I just love reading stories set in other countries and I love reading suspense. Author Louise Mangos has combined both of these elements in her two thrillers, Strangers on a Bridge and Her Husbands's Secrets, which is why I was delighted when she offered to write a piece for Wendy's Writing Now on the importance of setting in a novel.
Over to you, Louise.
I believe it was Mark Twain who
initially coined the phrase “Write what you know.” Like me, he was a voracious
traveller, and often spent weeks at a time in the settings of his stories.
Both my suspense novels are set in
different areas of Switzerland, and I am lucky enough to have spent several
years in two of the locations. My debut, Strangers
on a Bridge, is set in and around the valley where I currently live.


Although I know my settings
intimately, I work hard to bring them to life for the reader. There are some
amazing locations in Switzerland for the settings of stories. I like to portray
them with a complexity I might award to any of my characters. The geography and
climate are as moody as the people I write about.
So I do agree with Mr Twain: Write
what you know. But I also believe writers should research what they don’t know
to make their novels better.
Louise is a compulsive writer and
drinker of Prosecco. Her novels, short stories and flash fiction have won
prizes, have been placed on several shortlists and read out on BBC radio. Apart
from the two novels mentioned above, her short fiction has appeared in Mslexia
and Firewords, and in the Hammond House, Brighton Prize, Nivalis, Ellipsis
Zine, Bath Flash Fiction, Hysteria, and Reflex Press anthologies. She lives in
central Switzerland with her Kiwi husband and two sons.
You can find Louise here:
@LouiseMangos
Enjoyed the interview.
ReplyDeleteSo glad you enjoyed it, Allan.
DeleteVery interesting post. Having read Strangers on a Bridge I can attest that Louise gets settings perfectly. I felt as if I knew the place! The next novel is now on my list! (it's a long list)
ReplyDeleteSetting is everything, isn’t it, Lindsay.
DeleteA great post. Thank you Louise and Wendy. Spookily I've just finished Her Husband's Secrets (though I prefer the original title The Art of Deception, which suited the themes more) and really enjoyed it. For me the setting of the prison was excellent and I loved how Lucie found friendship and bonding with the women there. A cracking winter read!
ReplyDeleteAh, you’ve just read it. Great timing!
Delete