30/3/2018
I’m a writer based in South Wales, with an unhealthy obsession with stationery and baking. I mainly blog for my own sanity, but I’m also working on a novel. Still.
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Inspiration on the Road
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Today I’m lucky enough to have Amy Morse, author and entrepreneur, guest blogging for me. Amy, I am happy to say, is a friend, and a truly energetic, inspirational person, and I’m pleased to be able to introduce you to her. Take it away, Amy!
Inspiration on the road Writers find inspiration everywhere. We observe and create stories from the small things we see and experience. Travelling is a fantastic catalyst to feed your imagination; seeing new places, meeting new people and having new experiences feeds our creativity. The partially excavated site was littered with pottery, animal skeletons, urns, amphora, metal, glassware and even a stone box with a bronze clasp.
I featured the image of this box on the cover of the first edition of The Bronze Box.
In the first book; Sheridan and Blake embark on a mission spanning Europe to find the missing bronze box, and in the later stories, unravel the mystery surrounding its disappearance and unlocking the power it possesses. Throughout the books, an undercurrent of sexual tension between the two characters’ simmers away in a will-they-won’t-they thriller that tests them to their limits. Bulgaria was a fascinating back drop for the birth of these books. One of the most impoverished countries in Europe, it joined the EU in 2007 with hopes of a better life for its 7 million citizens. It is one of only a handful of countries whose population is decreasing; partly due to economic migration but also due to an aging population that struggles to subsist on the fringes of the West. Blighted by corruption and organised crime it’s struggling with high unemployment, minimal economic growth and poverty. Sparsely populated, four inhospitable mountain ranges transect the country and with unprecedented rural depopulation, huge areas of its fertile, dramatic and wild landscape have been claimed by nature and are archeologically unexplored. Nowhere is this more evident than in the central plains of the Valley of the Thracians. There are more than 1,500 of these mounds in the valley and so far, only 300 have been researched, even fewer excavated. Across the whole of Bulgaria there are estimated to be between 10,000 and 60,000 Thracian burial mounds. A culture with no written language, very little is known about the Thracian people who can be traced back to the 6th century BC. All that is known of these early Europeans comes from the writings of Homer in the Iliad and from ancient Roman and Greek texts. The rest of our knowledge comes from what they left behind in their elaborate funerary rituals, sites of worship and remains of their settlements. Homer described the Thracians as a mosaic of different tribes. The Copper Age civilisation that left the Varna Necropolis, the Varna Culture, would probably have been ancestors of Thracian tribes in this part of Bulgaria although the origin of the Thracians remains obscure. I captured elements of this experience in the opening chapters of The Bronze Box.
The enduring lesson I learned from this experience was; you can read about a place, you can pore over books and websites and maps and photographs, but for something to feel real to you and therefore be real for your readers, it needs to be a multisensory experience. To feel the atmosphere of a place, to smell it, touch it, taste it and to listen. Places have a way of speaking to you, your job as a writer is to be ready to listen. ———– To find out more about Amy and her books please visit her website Your comment will be posted after it is approved.
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