How to Create Memorable Settings that Bring Your Novel to Life

Your settings should work as hard as your characters and plot. Follow the steps below on how to create memorable settings that bring your novel to life.

Identity your major settings

By major settings, I mean the ones you will use in many scenes. My protagonist is Rae Riley, a nineteen-year-old young woman who has just discovered her father and his family and has moved in with them. They live in a rural county in southeastern Ohio. What kind of settings would a young woman move in?

  • Her home–this is a small farm where her grandmother, father, and three half-brothers live. Her grandmothers keeps alpacas. I discussed creating a home base for your protagonist here.
  • Her work or school–Rae isn’t doing college yet in the series, but she works over thirty hours a week as a check-out clerk at the local library, which is in the small town that’s the county seat.
  • Locations of any hobbies
  • Friends’ homes
  • Stores and restaurants
  • Church
  • The woods, fields, and hills that are part of the the southeastern Ohio landscape

This is Rae’s basic world. My genre is mystery, specifically cozy mystery. So I also need to choose settings that I can use in the mystery.

  • Scene of crime
  • Suspects’ homes or place of employments
  • Places to find clues and red herrings

Explore your settings like a tourist

Diving into your settings like you would a place where you chose to go on vacation will go a long way to making them memorable.

Rae needs to be in places where she can talk to suspects. A public library is a great place where that can happen. Anyone can walk through the front doors. In a rural location, more people might use a library because it has services, like the internet, which are more expensive or of poorer quality in people’s homes.

I’ll walk through my library setting and see what else it has to offer. Lots of bookshelves means Rae could overhear a conversation in an adjacent aisle, and it’s reasonable for the two people talking not to realize they aren’t alone. The maze-like pattern of tall shelves would be a great place for a chase. Most libraries have a room with historical documents for the local area–the perfect place for Rae to conduct research with resources that wouldn’t be online.

Rae works with a variety of employees at the library, from the director who is in charge to the janitor. How could these professional relationships affect a mystery?

What else does a library provide for a story? People return materials. What if patron left something incriminating in a book and must get it back? Libraries offer public internet terminals. What if Rae walks by a patron on a terminal and the site she’s visiting sets off warning bells for Rae?

When you dig deeply into your major settings, they will suggest characters and plot that will provide you with the raw material to make your settings memorable, breathing life into your novel in a way that only a carefully crafted settings can.

What memorable settings have you read?

Using Uncomfortable Settings to Develop Characters and Advance Plot

So what do I mean by using uncomfortable settings to develop characters and advance plot? The bedrock under this questions is tension–tension is the engine that propels readers from line to line, page to page, chapter to chapter. An effective way to created tension is to plunk your protagonist in a setting that makes him or her uncomfortable or uneasy. But how does this setting create tension, develop characters, and advance plot? Read on!

Creating Tension with Uncomfortable Settings

When we experience tension, we want to relieve it. Hence all the activities people engage in as stress-relievers. The same is true when reading fiction. When a reader experiences tension, she wants that tension relieves and there’s only two ways to do it: keep reading or set aside the book for good.

Placing your protagonist in a setting that makes them uncomfortable ignites questions in the readers’s mind: Why doesn’t the protagonist like where he is? Did something happen in his past? Are the people he usually find here a threat? What’s going on?

If readers are asking questions, that means they feel the tension. Most of the time, they will keep reading to answer their questions and relieve the tension.

Using Uncomfortable Settings to Develop Characters

Revealing what your protagonist doesn’t like is just as important as showing what he does like. For example, your protagonist goes to a very dingy bookstore in a sketchy part of the city. As soon as she enters the store, her thoughts reveal she is uncomfortable. In this situation, an author could introduce some backstory if her discomfort comes from an event in her past. Or she could remember unsavory rumors she’s heard about this bookstore. And yet she’s come anyway. Or the author can make it very clear that the reason the protagonist is uneasy is because of her history with the owner. All these explanations create tension and reveal something important about the main character.

Using Uncomfortable Settings to Advance the Plot

Once you’ve established your protagonist finds a setting uncomfortable, you have to explain why she is facing this setting. Using the example above, the protagonist doesn’t like this part of the city because it’s the poor part her family escaped from years ago. So why is she here? She believes the unsavory rumors she’s heard about the bookstore. So why did she come? The owner is the grandfather who disowned her mother. So why did she come?

All those why questions concern plot. As you write the scene, you can hint at the answer, perpetuating or increasing the tension. Or you can plainly answer it, but that plain answer not only releases the first tension but creates a new one.

For example, the girl visiting the bookstore owned by her estranged grandfather states why she’s come: her mother has disappeared and the cops think she’s just abandoned her. But the girl thinks some harm has come to her mom and she’s asking the only other relative she has for help. So I’ve relieved the first tension and created a second one.

What settings make you uncomfortable? If you’re a writer, how would you use them in a story?

Use Immersive Settings to Hook Readers and Transform Your Novel

Settings are the overlooked stepsister to characters and plot, and they shouldn’t be. Your selection and description of settings are just as important as the development of characters and plot. If your characters and plot aren’t grounded in a setting, then you don’t have a story. You have dialogue and action, but readers have no frame within which to reference them. Below are three ways to use immersive settings to hook readers and transform your novel.

What do I mean by immersive settings?

These are settings that are described so effectively, that paint such vivid word pictures, that readers feel they are actually experiencing the story along with the POV character. Those kind of settings hook readers and keep them turning pages.

But how do I write immersive settings?

Evoke the five senses. Take a look at a scene you’ve written. What senses have you used to describe it? You don’t, and usually you shouldn’t, use all five senses in every scene. But choose more than just sight for readers to imagine the scene the characters are inhabiting.

What’s the mood? What mood do you want to convey to readers? What is the mood of your POV character in a particular scene? The mood will determine what senses you choose to describe the scene as well as specific words.

For example, my teen sleuth Rae Riley hates hospitals. She visited too many of them while her mother battled a losing fight with cancer. Since Rae is my POV character, I will choose senses and descriptions that show readers Rae’s opinion of hospitals. Here’s an excerpt from A Riddle in the Lonesome October. Rae and her dad are accompanying Rae’s cousin Amber to see her father in ICU as he fights for his life after a riding accident:

Amber shrank into herself as we made our way through the maze that all hospitals adopted as their floor plan. Even if the color scheme was different from the hospitals in North Carolina, the miles of dead white light made it look the same. 

In the elevator, Dad put his arm around Amber, and she leaned into him, her breathing loud. 

I swallowed for about the hundredth time, trying to ignore the antiseptic stench that permeated every inch of every hospital I’d ever been in. 

Now a character who sees hospitals and medical procedures in a positive way might describe this journey to the ICU in more hopeful words, such as the smell was clean or refreshing. Instead of feeling like she’s lost in a maze, she notices the precision and industry of the nurses and staff she walks past.

Limit your description to make the most impact. One of the best pieces of advice I’ve received on describing settings came from romantic suspense author DiAnn Mills. She said that when you invite someone into your home for the first time, you don’t overwhelm them with a history of how you acquired each piece of furniture in your living room. You’d only discuss the items they showed an interest in.

In a similar way, you only describe what a reader needs to orient themselves in a scene with the characters and experience it through their senses. But how do you know what readers need in each scene?

This takes a lot of work–reading novels similar to yours to see how other authors write immersive settings and then practicing the technique over and over in your own writing.

The best tip is to limit your descriptions to the few aspects of the setting that will impart the greatest impact. In the excerpt above, I decided that since Rae is an amateur photographer, she would notice the quality of the light in the hospital. Since smell is the strongest sense to evoke memories, I chose to use that sense to convey Rae’s discomfort in hospitals. Both the light and the smell quickly and clearly immerse readers not only in the setting they’re walking with Rae, but also immerse them in her mind.

Here are more tips on writing immersive scenes for your novel.

How to Use the Sea in Your Stories

I’m away at a writing conference this week, so I’m reposting this article on how to use the sea in your stories.

Since I was twelve and went sailing with my cousin and her husband on their sailboat in Chesapeake Bay, I’ve been in love with ships and the sea. The might and the mystery of the sea fires my imagination. Below is inspiration for using the sea in speculative fiction, mysteries, and adventures.

Speculative Fiction

I’ve only visited the beaches on the east coast of the U.S. where European settlers first arrived, leaving behind four hundred years of recorded history. That history infuses the area, making it perfect for a tale of time travel.

In North Carolina, my family and I stay at Emerald Isle, a barrier island near a maritime archaeology site. Experts believe they are excavating the ship Queen Anne’s Revenge, Blackbeard’s flagship. In a speculative story, an archaeologist finds a way to Blackbeard’s time—a portal or some item salvaged from the wreck. Blackbeard discovers the way and travels to our time. The archaeologist has to get Blackbeard back to the 18thcentury.

A monster story works so well in the sea because, unlike stories of lake monsters, the unexplored depths of the oceans gives a hint of reality to the idea of giant, undiscovered forms of sea life. A fantastic story based on some fact has always appealed to me. “The Foghorn”, a short story by Ray Bradbury, comes to mind.

Mysteries

The possibilities for this genre are nearly limitless. How many middle grade mysteries have centered around an old lighthouse or sunken treasure? Tons, but that doesn’t mean current authors can’t put a new spin on classic settings.

For adult stories, the episode “Shark Mountain” from the PBS show Nature inspired me. It featured Howard and Michele Hall, a couple who run Howard Hall Productions. They produce and direct underwater films. Michele is also an underwater photographer and logistics coordinator for their expeditions around the world as they travel for their films.

I would love to invent a couple like the Halls. In a foreign country, the couple record or photograph something dealing with a crime but don’t know it. Their boat is searched, a colleague is attacked. When the local police seem unconcerned or corrupt, the couple conduct their own investigation.

To give a mystery an eerie atmosphere, nothing beats a deserted boat. The crew of a fishing boat finds a deserted ship. They can bring it in to harbor and then mysterious events start occurring, like someone following the captain or the fishing boat is vandalized. Or after the crew finds that abandoned boat, another ship begins to chase them and it’s a battle of wits for the fishing crew to reach port safely. That storyline combines mystery and adventure, which leads me to my next genre …

Adventure

When a writer sets a story in nature, she can count on using that element for all kinds of plot twists and tension. 

Two of my favorite nonfiction books are The Boy Who Sailed Around the World Alone and Dove, both by Robin Lee Graham. The first is a children’s books, stuffed with photos and the latter is for adults. Both recount the adventure of the author who became the youngest person to solo around the world starting when he was sixteen in 1965 and ending in 1970.

Those books alone provide a host of story elements from falling into the sea while working on the ship, to losing the main mast, to experiencing star-spangled nights on a still sea.

I could incorporate or adapt those real world experiences into a story involving a teen trying to sail around the world in the 21stcentury.

What books have taken advantage of the sea as a setting?

Writing Fun with Settings

What I mean by having writing fun with settings is finding places you can explore and see what fun you can have if you develop a story around them.

Fun Ideas for Settings

Here are some ideas to use if you just want to have fun writing about settings.

  • Research a location you’ve always wanted to visit and see what story ideas your research sparks.
  • Scroll through photo sites, like Pixabay, using search terms for locations you’d like to see, especially sci or fantasy landscapes.
  • Scroll through photo sites and write a quick scene set in the first setting that captures your interest.
  • Make a list of settings you personally hate. For example, I don’t like hospitals. Try writing a scene with a character who hates being in this setting. Then write one with a characters who loves it.
  • Do the same as above with settings you love.
  • Select a setting where you’d feel uncomfortable. For example, if you’re an urbanite, choose a small town. Write about what you would dislike about the setting. Write about what you might like.
  • Write about some of your favorite locations from childhood.

Since setting can also mean a period of time …

  • Research a favorite time period.
  • Write about which seasons is your favorite and why.
  • Write about which holiday is your favorite and why.
  • Write about the best event or year in your life.

Fun Ideas for Settings within Your WIP

Like I said last week, sometimes you need to have fun with your writing, but you can’t leave your WIP for very long because of a deadline. Here some suggestions for having fun writing settings within your current project.

  • Determine if you can move a scene you’ve already written to a new setting. For example, your main charcter’s (MC) best friend works at a candy store and you haven’t set any scenes there yet.
  • Examine your overall setting to see if there are locations within it you’ve overlooked. If your overall setting is a business within a skyscraper and most of your scenes take place in offices, see if you can set some in an elevator, the cafeteria, a stairwell, or even a bathroom.
  • Examine your settings to see if you’ve taken full advantage of what they offer. If your MC has a fight with a henchman in the kitchen of a restaurant, make sure the two opponents are using what’s in the kitchen–grabbing a chef’s knife, hurling a bowl of salad, throwing eggs on the floor.

For more tips on writing settings, click here. I’d love to read your suggestions for having writing fun with settings.

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