Gail Anderson-Dargatz  

Resources for Writers

On Finding Your Big Idea

marynovik

Literary Grave-robbing

When I began to write fiction, I was drawn towards stories set in the past because I had a love affair with literary history. Erotic poetry has a particularly strong pull for me, so it's not surprising that my two novels explore the intimate lives of real poets who wrote magnetically-charged love poems.

My first novel Conceit (Doubleday 2007) arose from my fascination with the poet John Donne and his seven children, especially his enigmatic daughter Pegge. I read his poems and studied maps and drawings of seventeenth-century London. However, the story didn't really spark until I dreamt that Pegge rescued her father's effigy out of the holocaust in Saint Paul's cathedral during the Great conceit-book-jacket1Fire of 1666. This was such an obsessive act of father-love, so bizarre and so provocative, that I was hooked on Pegge and set out to discover, not in history but in my fictional world, what drove her to it.

conceit-book-jacket1

Muse, the novel that I am just finishing, is also set in an historical city heaving with life--Avignon in the fourteenth century when the popes lived there. When I visited the immense palace of the popes, I was stunned by the secular frescoes in Pope Clement VI's bedchamber and found myself wondering what exactly went on there. It didn't take much research to confirm that the Avignon popes were no saints. In fact, Clement had an unofficial hostess, the Countess of Turenne, whom he called his "niece"--quotation marks supplied by my fertile imagination.

Although the church has swept much of the dirt under the rushes, we can't ignore the poet Francesco Petrarch, who wrote scorching letters about the pope's vices. I'd always admired his sonnets about the noble, un-beddable Laura. Now I was finding out that, far from being chaste himself, he fathered two children out of wedlock. Who was this flesh-and-blood woman he never married? Was she a scholar, a nun, a courtesan--maybe even the Pope's "niece"? The facts sparked off one another and ignited into fiction. I now had my main character, Solange, who began telling the story in her own voice. As she navigates the labyrinth of her life, her eyes and ears bring the dark corners and deep pleasures of old Avignon alive for us.

Mary Novik, December 2011

Mary Novikis the author of Conceit, a novel about Pegge, the daughter of the English love poet John Donne, a contemporary of Shakespeare.Conceit was chosen as a Book of the Year by both Quill & Quire andThe Globe and Mail. Long-listed for the Giller Prize, it won BC's top fiction award, the Ethel Wilson Fiction Prize.

Mary was born in Victoria and now lives in Vancouver, where she is putting the finishing touches on a new novel,Muse (Doubleday 2013). She is a member of the Vancouver writing group SPiN, which includes novelists Jen Sookfong Lee and June Hutton.

Resource Categories

Blogs on Craft

On the Building Blocks of Fiction

Tips on how to craft vivid scene that allows the reader to experience events right along with the characters.

On Finding Your Big Idea

Insights into the writing process and what a writer's day really looks like, as well as perspectives on research and writing from real life.

On Getting to Know Your Characters

Advice on the many ways you can make your characters come alive on the page for both you and your reader.

On Deciding on Point of View

What is the best perspective from which to tell your story? Writers discuss how they made choices on point of view and voice.

On Choosing Your Situation and Setting

Writers talk about how they use situation and setting to build story and convey emotion.

On Developing Conflict and Structure

From how to work in different genres to finding the real story, writers offer good advice on building conflict and structure.

On Revising

Tips on how to gain distance from your work and to how to re-imagine your next draft.

On Publishing

Writers offer practical advice on the business of writing and promotion, and on the importance of finding a writing community.

On Making a Living as a Writer

Writers offer words of wisdom on living on less.

On The Writer's Life

Writers talk about their life as a writer.

About Gail

Gail's novels have been national and international bestsellers and two have been short-listed for the Giller Prize, among other awards. She works with writers from around the world on her online teaching forums.