Writing a real place - but feeling weird doing so

GlitterRain

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So my trilogy (first draft already completed) is based on a real place - actually, the area where I live currently. It has the perfect ratio of history, preserved past, ghosts of the past, and combination of wealth and poverty for this trilogy to take place in, and ever since taking a college literature class on the region, I wanted to write something that takes place here and tell what I see of the area. I’ve wandered the very same streets my characters wander in the downtown area of the city in question and have explored nearby smaller cities/towns and rural land.

However, the area itself is small, and I feel . . . weird for calling out specific places/neighborhoods or even streets, especially in the downtown area of the city. The downtown area is where the MC lives in the first book (in a motel that doesn’t actually exist). Then in books two and three, the MC lives on a rural farm, which doesn’t feel as weird to write because it’s less “real” than the city, as in it doesn’t technically* exist and people can’t go find out if it exists or not.

*technically, because the farmhouse itself does/did very much exist in another county.

This same series has NYC in it, as well, and while I have never lived there and am not as familiar with the city as my home city, it feels less weird to try to be specific about places. For instance, at one point while he is in NYC, my MC and his friend stop at a cafe, likely somewhere in Manhattan. When writing this, I felt like I could make the cafe be however I wanted it to be because there are probably dozens if not hundreds of cafes in Manhattan. How would the reader ever be like, “Oh, it’s cafe X!”? However, in book one, the MC and his girlfriend frequent an antique store in the downtown area of my home city. I think it’s very likely that a person from the area would know what antique store I’m talking about, which feels weird even if I do not call the store out by name.

I want people to consider these books to be literature of the region and fall into that category. So on the one hand, I really want to make this book depict the area accurately - I want people from outside the area to leave the trilogy feeling like they know this area better than they did before (if they even knew it existed) - but on the other, I just have issues with “real” feeling “weird.”

If it’s at all helpful to see where I am coming from, my standalone book that I wrote before this takes place in New Hampshire (a state I have yet to visit but know some about), in a defined area/county, but the towns are mostly fictional, and that felt comfortable for me to write.

My question is, when I start revisions for the trilogy, how should I handle setting, because it definitely needs work. Should I just not worry about place-dropping specific areas? Should I fictionalize part of the city? What have you all done when writing real places? I especially want to hear about experiences writing smaller areas, but if you’ve written a story in NYC or some other major metropolitan area, let me know how you handled that, as well.
 
Place is so important in my fiction that it almost amounts to being a character. I set The Song of the Blue Bottle Tree in small towns and rural areas located in my home county in Arkansas. Real places appear next to fictional ones. People who live in Hempstead County will recognize which are which, and people who don't live there aren't going to care. Because I am a naturalist, I concentrate on setting the scene with fauna, flora, and landscapes. The book refers to real county roads, highways, several local graveyards, and a couple of high schools, but businesses are invented as I need them, except for the local Dairy Queen. DQ is unbiquitous in that part of the world. Specific places appear only as needed to advance the story; place-dropping wastes words that could be put to better use elsewhere.

Hope that helps.
 
Thank you! This does help. I have a follow-up question for you:
The book refers to real county roads, highways, several local graveyards, and a couple of high schools, but businesses are invented as I need them, except for the local Dairy Queen.
How do you handle characters interacting with places that are important to plot or are even a little detail that develops their backstory? For instance, you mentioned high schools. Would you allow a character to be a graduate of a certain, real high school, or would you omit that for one reason or another or create a fake high school for them to have graduated from?
 
The high schools mentioned in the story are real schools that my parents, grandparents, aunts, uncle, and many friends attended. The towns are small, with only one high school each, named after the towns. I did have a character attend the smallest school several years after the district was consolidated and the students bussed to the larger town.

My personal approach to using fictional v. real places: if no one directly involved with an institution is being maligned, It's a matter of artistic choice. For example, if the principal in the book is an evil person, I'd probaby invent an institution to avoid uncomfortable speculations about real principals, past and present. Simply connecting a character with a school is less likely to rouse comparisons. If a town is large enough to have more than one high school, and the high school is the site of a major part of the plot, I'd probably invent an institution to have more leeway in setting the scene.
 
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because there are probably dozens if not hundreds of cafes in Manhattan
Try tens of thousands. There are probably several hundred on Columbus Avenue (9th ave) alone. I set stories in NYC all the time. Never lived there, but I've visited at least twice a year for decades and feel like I know it as well as my hometown. Everything is anonymous there. You could write about anything and nobody could ever say nope about it.
New Hampshire
I lived there for a few years and still own a house there. My home away from home. It's up in the White Mountain area, which is the anti-NYC. You kind of have to know the jam to pull off a story up there... not like there are many denizens to read it, and if every single one of them did, it's still fewer than one residential block in Manhattan.
 
Place is so important in my fiction that it almost amounts to being a character.
How do you make setting almost an additional character? I understand adding details to locations to really set the scene to the reader, but is there anything you do in addition to that? Does your setting change (like in weather) to mirror the story or even propel it forward? I want to do what you described in my writing and I’m wondering how to weave it in.

Do you know of any writers who do this particularly well? I should go read your book for examples.
 
How do you make setting almost an additional character?

One starts by intrinsically linking a story with a particular environment. The Song of the Blue Bottle Tree would have been a different story had it taken place anywhere else or in any other time period. The environment reflects and informs the story in many ways, blantant and subtle.

Oddy enough, I'm currenty writing about this topic for my website. The essay should be up within the next few weeks, depending on how quickly I finish an article on turkey vutures for Wyoming Wildife Magazine. You might like to check it out for better details than I can suppy here. In the meantime, I'd be honored for you to read my book as a study in setting as character. Thank you for considering it.
 
Oddy enough, I'm currenty writing about this topic for my website. The essay should be up within the next few weeks, depending on how quickly I finish an article on turkey vutures for Wyoming Wildife Magazine. You might like to check it out for better details than I can suppy here. In the meantime, I'd be honored for you to read my book as a study in setting as character. Thank you for considering it.
It sounds like I came along with my question at just the right time then. I look forward to reading the essay! I have your book now as well and look forward to reading it in the next weeks.
 
It sounds like I came along with my question at just the right time then. I look forward to reading the essay! I have your book now as well and look forward to reading it in the next weeks.
Thank you! I appreciate your interest so much.
 
@GlitterRain, I understand how putting your small town on the literary map would feel weird, but have at it.

The place where I've lived the past 22 years is a borough of around 4,200 people, though being the county seat and full of doctors, lawyers, and other professionals, it feels a lot bigger. That said, its main street is about four blocks long and most residents could name off every shop in order. That hasn't stopped at least one of our goodly company of local writers from cramming in an imaginary bookstore and a coffee shop that isn't Starbucks. Heck, she even gave us bears in the nearby county park. I don't think it has bears, and I know good and well we don't have a bookstore (more's the pity), but she did it confidently and gets away with it.

If you slide a fictional business into your downtown, you'd want to call the main drag what it's really called, but you don't have to be specific as to what block it's on. Let people use their imaginations.

I'd recommend being vague if you mention specific residential streets. Like, I wouldn't say, "The big, ramshackle house at 1205 West Maple," but you can set a house on that street, if it has a particular character. Or if your town has tree streets (a lot of American towns and cities do), give the real one a different tree name.

Your project sounds like fun. And if you're concerned about it, just remember that 221b Baker Street, London, does not exist. No. 222, yes, and it's a shop dedicated to Sherlock Holmes souvenirs. Who knows, if your stories hit big, the same may happen for you.
 
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