Welcome, Guest! Why not create a free forum account today and join in with the world's friendliest bunch of Kindle enthusiasts

Location, location, location – authors don’t always use them wisely.

Thread Rating:
  • 0 Votes - 0 Average
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
 
Offline Joe McCoubrey
27 Jun 2012, 10:46 AM | Post: #1

Joe McCoubrey
**

Posts: 21
Joined: Jul 2011

Thanked 0 times

Location, location, location – authors don’t always use them wisely.

One thing most authors agree about is the need for accuracy when describing their locations – but just how far can they go in pinpointing exact street names and addresses? A bit of caution, and commonsense, is often needed. For example, it’s all very well describing a car chase through Lower Manhattan or London’s East End but beware having your drug baron or child kidnapper pull up outside a precisely numbered house in a precisely identifiable street! Think of the poor sod who just happens to live there!

It won’t do either to try to get around the issue by saying something like “midway along the terrace” or “at the far end of the street” because, you’ve guessed it, there’s another poor sod living there too!

SEE FULL VIEW AT: http://joemccoubrey.com/?p=742


Attached File(s) Thumbnail(s)
   
Offline Plummielass Reading bill rogers
27 Jun 2012, 07:52 PM | Post: #2

Member
***

Posts: 79
Joined: Jan 2012

Thanked 0 times

What I Read

RE: Location, location, location – authors don’t always use them wisely.

I have a thread on virtually the same subject.

One great howler I found was someone was taking a short cut from Leicester Square to Piccadilly Circus, via the back streets. Well any eejit knows you can see one from the other.
Offline Dorte Hummelshoj Reading Winterlude by Quentin Bates
27 Jun 2012, 08:02 PM | Post: #3

Posting Freak
******

Posts: 558
Joined: Jan 2012

Thanked 11 times

What I Read

RE: Location, location, location – authors don’t always use them wisely.

(27 Jun 2012 10:46 AM)Joe McCoubrey Wrote:  One thing most authors agree about is the need for accuracy when describing their locations – but just how far can they go in pinpointing exact street names and addresses? A bit of caution, and commonsense, is often needed. For example, it’s all very well describing a car chase through Lower Manhattan or London’s East End but beware having your drug baron or child kidnapper pull up outside a precisely numbered house in a precisely identifiable street!

Good point. Recently a Danish reviewer criticized a thriller because the writer used a house number which didn´t exist. I thought he might have done it on purpose because unless the guy who jilted you 30 years ago lived there you wouldn´t want to use a real location Tongue
Writer of traditional crime fiction. My blog

[Image: 51qhtZaEtGL._SL95.jpg][Image: 51DtkUTwjUL._SL95.jpg][Image: 61%2B462czKNL._SL95.jpg][Image: 41NJD8ISubL._SL95.jpg][Image: 51EiGhXfhsL._SL95.jpg]
Offline patrickt
29 Jun 2012, 03:57 PM | Post: #4

Junior Member
**

Posts: 7
Joined: Jun 2012

Thanked 0 times

RE: Location, location, location – authors don’t always use them wisely.

Worse than an address is a phone number. I have read that the phone companies in the U.S. have dummy numbers that go no where to use for advertising and such. It is a good idea.
Offline quaser Reading The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins
29 Jun 2012, 06:19 PM | Post: #5

Official KUF eBook Reviewer
*****

Posts: 302
Joined: Jun 2011

Thanked 1 times

What I Read

RE: Location, location, location – authors don’t always use them wisely.

The late, great Ed McBain, writer of the The 87th Precinct novels invented the district of Isola, which was based on New York's Manhattan, partly to ensure that he didn't fall into the trap of identifying too closely with a specific location. He also made up other names for New York's remaining districts. Though thinly disguised, it was very effective in that the geography existed, but no-one could specifically claim they were targeted inappropriately.

In a similar way, Batman's Gotham City was NY too.


Wine3
Protected by The Sword of Truth and The Shield of Honour
Offline George Reading In The Blood Steve Robinson
29 Jun 2012, 06:28 PM | Post: #6

Veteran Member
*****

Posts: 411
Joined: Jan 2012

Thanked 9 times

What I Read

RE: Location, location, location – authors don’t always use them wisely.

I base the books I write on my home county of Staffordshire. However, if there is a need to stray I will probablt take advantage of Google's Streetview. I've been to some brilliant places on that already and it hasn't cost me penny for petrol.
Chapin
Offline Trace Reading
02 Jul 2012, 05:50 AM | Post: #7

Veteran Member
*****

Posts: 369
Joined: Oct 2010

Thanked 0 times

What I Read

RE: Location, location, location – authors don’t always use them wisely.

I write fantasy so location is never a problem for me but I'd really hate to have my address listed in a book because a writer was going for too much authenticity. I know, for example, that the house at the center of The Amityville Horror has become a virtual tourist attraction with hundreds of people going to look while there's a perfectly innocent family just trying to live there. That would be such a pain.
Offline cecilia_writer Reading Bang
02 Jul 2012, 11:34 AM | Post: #8

That Singular Anomaly the Lady Novelist
******

Posts: 760
Joined: Dec 2010

Thanked 21 times

What I Read

RE: Location, location, location – authors don’t always use them wisely.

I've invented an extra small town on the Fife coast exactly because of this kind of issue. The only larger place I've written about is Edinburgh, where I live and where I can be reasonably certain that I know where the central library is and whether there are steps from the National Gallery up towards the Royal Mile (to name two examples). I often find when visiting somewhere new that looking at a map beforehand just doesn't give enough detail - for instance, whether there's an almost vertical climb to get to my b&b! (this once happened to me on a trip to the USA).
[Image: 51J0%2BT-LTfL._SL95.jpg][Image: 51K8-HuETSL._SL95.jpg][Image: 51%2Bkvr3dCwL._SL95.jpg][Image: 510SJwAwUxL._SL95.jpg][Image: 51YpqGWdwgL._SL95.jpg][Image: 61Me4CAUJWL._SL95.jpg][Image: 419ZzwduDuL._SL95.jpg][Image: 51mm%2B9-1jiL._SL95.jpg]
Offline Steve Robinson Reading
02 Jul 2012, 12:13 PM | Post: #9

Not Jefferson Tayte
******

Posts: 852
Joined: Sep 2011

Thanked 3 times

What I Read

RE: Location, location, location – authors don’t always use them wisely.

I like writing about real places. I think it can add to the realism but you have to get it right or you'll have the locals after you. Smile Having said that I made up a place in Cornwall called Porthwithian once because I couldn't find anywhere that exactly suited my needs. I go for real if I can though and it's nice to get emails from readers saying they plan to following in a characters footsteps next time they're in the area I've written about.
Steve
[Image: ITB%20cover.jpg] [Image: TTG%20cover2.jpg] [Image: LQE%20Cover%20%28Using%29.jpg]
A dark secret locked in the past. A family historian trying against the odds to unlock it.
Offline alexroddie Reading "Pompomberry House" by Rosen Trevithick
05 Jul 2012, 09:58 AM | Post: #10

Eccentric wanderer
******

Posts: 764
Joined: Jul 2012

Thanked 24 times

What I Read

RE: Location, location, location – authors don’t always use them wisely.

This is tricky ... I write historical fiction set in the 19th century, and a lot of my work is set in London. As anyone who's studied the subject knows, there's a pretty huge difference between the London of the 1890s and the London of the 2010s!

I find there's nothing like actually visiting the place and seeing it for yourself, preferably with a good map and an eye for architecture. It works wonders.

Currently Reading:bill rogers Last Book I Read:a v vates Favourite Genres:detective & historyFavourite eBooks:
See my recommendations
Currently Reading:Winterlude by Quentin Bates Last Book I Read:Did Anyone Die by Stella Stafford Favourite Genres:Crime fiction (police procedural, private sleuth, cosies)Favourite eBooks:
See my recommendations
Currently Reading:The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins Last Book I Read:The Swimmer by David Haynes Favourite Genres:Crime, Historical, Sci-FiFavourite eBooks:
See my recommendations
Currently Reading:In The Blood Steve Robinson Last Book I Read:The Charter Favourite Genres:Crime
Currently Reading: Last Book I Read: Favourite Genres:Fantasy, Crime/Thriller, Mystery, Comedy
Currently Reading:Bang Last Book I Read:Cellar Door Favourite Genres:Murder mystery
Currently Reading: Last Book I Read: Favourite Genres:Crime, mystery & thriller
Currently Reading:"Pompomberry House" by Rosen Trevithick Last Book I Read:"Ballet of the Bones" by David Haynes Favourite Genres:Historical fiction, literary classics, landscape writingFavourite eBooks:
See my recommendations