Lost in a Good Book

I'm freezing cold and I think I'm beginning to run a fever. My armpits ache. Am I about to come down with some dread disease? Actually no. I'm re-reading one of my favorite books, Connie Willis's The Doomsday Book.  For those who haven't read it, it takes place at Christmas in the present and in the middle ages--at the start of the Black Death, to be more accurate. I decided to re-read it because it gives a good feel for a medieval Christmas and I wanted to get into the holiday spirit. I'd forgotten about the Black Death part!

The problem with me is that I immerse myself in a book a like. When I don't really care for a book I skim to get the story. When I like it, I'm in it, not conscious of words on the page, experiencing what the characters feel. And currently it's freezing cold and the Black Death has just arrived. I suppose one of my assets/problems is that I have too much imagination. When I go to a good movie I am not watching it happen--I am there. Same with a good book--I've been frozen in Russia with Dr. Zhivago, I've flown over Africa with Beryl Markham and I knew the Southwest perfectly before I ever visited it because of Tony Hillerman.

It's not only the sense of place in books, it's relationships too. Sometimes I find myself snapping my head off at husband John only to realize that the man I'm angry with is actually in the book I'm writing or reading. I suppose this is a great boon to have--I don't actually have to pay for airfare or really have to visit Antarctica. But it can be emotionally draining.  For this reason I tend to stay away from books about children dying or natural disasters wiping out whole communities because I identify too much.

This may be one of the reasons my books work well and readers tell me they identify with my heroines. It's because I identify with my heroines. I don't use them like puppets and put them into scenes in the book. I follow them, being sngry when they are angry, scared when they are scared, stumbling into mistakes with them, and falling in love with them.  It's a scary way to work because I don't exactly know where we are going, but it works for me.

So how about you? Do you get lost in a god book?
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Published on January 20, 2012 09:25
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message 1: by Brenda (new)

Brenda Kirton I definitely agree with you. If the character I am reading is going through a high stress or tense situation, I feel like I am doing the same, and I have to work at not taking it out on my family. If they have just went through a physically painful time, I feel like I need to check for bruises. Getting lost in a book like this makes it very hard to say to my self I will go to bed as soon as I finish the chapter. I don't notice the pages being turned let alone where the chapter ended. The draw back is when the character does something really embarrassing or mortifying, I am right there with them.
By the way, I really enjoyed my recent trip to Nice, thank you. I can't wait to find out where I go next.


message 2: by Malia (new)

Malia I totally agree. I find myself often rather sad because there are just some characters in books I would so love to meet and for obvious reasons cannot! One can get so involved in really good books that they can sometimes truly can take over:)


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