Roses and Readers, please welcome C. Hope Clark today as our guest. She's talking settings...one of my favorite topics. Enjoy!
My fiction carries a strong sense of
place. I prefer reading books where place impacts plot and characterization.
Most readers, in my humble opinion, want setting to be a solid piece of the
composition, where they feel they’ve left the world they live in and have
completely immersed themselves into another, regardless the genre.
When you consider place, note that people
as a whole usually fall into one category or another. They either love their
home and the comfort of roots, or they dream of travel. Any book needs to
accommodate one feeling or the other, if not both.
This blog tour I’m on of late, is in honor
of my latest release Newberry Sin,
the fourth in the Carolina Slade Mysteries. Setting sucked me into this story.
My tales are usually grounded in real places. Towns, beaches, rural areas more
than urban. Newberry Sin takes place
in a real community named Newberry. Why? Because I can so see myself living
there. It reminds me of age-old roots I wish still existed.
Small town Southern beckons me. I was born
in Rolling Fork, Mississippi and spent summers on my grandparents’ cotton farm.
Grandpa was a farmer who donned a wilted fedora even in the fields with Grandma
wearing a farmer’s wife dress and proverbial apron that could carry three dozen
eggs from the coop back to the house. I climbed pear trees and chased feral
kittens amongst the hay bales in the barn. Took my summer afternoon naps on an
eight-inch-deep quilt spread across a four-poster bed. My grandmother’s rooster
and Billy goat chased my sister, but loved me. I collected eggs but could not
watch a hen prepped for dinner.
I played in the hollowness under a
wisteria bush and tried to remember not to let the screen door slam on my way
out. Biscuits were homemade every morning, served with real butter and maple
syrup with my record being twelve biscuits at one sitting. For the longest
time, the only phone was a party line that I would sneak and eavesdrop on when
nobody looked.
Carolina Slade, the protagonist in this
series, loves the country, has a degree in agricultural,
and lives to right the
wrongs in what most people think is homespun rural Americana. But where there’s
money, frankly, where there’s humanity of any kind, there’s corruption and a pecking
order of the haves and have-nots. Slade traverses that world trying to maintain
that country setting stereotype and rid the world of the ill-doers for the
betterment of all. She’s an old soul in a forty-year-old body whom you might
fool once, but never twice. And family means everything to her.This Newberry setting appeals to my roots.
However, it appeals to an amazing number who’ve never spent a night on a farm,
too. We’ve reached an era where our grandparents were more likely urban than
rural, and so many wish they could’ve experienced what that was like.Which means in these days when we can
travel so easily, the ruralness of Newberry
Sin and the other Slade books beckons to the traveler. They can envision
themselves transported to barns, fields, rivers, and general stores, and if
only for the length of a story, belong to a different life.
Setting is a powerful tool. Its foundation
helps mold the personality, mission, and emotional substance of a character.
It’s why authors owe readers the purest delivery of that sense of place that
they can. Because to refine your players, they have to be home to understand
what to defend, or be away from home to have something to miss. Some piece of
place grounds them, or leaves them restless. They pine for what they don’t
have, or they find themselves unable to
leave it.

After WKDK-AM Radio in Newberry invited me
five years ago to talk about Carolina Slade’s first escapades on the air, I was
invited to one book club, then another. Each person, each setting, made me fall
in love with all things Newberry. I joined the Friends of the Library, a strong
contingency fighting illiteracy in Newberry County, and soon found myself at
their annual, old-fashioned luncheon of chicken salad, fruit salad, and a
take-away Dixie cup filled with a potted vinca or begonia for each person to
take home and plant.
This was what I wanted in my Slade books.
Five years after that introduction, Slade finally tackles a mystery in
Newberry, South Carolina. The town is thrilled. Heck, the neighboring towns are
thrilled. I’m beyond thrilled, because as I stated, everyone either feels at
home, or wishes they could be there, while at the same time journeying through
a mystery where the clues make everyone sure they can figure it out, because it’s
all so familiar.
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BIO: C. Hope Clark’s latest is Newberry
Sin, her eighth mystery. Hope is also founder of FundsforWriters, and her
newsletters reach 34,000 readers each Friday. Her novels have won several
awards, for content and covers, and Writer’s Digest selected FundsforWriters
for its 101 Best Websites for Writers for the last 17 years. www.chopeclark.com