Christmas with the Old Masters--Botticelli

Monday, November 30, 2020

 

From now through Epiphany, I’m going to showcase seasonal art from the Old Masters, starting with Botticelli.

Allessandro di Mariano Filipepi Botticelli did several paintings of the Annunciation. This one is housed at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City. According to the Met's website, it was probably commissioned by a private patron sometime between 1485 and 1492.

The event in the painting is described in Luke 1:26-38. Here are selected verses.

26In the sixth month the angel Gabriel was sent from God to a city of Galilee named Nazareth, 27to a virgin betrothed to a man whose name was Joseph of the house of David. And the virgin’s name was Mary. 28And he came to her and said, “Greetings, O favored one, the Lord is with you!” 29But she was greatly troubled at the saying, and tried to discern what sort of greeting this might be. 30And the angel said to her, “Do not be afraid, Mary, for you have found favor with God. 31And behold, you will conceive in your womb and bear a son, and you shall call his name Jesus. 32He will be great and will be called the Son of the Most High. And the Lord God will give to him the throne of his father, David, 33and he will reign over the house of Jacob forever and of his kingdom there will be no end.”

34And Mary said to the angel, “How will this be, since I am a virgin?”

35And the angel answered her, “The Holy Spirit will come upon you, and the power of the Most High will overshadow you, therefore the child to be born will be called “holy—” the Son of God. . .” 38And Mary said, “Behold I am the servant of the Lord, let it be to me according to your word.” And the angel departed from her.

Next week I’ll look at a painting by Rembrandt.

__________

The Botticelli painting is in the public domain because of its age.


Writing About the Pandemic

Monday, November 23, 2020

 

When is it too soon to start writing stories about the pandemic? And should we?

When people are panicking, it’s not a good idea to feed into their fears. And if a writer is having a hard time handling it, maybe that person should wait until he or she can see it more objectively.

On the other hand, I’ve seen several good examples of how it can be done right. Since the comic strip Rex Morgan is written several months in advance, it took a while before its series on the Covid -19 quarantine began publication. But now I’m enjoying all those panels that show the characters living through what everyone else is dealing with.

Then there is humor. I bought a book from Audible called Inside Jobs: Tales from a Time of Quarantine, by Ben H. Winters. It is three short stories about crime during the pandemic and, since I purchased it on May 1, it must have been written quickly. The stories vary in style but all are interesting, and the first is hilarious as three gangsters working from home try to figure out how to steal a priceless postage stamp after the pandemic foils their first plan.

But what if someone is trying to write a contemporary novel? Will the writer date it by setting it during the pandemic? If he or she wants that specific setting, great. But the mystery I’m currently writing has nothing to do with the pandemic, and I don’t want to get sidetracked by it. So my “contemporary” murder mystery is written as if it was 2019 (without any reference to dates, however). Hopefully it will still be “contemporary” when life returns to normal.

Another option is to use the pandemic as inspiration for a historical novel with a similar theme but set at a different time. I recently read Pharmacy Girl, a middle-grade historical about the Spanish Influenza. Except for the historical markers, it could have been written about this pandemic. The book was published last year, before most people in the U.S. were even aware of Covid-19, so it wasn’t inspired by the current crisis. But it is eerily similar.

So if you want to write about the pandemic, go ahead.

__________

The photo was taken during the Spanish Influenza pandemic and is in the public domain because of its age.


Dealing with Reader Expectations when the Reader is Wrong

Monday, November 16, 2020

 

The courtroom scene from Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland is pure farce, and nobody would believe it. So why do television viewers believe crime shows that are almost as outlandish? And why do they expect me to perpetuate the fallacies in my own work?

I am currently writing a murder mystery with two parallel threads, one of which is a police procedural. I have done extensive research into those procedures and am trying to portray them accurately in the manuscript. However, I keep running up against critiquers who say, “but they don’t do it that way on TV (or in books).” And they give me the impression that my readers won’t believe me if I tell the truth. So what’s a writer to do?

In some cases, I’m dealing with the issue by being vague. Do the police really need a warrant or subpoena to see a murder victim’s financial records? I did an internet search and everything I came across discussed access to the suspect’s records, not the victim’s. Financial records aren’t crucial to the murder in my book, but I’m concerned that some readers may stop reading if they don’t see the procedures they have come to expect from TV. So when the detectives talk to the victim’s attorney, I wrote the passage this way:

Staci wrote down the information [about the value of the victim’s estate]. “Please give us her accountant’s contact information so we can review her finances.”

“I’ll email it to you,” Mr. Hunter said. “And when I talk to her daughter, I’ll ask if she’ll give permission for you to go through the records.”

Since those records belonged to a murder victim rather than a suspect, the police wouldn’t have any trouble getting them. Still, the process was always easier if the family cooperated.

Then, when Mr. Hunter talks to the victim’s daughter, he says this:

“The police will want to go through your mother’s financial records. Sometimes family members think of it as an intrusion, but the police will get the information with or without your consent. It looks better if you cooperate.”

Hopefully these passages will satisfy the reader while being vague enough to include the real facts.

Another way to deal with the issue is to explain the seeming inconsistency. For example, on TV shows the detectives always seem to be present at a lineup. I’m setting my story in Chicago, and the Chicago Police Department procedures absolutely prohibit that. So while the suspect is participating in a lineup, my detectives are at their own desks. Here is the way I explain that:

Although Staci would have liked to watch, it wasn’t possible. Under departmental policy, members of the investigative team weren’t allowed to attend a lineup. Even the detective who ran it couldn’t know who the suspect was. That way, nobody would say or do anything, intentionally or unintentionally, that would suggest who the witness should identify.

Of course, this approach creates several challenges. The explanation has to be short but, more importantly, it must blend into the story and advance the plot. If it interrupts the flow or reads like filler, it is better to leave the explanation out altogether.

Another challenge is describing matters my POV character doesn’t witness. I usually resolve this problem by having someone who was there tell Staci what happened. Or, as in the case of the lineup, she imagines what would have happened based on her knowledge of the procedures, after which somebody comes and tells her that the witness did identify the suspect.

From Dust to Dust will go through more drafts before it is completed, and these passages may change.

But I refuse to sacrifice accuracy for reader expectations.

__________

The image at the head of this post is one of John Tenniel’s original illustrations for Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland. It is in the public domain because of its age.


Covid-19 Drags Publishers Into the 21st Century

Monday, November 9, 2020

 

Covid-19 isn’t a good thing, but it does have some useful consequences.

Last week I finished another round of publisher submissions for one of my middle-grade historicals, and it was easier than the previous time I submitted (a different book) to these same publishers. Then, three out of six took submissions by email, while the others required snail mail submissions. This time only one required snail mail submissions. So it appears that Covid has dragged two publishers—or 33% of the sample—into the 21st century.

I never could understand why publishers preferred hard copies. Some of it may be paranoia about viruses, but requiring submissions as Word or PDF documents makes them unlikely, and good virus software detects and eliminates scripts and any other minor problems that may attach to those types of documents.

Email benefits the writer, the publisher, and the environment. I don’t have to waste money on paper, ink, and postage or spend time going to the post office. Editors don’t have to lug around paper documents but can read submissions right on their laptops or tablets. And if the editor isn’t interested, the submission can be deleted without having to recycle the paper, thus helping the environment.

It’s possible that those two publishers were teetering on the edge of the 21st century already and would have gotten there without the pandemic. Still, I’m glad the pandemic has caused some publishers to rethink their submission requirements.

But I’ll be even happier if one of them accepts my book.


An Hour Gained--Or Is It?

Monday, November 2, 2020

 


With yesterday’s time change, I dug out a poem I wrote in 2013. I’ve printed it on this blog before, but it remains timely. (And yes, the pun is intentional.)

Spring Forward, Fall Back

Spring forward,

To save an hour of daylight.

Put it in the bank

Until the dark of winter.

Fall back

Into the evening gloom.

Open the vault

To lengthen the days.

Empty the treasure chest

Of sunlight and illusion,

Evening hours borrowed from morning

And then returned.


No hour gained,

No hour lost.

Each day still has twenty-four

To run its course.


Minds are easily deceived,

But you can’t fool Mother Nature.