Guest Post & Giveaway — Sharon Lynn Fisher: Writers Are Magpies

Ophelia Prophecy Blog Tour Button

Today I have a guest post from Sharon Lynn Fisher, author of Ghost Planet, a science fiction romance which had a premise I loved, which is that everyone that lands on Ardagh 1 eventually has the ghost of someone they once knew attach themselves to them. She’s also the author of the recently released The Ophelia Prophecy that takes place on Earth in the aftermath of genetic research gone awry. The Manta, products of human and insect DNA experiments, are now the dominant culture, and this story is about a Manta and a human getting thrown together and the resulting clash and fallout — another great premise. I was quite excited to hear from Tor about hosting a stop on her blog tour, and actually very pleased she picked the question I’d asked about world building. Enjoy.

(Tor has also offered 3 copies of The Ophelia Prophecy to give away to 3 readers of this site, so check that out at the bottom of this post).


I’m going to start off this post with the terrific question provided by Janicu:

I imagine that writers, like a lot of creative people, are like magpies that save little bits of something from the world, internalize it, and remake it, rearrange it, add a whole lot of their own magic, and voila. What would you say are little pieces of inspiration that went into the making of this new story? (If you wanted to mention ECHO 8, I wouldn’t mind hearing about that too)!

World building is a topic that is near and dear to my heart. I’ve mentioned in a few interviews how I used to hate it. I found world building really intimidating, and thought of it as the stuff that happened between bits of “real” story (action, dialogue, romance).

I have since become disabused of that oversimplified understanding. World building is so much more than descriptions of setting (though that part is pretty important too). It fuels just about every other aspect of the story. It helps develop character and motivation. Drives creation of the plot.

But moving on to this magpie thing, because Janicu really hit on something there.

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Connemara Abbey (image courtesy of Sharon Lynn Fisher)

In my current release, THE OPHELIA PROPHECY, I built settings based on real-world locations. Places I had visited and wanted to return to. Sanctuary, the last human city, is located in the otherworldly landscape of Arches National Park in Moab, Utah. After Asha, the heroine, is abducted from Sanctuary by the hero, Pax, their next stop is Connemara, in County Galway, Ireland. Connemara is one of my favorite places on Earth (based on what I’ve seen of it so far). Dramatic and often bleak landscapes, and a living sky, constantly shifting from sun to rain to wind. You can feel its history. You can almost hear the voices of the people who’ve lived and died there. No wonder Ireland produces such amazing writers.

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Granada Alhambra (photo by Javier Carro, distributed under a CC BY-SA 3.0 license)

But the real showcase setting of OPHELIA is the Manti capital in Granada, Spain. The Manti are the human/praying mantis transgenic organisms that all but destroyed humanity with a targeted plague. I needed a location suited to them — exotic and sensual, with a complicated history. This Moorish city is charming just as it is, but I depicted the fictional version as enhanced by the Manti to included living, organic architecture inspired by Gaudi structures I’d seen in Barcelona (and then finished it off by layering on some political and religious conflict). One key location, a tavern called Debajo, was inspired by an image I came across on the Internet. A stone, squat, clearly medieval building situated among the more graceful architecture of the Albayzin. This tavern peddles a drug inspired by a flower I saw and learned about on a trip to Costa Rica.

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Colman School (image courtesy of Sharon Lynn Fisher)

As my hostess mentioned ECHO 8 — my third book from Tor, due out early next year — I’ll say a word or two about that. That book is set in current-day Seattle, and also on an alternate Earth that has been devastated by an asteroid strike. The primary location is an old school building visible from I-90 on the way out of Seattle. I used to drive past the circa 1900 building with its boarded-up windows and thought what a shame it was that someone was going to tear it down eventually. But they didn’t. It was renovated and converted to an African American history museum, with affordable housing on the upper floors. For ECHO 8 it became the Seattle Psi Training Institute. Another key location is the creepy decommissioned ferryboat, Kalakala, which has a very colorful past. I once lived in a tiny house on a dock on Lake Union, near downtown Seattle, and this massive derelict was parked there for a time. I always wondered about it, and when I started writing ECHO 8 I did a bunch of research, and it became a setting (and almost a character) in my book.

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Kalakala (photo by Barnaby Dorfman, distributed under a CC BY 2.0 license)

But the book of mine that best illustrates the magpie idea, I’m working on now. I don’t want to say too much about it yet, as it’s still in the earlyish stages, but it’s set in Portland and features an artist heroine and a physicist/warrior poet hero. The heroine, Neve, IS a magpie. She collects bits of garbage she passes on the street, and she turns them into art books. She sees meaning and beauty in discarded objects as ordinary as a dry ballpoint pen or a popped balloon.

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Magpie (photo by Adrian Pingstone)

Writers are just like that. It can be things or people or places or even garbage. They are captured and cataloged every day of our lives. And they decorate our mental landscape. I remember one day I was walking down a busy street in downtown Seattle, near the Pike Place Market. I saw a woman walking toward me carrying a box. As she came closer, I saw she was wearing a fairy costume, and she looked annoyed. As she passed, I noticed her wings were in the box. There she was, a whole story walking down the street in broad daylight. And nobody seemed to see her but me.

 


Sharon Lynn Fisher Author PhotoABOUT THE AUTHOR: A Romance Writers of America RITA Award finalist and a three-time RWA Golden Heart Award finalist, SHARON LYNN FISHER lives in the Pacific Northwest. She writes books for the geeky at heart—sci-fi flavored stories full of adventure and romance—and battles writerly angst with baked goods, Irish tea, and champagne. Her works include Ghost Planet (2012), The Ophelia Prophecy (2014), and Echo 8 (2014). You can visit her online at SharonLynnFisher.com.


GIVEAWAY:

This giveaway is closed!

 

Rules:

  • This giveaway is for U.S./Canada only
  • Contest ends: Wednesday, April 30th.
  • One entry per person please!

4 thoughts on “Guest Post & Giveaway — Sharon Lynn Fisher: Writers Are Magpies

  1. Great post! Love the analogy of how writers are like Magpies collecting little pieces. So true! Grab a bit of dialogue here, an image there, a dream sequence from a week ago…

    I really enjoyed seeing the photos of Granada. Having read (and thoroughly enjoyed) The Ophelia Prophecy I tried to imagine how the buildings looked in my mind, and the actual images of the existing structures had both similar and different elements from how I visualized them.

    And the Kalakala. Just wow. Every time I see a photo of her, I’m awestruck.

  2. You and me both, Laurie. I’m a little bit obsessed with the hard-luck Kalakala. And regarding Granada, the Alhambra has many faces — different parts built at different times. In the shot I included it’s looking more like a fortress, but in some shots it’s just breathtaking. It’s a ton of fun sharing some of this stuff with readers. Thanks so much for dropping by!

  3. I just finished this book. I read it in one day because I couldn’t put it down and I was stuck on my back due to a nasty case of vertigo. I loved it. Which is new for me in my present self. I have become a bit jaded and cynical and so all of my old love for romance was lost to me. I can honestly say that this book opened the door (it is ajar) for me again. The sex scenes were well done. (always a bit cheesy for those watching/reading as when you are in the middle of one, the last thing you are doing is thinking of ways to describe it-unless of course it Sucks.) I will add, I know that romance isn’t all about sex but a large part of it should have some and it better be good. This was. Hot, sexy, a little bit risky, and well described. The rest of the story line was super interesting, on point with today’s science, as well as the social climate regarding difference. What I mean by that is: We have so many people stepping forward and owning their differences and that takes a lot of courage. To go against the norm. And then to be courageous enough to re-define it. As the answer is not to destroy the mainstream but change the current…at least that is what I think. On a side note, I was thinking about this book and the topic of differences last night when I picked the kids up from catechism (yes, I am an odd catholic but then again, I am redefining the norm) and I decided that due to my constant nausea and head whirling I would pick up some food. I took the kids to this little joint that has $2 Wednesday’s (though I ended up spending $40 and that really annoyed me.)and as we were standing at the bar area waiting for our to-go order the waiter/waitress (who I have met before at this establishment but the children have not) was born with female genitalia, etc but is growing a mustache and beard. I was a little bit anxious of the my 10 and 7 year old’s response. My 7 year old tends to ask really crazy questions and I didn’t want this super cool and kind person to be hurt by my son’s sometimes careless candor. To my surprise and joy they accepted the whole thing as normal. There wasn’t even a whisper of it on the car ride home. I know I am bit long winded here but it had me thinking of the book and the cultural upheaval due to differences and past hurts and hatreds that is the current landscape of our world. My point? The book is current. It is well written. It makes a statement. It is romantic. It is interesting. The world is represented well. AND I can’t wait to see what happens between Iris and Corrick (who sounds so sexy) and I want to see more of this world.
    I would also like to state that I like this site. I will visit as often as I remember and my time will allow. I can’t wait to put all the books you have reviewed (well a lot but not all) on my TBR list. Thank you for your hard work.

    • What a great comment. It’s really interesting to hear how this book had you musing about differences in cultures and how it’s relevant to regular life. I love when a book is like that. Thanks for your kind words about my blog too (you really made my day). I’m sorry you had vertigo though – I had an experience with that once and don’t care to repeat it.

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