How you personify lonliness
Liam writes…
I am a person centered therapist and I love how you somehow manage to tune into human suffering so completely. All of your books seem to touch on isolation and despair so well. I just wondered how do you encapsulate fear and dread so well in your books. I've never read a book where the fear and paranoia stays with me once i close the book. There is no peace, I just always want to know what happens.
And i usually avoid human suffering but with your books i cant turn away.
How do you do it?
Thanks,
You dont have to reply, I just wanted to let you know how much I admire your writing prowess
Michelle Replies…
Dear Liam,
You kindly said that I didn’t need to reply, but I do want to thank you for your message, which I really appreciate. It’s a strange thing to spend one’s time evoking human suffering and yet at the same time trying to keep the reader turning the pages – but it’s very satisfying if one can achieve it. Perhaps that’s because it’s a form both of expression and communication. As to the “how do I do it?”, well, for me it’s a mixture of the objective – ie research, planning, plotting, pacing, etc – and the intensely subjective. By that I mean identifying strongly with the protagonist, so that I have them at the back of my mind always, including when I’m not writing. Plus lots and lots of re-writing. My Gothic stories seem to need more re-writing than my other books, and I think that’s because they are the most psychologically complex, and it takes time for stuff to come up from the unconscious.
Again, thanks so much for getting in touch. As I do battle with the re-write for my rainforest Gothic story, your comments are very encouraging!
Best wishes, Michelle
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