Authors, Writers, Publishers, and Book Readers
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Come on in, Julie. The water's lovely. :) That's an interesting question. If you want to give a certain feel to a story right away, picking a location your readers will already be familiar with gets them into the groove right away I'd say.
For example if I tell you my story will be set in Paris or Nebraska, you immediately relate different images in your mind to that setting. If it's a fictional town name though, you need never worry about there being anyone actually from that town whose name or description might match your characters. Me, I'd like to choose a name just for the fun of making it up. :)
Come on in, Julie. The water's lovely. :) That's an interesting question. If you want to give a certain feel to a story right away, picking a location your readers will already be familiar with gets them into the groove right away I'd say.
For example if I tell you my story will be set in Paris or Nebraska, you immediately relate different images in your mind to that setting. If it's a fictional town name though, you need never worry about there being anyone actually from that town whose name or description might match your characters. Me, I'd like to choose a name just for the fun of making it up. :)
I think maybe instead of saying which is better, I'll point out some pros for each and I think the cons are implied by the pros of the opposite.
FAKE LOCATION PROS:
-- You don't have to study the region's history. (Saves time, energy, and unleashes the imagination.)
-- Anything goes. You don't even have to adhere to basic physics.
-- Conducive to fantasy and sci fi novels.
-- Create atmosphere of mystery in real life about you. As in, "I wonder which place the author was REALLY talking about?"
REAL LOCATION PROS:
-- Rooted in reality. Some audiences need that.
-- Built-in audience: The residents of that town/state. (You know you've at least got one place you can easily set up a speaking engagement and, if it's a small town, probably make the local papers.)
-- If your book really takes off, you could end up creating an underground tourist spot of the town, which, in turn, may sell more books.)
-- You might enjoy learning about the history and sociology of a location.
I think maybe instead of saying which is better, I'll point out some pros for each and I think the cons are implied by the pros of the opposite.
FAKE LOCATION PROS:
-- You don't have to study the region's history. (Saves time, energy, and unleashes the imagination.)-- Anything goes. You don't even have to adhere to basic physics.
-- Conducive to fantasy and sci fi novels.
-- Create atmosphere of mystery in real life about you. As in, "I wonder which place the author was REALLY talking about?"
REAL LOCATION PROS:
-- Rooted in reality. Some audiences need that.
-- Built-in audience: The residents of that town/state. (You know you've at least got one place you can easily set up a speaking engagement and, if it's a small town, probably make the local papers.)
-- If your book really takes off, you could end up creating an underground tourist spot of the town, which, in turn, may sell more books.)
-- You might enjoy learning about the history and sociology of a location.
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