I am S. L. Carlson, a proud and grateful BWL Publishing Inc. author. My books can be viewed and purchased by visiting https://www.bookswelove.net/carlson-s-l
I read a recent meme online: “A friend asked me how I was preparing for the fall, and it took me a while to I realized she meant autumn, not the fall of civilization.” This especially cracked me up because I once wrote a dystopia novel, and could easily see from where that thinking had come.
Because of my busy past couple months, I am grateful
that this year fall (autumn colors) have come later so I could enjoy them. Some
chalk the delay up to climate change. The change in foliage color certainly does
have to do with climate and the coming cold. I don’t really care when it arrives,
I look forward to hiking and dancing each fall among the crispy colors.
Colors are very much a part of writing description. It helps the reader see what and where we write.
For War Unicorn: The Ring, I’d paid a NY editor
to look over the novel before subbing it to BWL. I vividly remember her comment
that by the end of the book our hero had no physical description. Yes, it came
through that he was an innocent, strong-but-bumbling, country boy, but he had no
eye nor hair color. I defended that, thinking that with no description, anyone
could relate to him. Wrong. Readers need colors, even if it’s not their own.
And depending on the culture and time, would depend on
what a color is. Red River, in the afore-mentioned book, came as a result of blood
flowing down the river after a battle. It was named such considering the
peasants who lived in the area, and a way to remember their history. There are
many other more sophisticated words for red, e.g., cherry, vermillion, crimson,
wine, cerise, to name a few. For outdoorsy, tree-loving me, sugar-maple red
(especially on a sunny day) is quite spectacular.
What colors have you, an author, described? What
colors do you, the reader, remember from books, leaving a vivid memory?
S. L. Carlson Blog & Website: https://authorslcarlson.wordpress.com
BWL Inc. Publisher Author Page: https://www.bookswelove.net/carlson-s-l
Great pictures. Srill waiting here for some fall colors. Roses are still in full bloom.
ReplyDeleteWhen we lived in the Black Hills,?a visitor to the area asked when spring arrived. I started naming months from Feb to Nov — all months when roses bloomed…depending on year/weather. Hope you get great fall color soon.
DeleteArizona changes colors later, but it does. What I also consider for naming the colors in my books is the mood of the scene. In a thriller, red will most likely suggest blood. In a family holiday story, it might suggest cranberry sauce. Thanks for sharing.
ReplyDeleteGreat thinking of using color for mood! Thank YOU for sharing.
DeleteI grew up back east. My favourite season has always been autumn, and every Sept & Oct I miss the change of colors.
ReplyDeleteI feel for you. Missing something (even a season or climate) is difficult. This is the very reason my sister visits in autumn from Florida where it’s always green.
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