By
J.J. DiBenedetto (Guest Blogger)
It’s
an
interesting
challenge
writing
a
book
set
in
1990.
In
some
ways,
it’s
harder
than
writing
one
set
in
the
more
distant
past.
There’s
plenty
of
research
material
to
help
you
get
the
details
correct
for
a
book
set
during
the
Civil
War,
or
in
medieval
times.
And
the
farther
back
you
go,
the
less
you
have
to
worry
about
year-to-year
changes.
The
everyday
details
of
life
in
the
year
1300
are
not
notably
different
than
they
are
in
1305.
You
also
don’t
have
pop
culture
to
worry
about.
But
going back only 26 years is a different matter. I was 20 years old,
and a lot of my readers are in my age group or, if they’re younger,
they’re still old enough to have clear memories of that era. It’s
far enough back that my personal memories are not always clear, or
accurate, but it’s recent enough that many people will notice the
details. Some of them can be looked up; I’ve got IMDB to tell me
that I can’t have my heroine go to a matinee of “Silence of the
Lambs” because that movie didn’t come out until 1991. But not
everything can be found so easily.
When,
for example, did the Internet really become an everyday thing for
most people? It was sometime in the 90’s, but I was using email
(and CompuServe – remember THAT?) as early as 1987. It’s hard to
nail things like that down.
Or
cell phones. When did you get your first cell phone? Do you even
remember? I honestly don’t. It was the late 90’s, that’s the
best I can do. But one of my friends worked in a call center for
NYNEX (one of the companies that would eventually become part of
Verizon) handling customer service for cell phones in 1989. At
least, I think it was 1989. It might have been 1988. Or 1990.
That’s
the problem. It’s too close to be able to get away with fudging
the details, but it’s too far away to be able to rely purely on
memory. And there really isn’t an encyclopedia to consult. Sure,
there’s Wikipedia, but it’s not always reliable.
So
why did I set my new book, FINDERS KEEPERS, in
that time? Why not just set it in the present?
Two
reasons. The most important one is that Jane, the heroine is a
spinoff character from my Dream Series novels. We see her in the
first book of that series, DREAM STUDENT, as a
fellow student and dorm-mate of that book’s heroine, Sara. That
book takes place in 1990 as well, and Jane is a year ahead of Sara
(who’s a junior). FINDERS KEEPERS starts with
Jane in her first months of graduate study at the University of
Oxford, so in order to maintain continuity, it has to take place in
1990.
The
second reason, and it’s also a big reason why DREAM
STUDENT was set then, too, is that the general absence of
cell phones, and Google and GPS navigation and so forth make both
stories a lot easier to write. Both heroines could have solved their
problems in about five minutes if they had access to modern
technology, and since I didn’t want books that were ten pages long,
I needed to find some way to work around that!
(A
third reason is that the college Sara and Jane attend in DREAM
STUDENT is a very thinly veiled version of the college I
actually went to, and that’s when I was there. Write what you
know!)
Jane, the archaeologist
Here’s
a very brief excerpt illustrating the similarities and differences of
a time that’s not very long ago and yet is a totally different
world:
As you can see from the postmark on the envelope, I’m still in England. I have not “washed out” or “packed it in” or, my personal favorite, “come crawling home with my tail between my legs.” How would that even work, anyway? It’s not anatomically possible, even if I had a tail.I have not been driven mad by the weather, or the thick accents and the different spellings of everyday words, or the inability to watch new episodes of “Star Trek: the Next Generation.” They do actually show it here, every Wednesday night. We all get together in the Middle Common Room to watch. Shows what you know.Besides, I’m sure you don’t even have a Middle Common Room back there at Cornell, do you? Certainly not one that C.S. Lewis and J.R.R. Tolkien once sat in. I could be sitting in the very same seat that the first draft of one of the Narnia books was written in. Where are you sitting to watch “Star Trek?” Some crummy dorm lounge with ugly furniture that doesn’t match the carpeting, to judge by the photo you sent last month.
FINDERS
KEEPERS is available now, on Amazon and elsewhere, both as an
eBook and in paperback (and soon as an Audible Audiobook!). What’s
it actually about, other than being set in 1990?
Blurb
It
should have been a simple job. All archaeology student Jane Barnaby
had to do was pick up a box her professor needed and deliver it to
him at his dig site, along with his new car. Yes, his office was in
Oxfordshire, and his dig site was in Spain, a trip of 1,400 miles
across three countries and two bodies of water. Still, it should
have been simple.
And
it was, until Jane discovered she picked up the wrong box by mistake.
Not the one with boring pottery samples, but instead the one with
priceless ancient Egyptian artifacts. The one that a team of
international art thieves is after.
Now
she’s chasing – and being chased by – the thieves. And she’s
picked up a pair of passengers who claim they can help her outwit
them, get her professor’s pottery back and return the artifacts to
their rightful owner. If only she could figure out which one of them
is working with the thieves and which one she can trust in this
high-stakes game of finders keepers.
FINDERS
KEEPERS
is on Amazon at http://getBook.at/FindersKeepers
and you can find links to all other retailers right here:
http://writingdreams.net/my-storie/the-jane-barnaby-adventures/finders-keepers.
As
for me, well:
J.J.
DiBenedetto is the author of the Dream Series. He lives in
Arlington, Virginia with his lovely wife and Danny, a white cat who’s
trained them both. He’s originally from Yonkers, New York. He
loves the New York Giants, fondue, photography, travel, the opera and
he’s a huge science-fiction and fantasy geek.
You
can follow me at my website – http://www.writingdreams.net,
and also on FaceBook
and Twitter.
Last,
but certainly not least, I have a giveaway! I have a free eBook copy
of FINDERS KEEPERS, and also a five-book eBook box set of my
Dream Series novels. Just comment to this post for a chance to win!
9 comments:
Greetings, James!
Welcome back to Beyond Romance. Your latest adventure sounds just as engaging as your previous series. Jane's personality comes through loud and clear, even in that short excerpt.
The new book sounds wonderful! I lived in Oxfordshire for 32 years...so the local colour appeals....as does the plot!
The new book sounds wonderful! I lived in Oxfordshire for 32 years...so the local colour appeals....as does the plot!
What a fun problem you have writing these books. I don't remember when the internet went to every home, but my husband was a programmer so we always had what ever was coming out. We actually got to beta Microsoft Word 1.0 and that didn't actually go to the public til about version 6 or 7. What a trip. I also remember being introduced to the innovative new storage medium where one could store an entire room of data on one record like disc now commonly known as the CD. These days, even that is obsolete. But then, I also remember the rotary telephone and party lines. *sigh*
It was nice meeting you and I look forward to reading your books. Thank you.
Thanks! I hope you'll enjoy them!
Thanks for hosting me today!
interesting sounding
bn100candg at hotmail dot com
When you go back to a time of memory for many people the details do need to be more accurate.
Interesting thank you.
marypres(AT)gmail(DOT)com
Love the idea of time travel to times I can actually recall!
emmasmom69 AT gmail DOT com
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