How important
is setting to you in a novel? As a reader, I’ve always enjoyed books set in different
parts of the world. I’ve probably learned more from novels than I have from
geography or history lessons!
I love to
travel, and visiting places I’ve read about in books is one of my favorite
things to do. Visiting new places also inspires my own writing—and helps me get
the details of the setting right. How lucky we writers are to be able to travel
and count it as research!
What kind of hero or heroine would live in a house in this amazing setting? Mendocino, California. |
An artistic water stop outside the Mountainsong Galleries in dog-friendly Carmel-By-The-Sea. I like writing dogs in my stories--could this inspire a scene? |
Then we set off on the road trip. We visited
Santa Barbara (what a beautiful town!); the quaint Danish village of Solvang;
charming Cambria; Carmel (my third visit); then drove north to visit friends in
Shasta County via San Francisco.
The car he or she drives can help define a character. I love this one parked at Carmel-By-The-Sea. |
We drove on the coast-hugging Highway 1 to make the most of the awe-inspiring
scenery (when it wasn’t shrouded in fog, that is!) Point Reyes, Elk, and
Mendocino were highlights.
This was the view from our room at the Greenwood Pier Inn at Elk, California. I'm sure I'm not the first writer to be inspired by this delightful place with its magnificent views and beautiful gardens. |
This pony grazing in a field of daisies in the Fall River Valley, California, might be just the horsey character I need for one of my stories. |
On this trip, I found just what I needed
for the story I am currently writing—but I won’t jinx myself by telling you
about it just yet. I also found a whole lot of inspiration for new characters
and new stories.
This tells me the person who set this scene near their front door has a warm and welcoming heart - the kind of heroine I want to write. |
We finished up
in the beautiful Fall River Valley to stay with our friends who farm wild rice.
They also produce a delicious chocolate bar made with puffed wild rice and
Belgian chocolate. The crunch and flavor the wild rice adds to the chocolate
truly is a taste sensation.
Wild rice growing in the Fall River Valley, CA. I love wild rice whichever way it's cooked but its particularly toothsome added to chocolate! |
My friends produce this chocolate from the wild rice grown in their valley. I'm hoarding my bar, but I don't know how much long I can hold out until I eat it! |
Please leave a
comment to be in the draw to win one of three bars of Fall River Wild Rice Dark Belgian Chocolate that retail for $4.50 each. I'm sorry, but this prize can only be sent to
addresses in the USA. Be sure to leave your email address with your comment.
Kandy
Shepherd writes fun, feel-good fiction. She is the author of The Castaway
Bride (set
on a tropical island in the Pacific); Something About
Joe, (set on the harbor in Sydney, Australia); Love is a Four-Legged Word and Home Is Where the Bark Is (both set in San Francisco.)
Visit
Kandy at her website