On Writing What You Don’t Know
Somewhere back in caveman times, I envision a young,
creative soul with a fistful of ochre and torch soot. As she ponders the
limestone, instead of bison or aurochs or deer, her head fills with great
creatures who live under the sea and though she’s never seen them, she knows exactly what they look like. How they
move. The way they shimmer when sunlight hits their skin. And then, an elder
comes up behind, and after a dismissive grunt, tells her ‘stick to what you
know’.
It’s maybe the oldest pieces of writing advice out there.
And it has its merits. If our aspiring cave artist can only manage a
soggy-looking bison, she’s added very little to the world. Or maybe she paints
a respectable dolphin, except it’s blood crimson with snaggly tusks, and no one
is the wiser until some seafaring stranger happens by and says it’s all wrong.
Still, our intrepid artist hasn’t committed any harm. But is that always the
case?
In the real world, when we tackle a topic outside our
experience, we own the force of our words. For a reader in a marginalized
group, a depiction which rests on unwanted stereotypes can feel more painful
than the lack of representation itself. The main protagonist of At Shutter Speed identifies herself as
biracial, which I do not. However, I am
an adoptive mother who’d been watching her non-white, immigrant child struggle
with the changes that have occurred in America
over the past few years. (Although that’s his tale to tell someday if he
chooses, not mine.) Writing this story became my window into how scary and
uncertain all this feels to him. The challenge was how to avoid the trap of
falling into my own biases and perceptions, but I found that so long as I
maintained an awareness of this, I could approach it much the same as I do any
time I write a new character or setting. I’ve never been a war photographer
either, but I immersed myself in memoirs and geeked out with photos and cameras
until I was confident I could inhabit the character’s headspace in a believable
way.
“What you don’t know” is only true for a fixed point in
time. Perhaps it’s a piece of historical fiction set in an unfamiliar time or
place, or a voice you want to explore, but aren’t sure you can do it justice. A
magical thing about writing: you can always turn back. Don’t be afraid to
venture out of your cave and take your first steps towards the sea.
About the Author
In her own fictional world, Rebecca
Burrell is a secret Vatican spy, a flight nurse swooping over the frozen
battlefields of Korea, or a journalist en-route to cover the latest world
crisis. In real life, she’s a scientist in the medical field. She lives in Massachusetts with her family, two seriously weird cats, and a dog
who’s convinced they’re taunting him.
WEBSITE & SOCIAL LINKS:
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About the Book:
Title: AT SHUTTER SPEED
Author: Rebecca Burrell
Publisher: Cranesbill Press
Pages: 381
Genre: Women’s Fiction
Author: Rebecca Burrell
Publisher: Cranesbill Press
Pages: 381
Genre: Women’s Fiction
BOOK BLURB:
In the click of a shutter,
#Resistance becomes more than just a hashtag.
Pass the bar exam. Convince
someone—anyone—in the Egyptian government to admit they’ve imprisoned your
husband. Don’t lose your mind. For fledgling human rights attorney Leah Cahill,
the past six months have been a trial by fire, ever since Matty, a respected
but troubled war photojournalist, disappeared during a crackdown in Cairo.
Leah, the daughter of a civil
rights icon, grew up wanting to change the world; Matty was the one who showed
her she could. Though frustrated by the US government’s new fondness for dictators, she persists,
until a leaked email reveals a crumbling democracy far closer to home.
Risking her own freedom, she
gains proof Matty’s being detained at a U.S. ‘black site’, stemming from his work covering the
refugee crisis in Syria. Armed with his photo archives, Leah plunges into their past
together, a love story spanning three continents. She uncovers secrets
involving Matty’s missionary childhood, her own refugee caseload, and the only
story the deeply principled reporter ever agreed to bury. It’s what got him
captured—and what might still get him killed. With Leah’s last chance to save
him slipping away, Matty’s biggest secret may be one he’s willing to die to
protect.
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