Kim Fielding's Blog, page 85

March 25, 2012

Research

Today I'm going to share with you one of my deep, dark secrets: I really love doing background research for my fiction.

Once an academic geek, always an academic geek, I guess. And fiction gives me the excuse to research all sorts of topics that have nothing whatsoever to do with my academic specialty but are still really interesting. For example, for the Praesidium trilogy I ended up learning about nineteenth century sailing ships. Didn't know the first thing about the topic ahead of time.

Also--and I suppose maybe this is more evidence of my geekhood--I love history. Not the boring stuff about which year some war was fought or who signed which treaty. But the cool stuff, like what did people eat in medieval England, or how did the Roman empire affect language and culture throughout Europe, or what were the sanitation practices in Victorian London. It helps when I've traveled to some of the places I write about and I can actually picture the houses and the countryside.

Doing research makes me feel a little like a detective. And it gives me a fantastic excuse to talk to people and ask them all sorts of nosy questions, to try just a taste of places or lifestyles or jobs that will never be mine.

Often the research itself suggests plotlines I'd never have thought of on my own. Sometimes the research slows down my writing because I end up on some fascinating detour, but then I never know when that detour will come in handy.

And there's a really deep satisfaction I get when I'm able to paint details with precise accuracy, even if nobody but a few people who happen to be familiar with the topic will realize how accurate those details are. So if you're reading one of my works and you come accross a factoid on, say, the weather during D-Day, you can rest assured it's as correct as I was able to get it.
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Published on March 25, 2012 11:17

March 21, 2012

Creativity

So I'm back from New York City and working away. Last night I finished the first draft of my newest novel, tentatively titled Brute. It's another darkish fantasy, so if you enjoyed the Praesidium books I think you'll like this one. Now it's time for editing, which is a process I've grown to enjoy. I learn a lot from it, and it's such fun to see my work get all polished and pretty! It's also wonderful to get my first chance to see how readers react to a story.


I heard an interview on NPR this morning with Jonah Lehrer, author of a book called Imagine: How Creativity Works. I haven't read his book yet. But he was talking in the interview about the portion of the brain (it's in the right brain) responsible for creative leaps as well as things like understanding jokes and metaphors. And he was saying how lots of people experience these creative leaps in bed in the morning or while showering. Hey, that's me!


For me, creativity is usually a very sudden process. I can't force it, but then while I'm driving or brushing my teeth, the solution I'm looking for or the new plot twist just pops into my head, all shiny and tied with a bow.
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Published on March 21, 2012 21:39

March 19, 2012

Guest blogging today

Today I'm guest blogging at Guys Like Romance, Too: http://www.guyslikeromancetoo.blogspo...
Come read about how Ennek and Miner came to be, and read an excerpt from Equipoise.
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Published on March 19, 2012 10:40

March 17, 2012

More NYC

My latest novel is at 88,878 words and I think I'm on the final scene of the first draft. But it's late and I have an earlyish flight, so much as it's killing me to do so, I'm going to have to give it up for tonight.

Also, the vicinity of Times Square is not the best place to be on a St. Pat's Day Saturday. I tried to walk around the city today but gave up due to hordes of drunken college-age people. Still, I think NYC ties with San Francisco for the best people-watching in the world. I bet a few of the people I saw over the past couple days will end up in my future novels.
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Published on March 17, 2012 20:39

March 16, 2012

NYC

I'm in New York City for a few days. I haven't been here for years and unfortunately I'm too busy with work to do much sightseeing. But I have a wonderful view of Times Square from my hotel room, which helps. The Croatian food I had for dinner last night and the cheesecake I had for today's lunch also help.

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Published on March 16, 2012 13:12

March 10, 2012

Cover

I just saw the pencil sketch for the cover of my upcoming novel, Good Bones, and it's terrific. The artist managed to draw the protagonists exactly how I saw them in my head. Within the next two weeks or so I ought to get the final, painted version back, and then I can share it with you.

Next week I'm off to an academic conference in New York, and I'm not ready for it. I enjoy conferences and I'm usually better prepared, but this time I happen to be 63,000 words into my latest novel, and I'd so much rather be writing that!
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Published on March 10, 2012 13:41

March 6, 2012

I'm feeling very official now

Dreamspinner Press has posted my author bio.

No links to books yet, but those will be there eventually.
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Published on March 06, 2012 11:09

March 3, 2012

My eyes are bigger than my stomach

The other day my wonderful, supportive husband gave me a lecture on over-extending myself. This may have had something to do with the fact that I currently have four books (two novels and two textbooks) in various stages of writing and editing. Or maybe it was because I had just announced to him that I intend to attend the GayRomLit retreat for the first time, even though that will mean traveling to Albuquerque less than two weeks after I return from a conference in Europe. My husband may have had a teeny-weeny little point.

Whenever I ordered more food than I could eat, my grandmother used to say that my eyes are bigger than my stomach. I wonder if there's a similar phrase that can be applied to life in general?
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Published on March 03, 2012 21:42

February 25, 2012

Sigh

This weekend I'm grading exams. Far, far too many exams. It's a difficult enough exercise to begin with, especially because I'd much rather be working on my latest novel (I'm 24,000 words in). But then I get unintelligible handwriting, inability to follow simple directions, atrocious mangling of the English language, and flagrant disregard for reality. For example, I have learned this weekend that Christopher Columbus founded the United States, that the Nazis tried to kill all the Jews in Germy, that a person might be concerned about the possibility that events will sparrow out of control, and that there exists something (I'm not sure what it is) called a futurity.
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Published on February 25, 2012 15:29

February 21, 2012

Interview

Today I'm interviewed on M.R. Gott's blog. There are some great questions, so come have a read: http://wherethedeadfeartotread.blogsp...
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Published on February 21, 2012 17:20