Thornwood:
Creating a fictional town
I have a habit in my
writing, I don’t often use real places. In my YA, Snapshots,
the city Cyc lives in, I didn’t have a name until one of the very
last drafts. I picked a name along the lines of Los Angeles and had a
bit of meaning. In Path of Angels, and Abducted Life,
there are no names for the towns the characters are from. It just
wasn’t important to the story.
But when it came to
Mistakes of the Past, I needed a town name because it matters
to Rose. She wants to escape the town and the tragedy attached. Plus,
the characters kept talking about the place. When I introduce Rose,
she’s looking at the name to the town!
Many writers will use real places, but that has its downsides. You gotta get details right. That’s hard if you don’t live near the place. And trust me, someone who lives there will let you know. This is the main reason why I often make up the places where my characters live. I can arrange it how I need it to and don’t have to worry about getting it wrong and throwing readers out of the scene.
Of course, that’s not to say I don’t get inspiration from real towns and cities.
Thornwood is actually a mix of two towns I grew up around: Newberry and Curtis, Michigan. Curtis is a tiny, little tourist trap. You can drive through it in a minute. Newberry is bigger, but not by much. I mashed them together to get a small town where most everyone knows each other, but it’s also big enough for a hospital. Both aren’t too far from where I currently live, so the inspiration for the city (which I never bothered to name) is inspired by that. Although, that city is much bigger than the one I live in.
Will I ever use a real life place for a story? Yeah. It will probably be somewhere I have visited or can easily. That will allow me to make sure the streets I use are accurate and makes sense.
Many writers will use real places, but that has its downsides. You gotta get details right. That’s hard if you don’t live near the place. And trust me, someone who lives there will let you know. This is the main reason why I often make up the places where my characters live. I can arrange it how I need it to and don’t have to worry about getting it wrong and throwing readers out of the scene.
Of course, that’s not to say I don’t get inspiration from real towns and cities.
Thornwood is actually a mix of two towns I grew up around: Newberry and Curtis, Michigan. Curtis is a tiny, little tourist trap. You can drive through it in a minute. Newberry is bigger, but not by much. I mashed them together to get a small town where most everyone knows each other, but it’s also big enough for a hospital. Both aren’t too far from where I currently live, so the inspiration for the city (which I never bothered to name) is inspired by that. Although, that city is much bigger than the one I live in.
Will I ever use a real life place for a story? Yeah. It will probably be somewhere I have visited or can easily. That will allow me to make sure the streets I use are accurate and makes sense.
Luc seeks atonement for the actions that banished him from his home.
Living as a priest in a small town, he strives to show how much he’s
changed with the hope that one day he can return to his family.
Haunted by the guilt that destroyed her family, Rose has shut her heart off. She vows to never let anyone near again lest she hurt them. When she meets Luc, she can’t deny the draw she feels to him.
But the past is not easily forgotten. When Luc’s past finds him, Rose is caught in the middle. Forced to face who he used to be, Luc must decide if he’s willing to give up his chance at redemption to save Rose. But doing so means he won’t be able to hide who he is. Will Rose be able to reconcile the man she knows with the devil he used to be? Or are the mistakes of the past too damning?
Haunted by the guilt that destroyed her family, Rose has shut her heart off. She vows to never let anyone near again lest she hurt them. When she meets Luc, she can’t deny the draw she feels to him.
But the past is not easily forgotten. When Luc’s past finds him, Rose is caught in the middle. Forced to face who he used to be, Luc must decide if he’s willing to give up his chance at redemption to save Rose. But doing so means he won’t be able to hide who he is. Will Rose be able to reconcile the man she knows with the devil he used to be? Or are the mistakes of the past too damning?
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About
the Author:
Patricia
Josephine never set out to become a writer. In fact, she never
considered it an option during high school and college. She was all
about art. On a whim, she wrote down a story bouncing in her head.
That was the start of it and she hasn't regretted a moment. She
writes young adult under the name Patricia Lynne.
Patricia
lives with her husband in Michigan, hopes one day to have what will
resemble a small petting zoo, has a fondness for dying her hair the
colors of the rainbow, and an obsession with Doctor Who.