Memoir Writing Tips by Denis Ledoux: Establish Your Setting

Posted by Kathleen Pooler/@kathypooler with Denis Ledoux/@DenisLedoux

 

“Rule one: Write about settings you’re familiar with.”  Jeffery Deaver

 

This is the third session in a series of Memoir Writing Tips by  Memoir Author and  Teacher Denis Ledoux in preparation for “The Memoir Network’s “November is Lifewriting Month .” Today’s topic is Establishing Your Setting.  Here are :Session One on Action and Session Two on Character Description.

 

Welcome back , Denis!

Denis Ledoux author profile
Denis Ledoux, Author, Teacher, Editor

 

Every story needs a believable setting. Setting will both put your characters in their context and make them seem real.

 

The setting is both where and when your story occurs. The where is the place in which the story occurs. It includes interiors and exteriors of buildings, the landscape, and the political demarcations (town, county, country, etc.). The when includes the calendar time as well as the history of the characters and of their community (family, group, nation, etc.). Setting, like character, is also best established with ample sense-oriented details.

 

Always place your story in a recognizable setting. That is, use descriptive writing to show us where your story occurs! Let us see the double Cape, with its faded red paint and two dormers directly above the downstairs windows. Give us a view of the living room inside, to the left of the front entrance, where you were sitting in one of the stuffed wing-backed chairs. Let us notice you passing your finger over the worn arm rest as you come to a frayed upholstery cord and thoughtlessly pull it. Point out the full-leafed maples and oaks (not just generic trees) outside the clear window next to your chair and hear the car that is crunching stones in the driveway. Let us taste the pastries–cobblers and brownies and molasses cookies–that you are being served on large oval china that belonged to the grandmother of your hostess.

 

Without the sort of tangible physical setting provided in the paragraph above, your story remains an ethereal piece–inhabited by phantoms in a conceptual space. You story needs to have a sense of place that is very real. Descriptive writing full of sensory details will do that.

 

Your character also inhabits intangible settings that are not physical. Writers must pay attention to these spiritual, historical, cultural, and economic settings in order to effectively convey full characters! What is your character’s cultural community: Yankee, Jewish, Lithuanian, African, or Chinese? Show us how the person interacts with this background. We need to know about the person’s economic status: is she the wife of an upper-income lawyer or a single woman who works as a secretary at a hardware store in a small town; is he the third son and sixth and last child of a mill worker and a store clerk or the only child of a heart surgeon father and corporate lawyer mother? Is your character the first person in her family to graduate from high school? The reader needs to know the education levels, religious affiliations, and spiritual affinities of the people you are writing about. Your characters will otherwise remain stick figures without any contexts–or, to use another image, fish out of water.

 

In short, as part of the setting, we need to know the entire context that surrounds your character. These include: physical, intellectual, spiritual, cultural, economic, educational, professional, occupational, personal and public. These aspects of your characters must be explored through descriptive writing.

 

The setting is a very important aspect of your lifestory. It can change your story from a parochial one that is of interest only to family and friends to a universal story that becomes the voice of a generation and of an shared experience.

 

Good luck writing!

 

***

Thank you Denis for showing us how descriptive writing about where and when our stories take place can help our stories become “the voice of a generation and of a shared experience.” Your specific examples are very useful.

Author Bio: Every November, Denis offers November is Lifewriting Month. NILM provides writing prompts via e-mail, free tele-classes on memoir-writing techniques and many surprise memoir gifts. Denis is the author of the classic Turning Memories into Memoirs/A Handbook for Writing Lifestories. Most recently , he completed his mother’s memoir, We Were Not Spoiled, and his uncle’s, Business Boy to Business Man. Denis is currently working on a book about “writing with passion.” Jumpstart materials are also available for writers wishing to be memoir professionals in their communities.

 

How about you? Do you have questions for Denis on how to incorporate setting into your writing?

 

Denis has generously offered to give away the Memoir Start-up Package at the end of the series to a commenter whose name will be selected in a random drawing.

 

startuppackagemedium
The Memoir Start-up package

We’d love to hear from you. Please leave your comments below~

 

 

Next Week:

 

Monday, 10/21/13:  “WOW! Women on Writing Book Tour  and Giveaway with Memoir Author Toni Piccinini on The Goodbye Years: “The Messy Middle””

 

Wednesday, 10/23/13: “Kvetch: A Jewish Memoir of Music and Survival, African Style by  Memoir Author Greta Beigel”

 

Friday, 10/25/13: Session Four of “Memoir Writing Tips by Memoir Author, Teacher and Editor Denis Ledoux: Conveying Theme Effectively.”

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

14 thoughts on “Memoir Writing Tips by Denis Ledoux: Establish Your Setting”

  1. I really enjoyed reading your words, Denis! Often in poetry, I write from a setting in nature and it leads me to the wisdom found in nature! I appreciated being reminded how important setting is for the reader when writing prose – its universality!!!

    1. Thanks for sharing about your experience with poetry. I find that setting can change how I assess a scene or appreciate what happened. Setting is also almost a character in a story.

  2. Kathy, thanks for hosting this series from Denis. These tips are pure distilled essence of life writing wisdom, great for beginners and a powerful refresher for veterans. Thank you Denis.

  3. One is always amazed how much goes into a memoir and it’s craft. It is really a true to life novel.

    Thanks so much for sharing Denis’s tips with us through having him on your blog, Kathleen. I thoroughly enjoyed reading this and hope to be counted in the give away. 🙂

    1. A good memoir employs many novelistic techniques. It’s only that the writer may not make things up. Some may disagree with me on this, but I am firm that a memoirist must not make anything of essence up–I’m not saying you advocate this but thanks for the occasion to make an important point about memoir writing.
      Was your family car in 1955 red or blue? Choose a color–it’s not likely to change the story. But, don’t make up a story about why your parents divorced because the made up reason makes better fiction. NEVER. Anyway…

      Yes, you are so right: a good memoir ought to read like a novel.

  4. Descriptive settings and exploration of a character’s economic, religious and cultural background are so necessary in bringing a story to life. Often when something in our story is not working is because we’ve not paid enough attention to one of those two areas. Thank you, Dennis, and thanks,
    Kathy for featuring Dennis with such valuable writing tips.

  5. As a beginning writer of memoir, I think sometimes I am going about it the wrong way but I may just be tilting at windmills. Thanks to Denis’ encouraging comment “The setting is both where and when your story occurs” I’ll just keep writing what I know and where I remember all of it happening. Thanks, Kathy, for hosting this great series.

    1. Good luck, Marian. We all once stood at the place you now stand–at the beginning of a rewarding writing experience. It’s all before you–an exciting adventure. As Jerry Waxler has written in his blog, a memoir is about a hero’s journey and the very writing of a memoir is a hero’s journey. So…

      You are a hero. I wish you much success.

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