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Thursday, March 27, 2008

Larissa Ione | Keeping It Real

"Write what you know." We’ve all heard it, and maybe we’ve even stayed true to that. But what happens when you need to write about something you don’t know?

Well, that’s where research comes in.

Now, I love research, and right now, I’m researching something I’ve always been interested in – modern and ancient Egypt. The problem? Trying to blend fact with not only fiction, but paranormal fiction, and strangely enough, while there is a ton of information about ancient Egypt, information on modern Egypt, outside of politics, is lacking.

See, I’m working on the third book in my Demonica series, which is set mainly in Egypt. The first two books, Pleasure Unbound (July 08,) and Shadow Lover (April 09) were largely set in New York City and in an underworld hospital. New York was easy enough to research, since there is oodles of information available (plus, I was constantly bugging Stephanie Tyler, my Sydney Croft writing partner, for details, since she lives there,) and the hospital was easy, because I made it up, using real hospitals and my depraved imagination (hey, it’s a hospital run by vampires, demons, and werewolves – it takes a little depravity to come up with the creepier details.)

But trying to work sketchy information about modern Egypt and Egyptian culture into a world where paranormal creatures and their human enemies collide both above ground and below? Well, that’s proving to be a challenge, especially because I’m a stickler for detail and getting it right.

I don’t have a problem manipulating gray areas into something that works for a fictional situation, but I absolutely hate getting details wrong – so much so that when Stephanie and I were writing the first three books in the Sydney Croft Storm series (Riding The Storm and Unleashing The Storm, both available now, and Seduced By The Storm, available September 08,) I contacted several meteorologist friends for information, even though I spent 15 years working in the weather field for the US Air Force and National Weather Service, and I know meteorology. But I wanted to make absolutely certain that our fictional weather machine could, theoretically, do what we needed it to do.

So what about you? As a reader, how important to you is technical detail (whether or not you know it’s accurate?) For example, I have NO idea if Tom Clancy’s incredible detail is accurate or not, but he writes with such authority that he could tell me the earth has two moons and I’d believe it. So does technical detail help pull you into a rich world, or does it bog down a story for you?

Larissa Ione (http://www.larissaione.com/)

Sydney Croft (http://www.sydneycroft.com/)

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9 Comments:

At March 27, 2008 8:36 AM , Blogger Cheryl said...

I think it depends on wheather the story and if it will help or not and two if the author writes it in a wonderful and easy flowing way than I do like technical detail.

Other times I could do without the technical detail. So again it all depends on how well the author can incorporate it in to the novel.

Thanks Cheryl

 
At March 27, 2008 9:09 AM , Blogger Larissa Ione said...

That's very true, Cheryl. And you know, I think for me, it also comes down to mood. Sometimes I enjoy a fast paced, lightly detailed book, and other times I want something a little more detail-rich.

Ooh, and genre matters to me, too. I prefer really richly-detailed historicals, but when it comes to romantic suspense, I like something that really moves and isn't as detailed, if that makes sense!

 
At March 27, 2008 11:37 AM , Blogger Tori Lennox said...

I love doing research. Sometimes I'd rather do the research than write the book. *g*

 
At March 27, 2008 1:18 PM , Blogger Larissa Ione said...

Tori, research is sometimes a GREAT way to procrastinate! :)

 
At March 27, 2008 4:17 PM , Blogger Estella said...

If the story is good, technical detail does not bog it down for me.

 
At March 27, 2008 4:41 PM , Blogger Larissa Ione said...

I'm with you there, Estella!

 
At March 27, 2008 8:42 PM , Blogger Stacy~ said...

If the story is told well, is engaging and captures my attention, then I have no problem with the details. If the author takes the time to make the specifics interesting, then it really can deepen the story, give it flavor, and make me feel like I'm right there.

Yet there are days when a quick, direct story without a lot of detail is just what I'm in the mood for.

 
At March 27, 2008 10:47 PM , Blogger Larissa Ione said...

"Yet there are days when a quick, direct story without a lot of detail is just what I'm in the mood for."

Absolutely! I think I probably read mostly books like that, in fact. But the fully detailed stories can be so satisfying when I'm in the mood for one!

 
At March 29, 2008 3:49 PM , Blogger Kris said...

I am pretty much in agreement with stacy. As long as the story catches me then I do not pay too much attention to detail but sometimes it can make me believe it more with the details. But I do not want to go overboard. I am not a big reader of technical manuals. ;)

 

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