. L. Doctrow's THE MARCH..
Making the decision about how much research to include in your work is a
taste thing and depends largely on the market you re targeting. The
point is YOU CAN'T USE ALL YOUR RESEARCH, and the ten percent limit
seems like a pretty good rule of thumb. Of course then you must decide,
which ten percent?
The answer is, the ten percent that's PERTINENT to telling the story, to
creating the world
your characters -- and ultimately your readers -- will inhabit. You
generally add the information
in small doses and as nonchalantly as possible. (With a shrug, I like to
think of it.) As if wasn't
something extraordinary --which of course it isn't -- at least in your
characters' lives.
You can add that research in conversation or exposition, through action
or introspection. You
add it as simply as possible -- i.e.: In the three hours the train
passed through Philadelphia,
Baltimore, and Washington, Susan...
You also need to decide which p.o.v. character to use to introduce the
research. This is where knowing what your character knows comes in. For
example, the boiler deck on a river boat is not where the boilers are;
the boiler deck is what we would think of as the second floor. The
captain of the boat knows this; his passenger might not. Thus you
introduce this information from the passenger's p.o.v..
If you re having a really hard time excluding research material, write a
first draft that's just for
you, one that includes all that obscure stuff you love. Then when your
ardor has cooled, look at
the manuscript subjectively. After that go back and kill your darlings.
Remember that in fiction, the needs of the story ALWAYS SUPERSEDE the
brilliance of the research.
Conversely, there are times when an author needs to convey a large block
of information to the
reader and do it as painlessly as possible. The most obvious way is to
work it into conversation, or perhaps to toss it back and forth in the
course of a discussion. Break these blocks of information with action,
reactions, and especially insights or emotions from the p.o.v. character.
Using public speeches or business presentations can work this same way,
but with the same caveat.
Including letters, telegrams, and notes makes the reader feel like a
voyeur. Newspaper articles generated by the author and indented in the
body of the text can also serve to the purpose of providing an avenue
for research. And finally, Rita Award winner Susan Wiggs offers this
sage advice for presenting difficult concepts or material, "Readers pay
attention to what character say IN BED."
The other thing research does is create ambiance, verisimilitude. As you
sprinkle tidbits about
the character's world into the text, remember those tidbits should be
used judiciously and sparingly. Try to make them do double duty, using
them to augment actions or attributions.
"You may go!" Martin shouted and strode to the tall Paladin window that
looked out into the boxwood garden and waited for Gwendolyn to take her
leave.
Or allow research or description fit the mood intend to create. "The
room was spare and serene," sets a very different mood from, "The
table's carved wooden base was burnished to a rich tawny finish that
gave it the texture of oozing caramel syrup."
Architect Mies Van Der Rohe proclaimed that, "God is in the details."
Getting the nuances of your research right, will go a very long way
toward convincing your readers that you know what you're talking about.
Your own taste and judgment -- and a critique partner who'll tell you
the truth -- should guide
you as to how much research to include in your story. And remember,
using research judiciously is a skill that gets easier with practice.
Just like all the rest of this.
May you and your delete key live happily ever after,
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