Thursday, September 28, 2017

Vacationing Like a Researcher

with guest Stacy Henrie.

Years ago, I accompanied my husband on a business trip to Boston. While there, I was able to see a good portion of the sights and I took a bunch of pictures. However, if I were to try and set a book in Boston these days, I would still need to do a great deal of research about the city and its history, even though I’ve already been there. Why? Because too much time has passed since that trip and because I didn’t vacation there with a researcher’s eye for a potential book setting.

Since then, I’ve taken trips that were solely for research, where most of my time is spent collecting information for a planned story. But what about those regular, just-for-fun vacations with family or friends? Can those be turned into possible research gold-mines, even without a potential story idea in your head before you go? Absolutely!

Last month my family and I took a trip to the Upper Peninsula of Michigan—purely to see what we’d been told was gorgeous countryside. And it is! This trip wasn’t for a planned book of mine, but I came home with a wealth of information and pictures that may very well find their way into a future story. 

If you’re planning an upcoming trip or vacation that’s just for fun, here are some tips for approaching your time away as a book researcher.

Know Before You Go

Before our trip, I came up with a list of places and attractions I wanted to see while we were there. Being a historical writer, there were several museums on my list, but there were also places that are iconic to the area that I didn’t want to miss like Pictured Rocks National Lakeshore. For my kids, there were things like a shipwreck boat tour on Lake Superior and a visit to a family-owned zoo. Nowadays, you can find lots of “Top Ten” lists of things to see and do as well as other travel blog posts on just about any place in the world. These can help you compile a list of things you want to see and experience on your trip. 
 

Ditch the Guidebook for the Camera

Several of the historical museums we visited in the UP had lots of valuable information posted on signs or plaques. So rather than purchasing a book from the gift shop about everything in the museum or on one central topic, I opted to take pictures of all the informational plaques I found interesting or I thought I might want to reference later. With a smart phone or tablet – or even a regular camera – you can photograph any pertinent information for free. And the more pictures you take of your surroundings, the more likely you’ll be able to call to mind the details of what a place looked and felt like.



Check out the Local Flavor

I’m talking about more than food here—although, sampling the local fare is also a fantastic way to immerse yourself in the place you’re visiting. What better way to know what your potential characters might eat, then to try the food yourself? The UP is known for its pasties (which we learned is NOT pronounced paste-ee. It’s called a past-ee). So we had them for dinner one night. I recommend the chicken ones. We also had fantastic fish and chips in a small town on the eastern side of the UP.

In addition to food, though, be sure to check out the haunts and hangouts of the locals. I’d read online about a café and bookstore in Munising, Michigan that had great ice cream. While the ice cream certainly turned out to be yummy, it was the ambiance of the café that proved to be the coolest thing about the place. Regular kitchen tables are set up around the room, which has walls lined with books. Patrons can eat at the tables or play one of the supplied board games or do both. At the far side of the room, a band was playing music. And nearly everyone sang along when they played “Sweet Caroline.” Having been there and experienced the local flavor of the place, I could easily recreate a similar café and bookstore in a future story.


Allow for Spontaneity

While it’s helpful to make a list of things you don’t want to miss on a trip or vacation, there is something to be said for having days or hours of flexibility. Time to make unscheduled stops and simply enjoy the beauty of the moment. It’s often in those moments that you can really connect with a place. 

One such moment for me was looking for agates along the south shore of Lake Superior. It was equally as fun to read an account, after coming home from our trip, about a woman in 1881 who also had a collection of agates from along the south shore. If I had to write about someone agate hunting on Lake Superior in early August, I could do it now. I could describe the gray day, the cold water, the smooth rocks, and the lake stretching out to the horizon. 



It’s these details, these in-person experiences, these pictures that can enhance a story—even if it’s one we haven’t yet created. 

Writers, have you taken a non-research trip or vacation that you later used as the setting for a story? Readers, do you like to plan out your vacation itineraries or do you like get to where you’re going and decide then?

Leave a comment today for an opportunity to win your very own ecopy of The Keeper of Her Heart! Winner announced in the Weekend Edition. 


The Keeper of Her Heart

A Girl on the Brink of Womanhood, a Country on the Brink of War

Even at a young age, Ada Thorne knew that she would marry only for love, never money. So when she finds herself irrevocably drawn to Ned Henley, the lowly gamekeeper on a neighboring estate, she defies her parents and society by eloping with him to London to build a new life.

Without her family’s support, life in the city is far more difficult than the one of ease and privilege Ada has always known. She’ll find herself relentlessly tested in ways she never imagined—especially when Ned, answering the call of duty, enlists to serve his country in World War One.

Alone and near poverty with a child to raise, Ada’s resolve will be strained at every turn. And as she struggles to remain true to her convictions and live life on her own terms, Ada will embark on a journey of courage, faith, and love that will surpass even her own humble dreams  . . .



USA Today bestselling author Stacy Henrie is the author of western romances, the anthology Love for All Seasons, and the Of Love and War series, which includes Hope at Dawn, a 2015 RITA Award finalist for excellence in romance. She was born and raised in the West, where she currently resides with her family. She enjoys reading, road trips, interior decorating, chocolate, and most of all laughing with her husband and kids. You can learn more about Stacy and her books by visiting her website at stacyhenrie.com.

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109 comments :

  1. Welcome Stacy!! I'm a lot like you when it comes to vacation. My husband and I like to experience the local "flavor"; places the locals like to eat or shop and the non-touristy places to visit. I never buy the books at a museum, I love taking pictures of the plaques so I can go back and remember what it was that I saw.

    I used to be the type of vacationer that planned out every step of the way. My husband is more of the spontaneous type so I've learned over the years to go with the flow more. I have to have a definite place we are staying and maybe one or two things I'd like to see or visit & then the rest I just leave up to what we feel like doing. We might see something that looks interesting to do or see and stop in. We've found a lot of cool things over the years :-) One year we went white water rafting with a tour guide company...totally spontaneous and SO much fun!! And for my husband who doesn't like anything to do with water, that was a HUGE surprise that he actually wanted to do that with me :-)

    It sounds like we have a lot in common when it comes to vacation time! Over the years, I've found the fun in spontaneity and have had great experiences and lots of memories :-)

    What a fun post, I'm loving your pictures of the UP. That's on my someday list of places to visit since I've heard a lot about it. Thank you for the chance to win an ecopy of your latest book...looks/sounds good!

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    1. Raising my hand. Anal retentive vacationer here. Trying to beat it.

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    2. I get major FOMO when I vacation. (Fear Of Missing Out) I'm also trying to adopt a more spontaneous attitude and see where the road takes me.

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    3. Trixi - It does sound like we have a lot in common with vacationing! My husband is more the spontaneous type too. Love that you also take pictures of plaques! Thanks for commenting.

      Tina - LOL! I love that - anal retentive vacationer.

      Josee - When there's so much to see and do, I can totally understand having FOMO! And that's awesome you want to allow for spontaneity too!

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    4. Tina, I had to look up anal retentive because I have no idea what that is. According to Google, it means a person who is "excessively orderly and fussy". I can be that way with certain things too, being married to my husband as long as I have, has taught me that I can relax some of my standards. There are still things I like in an orderly fashion, others not so much. It's a process to learn, I tell ya!! :-)

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  2. I wrote my stories in my local area specifically because I could visit the museums without having to travel. I did get to see some wonderful museums and places like the Newell Pioneer Village in Champoeg, Oregon. I probably wouldn't have gone there if it weren't for research, but I can recommend it to any historical writers in the area!

    In the future... I think I'd like to set a story on a cruise ship going from New York to London. I'd have to research that thoroughly, of course. Purely for the purpose of making sure my setting was completely authentic.
    Or mostly for that reason. ;)

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    1. Evelyn! Great to see you. Is that your book cover in your profile pix? I vote that I go with you from NY to London..research assistant!

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    2. EVELYN!!!!!! YOU SOLD TO LIH. OH MY GOSH!!! THIS IS FABULOUS NEWS! MUST GO SHOUT THIS TO THE WORLD!!! WOOHOOOO!!!

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    3. I love the title of your new book! Makes me want to pick up that book and read it!

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    4. Evelyn - I love pioneer villages! And of course, you'd need to thoroughly research a cruise from New York to London. :) That would be a neat thing to research!

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    5. A huge congratulations, Evelyn!!

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    6. Hi Evelyn:

      If you are going to write a romance on a cruise from NYC to London, why not go all the away around the world? The Queen Mary 2 and Queen Elizabeth do four month long luxury cruises around the world. I'd love to read a whirlwind romance that takes me on a tour of the world. You should see the sales literature that sells these tours. Just dream of it!

      You write it…I'll buy it!

      Vince

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    7. Thank you Stacy, and Vince and Jeanne and Sally and Tina! I sold a manuscript during the Manuscript Matchmaker contest that LIH hosted last year, and it's finally coming out in January. I'll have to take that cruise to celebrate! (And invite a few research assistants along ;)

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  3. Hi Stacy:

    Thanks for sharing your ideas about doing on location research. I'm a big fan of exceptional setting descriptions. What I particularly like is when the scene is written with such veracity that years later I can't be sure if I've actually visited the location or only read about it. This gets doubly difficult when I know I have visited the location but I'm still not sure if my memories come from that visit or from reading a story set in that location.

    The best way to do this is to 5-sense your research and record those observations. Always be asking sense questions: what does the area smell like? What is the dominat odor? What does the wind sound like along the beach or whisteling through the trees. What animals can you hear or did you see? Can you taste the salt in the air? How does the light affect the color of the cliffs as you boat next to them on Lake Powell? Does the day smell different than the night? How do the sounds at night differ. What does the ground feel like as you walk along the way? What does the temperature feel like? Is there a local drink? What did it taste like?

    I also like to ask locals what are notable sites that only locals would know about? These are what I want to put in the story. Everyone knows the Eifel Tower is in Paris but only the locals will know about the lesser monuments. My goal would be to make a local feel like he's back home.

    One of the best jobs of 5-sensing a story is in Sandra Leesmith's "Where the Eagle Flies". I'm truly not sure which of my memories of Lake Powell come from my visits or from reading that story. I can almost feel the texture of the cliff walls and see how the colors of the cliffs change as the sun moves across the sky and the angle of the light changes.

    Please place me in the drawing for your book. I'm a student of WWI and am reading a very good book right now by Kate Breslin set in that time, "High as the Heavens", and I have this question for you: What genre would you call your book? It's not a romance as far as I can tell and I'm not sure if you'd call it women's fiction. Is it straight historical fiction? I like lots of history in my historical fiction like Georgette Heyer.

    Vince

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    1. I think this line in her blurb classify's this release as historical romance, Vince.
      "...courage, faith, and love that will surpass even her own humble dreams."

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    2. Vince - I love what you said about a setting being described so well that you can't remember later if you visited it in real life or not! Great suggestions about the 5-senses questions too. And you know - I live within a half-day's drive of Lake Powell and I've actually never been!

      And yes, my book is an inspirational historical romance.

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    3. Hi Stacy:

      Glad to hear the story is a romance. When the story started with the marriage and it was not a marriage of convenience I didn't think it was a genre romance but rather a story with a romance in it.

      About Lake Powell: I suggest going there for pure creative inspiration. The landscape is so different and 'other worldly' that it has been used in Science Fiction films as being on another planet. I also suggest staying at the lodge there so you can just walk out the front door and take the tour boats. I took the short tour last time but next time I'll take the four hour long tour. The place is amazing.

      Vince

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    4. It sounds amazing! And I didn't know they did tour boats - that would be a fun way to see the lake, especially since we don't own a boat ourselves.

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  4. Hi Stacy. I love it when I read a book that has so much detail about the setting that I can imagine being there. If it is somewhere I have been, it can take me back there.

    I love the cover of your book. Please add me to your drawing. Thank you.

    When we take vacations it's not always planned. We go, then decide when we get there what our itinerary will be. But our last vacation (to Walt Disney World) was totally planned. To be honest, I would rather go, then decide instead of planning it all out. Sometimes, when we plan I think we can lose some of the spontaneity and possible miss out on something.

    Blessings,
    Cindy W.

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    1. Thanks for commenting, Cindy! Love what you said about a detailed setting taking you back if it's a place you've been. And I think that's awesome you allow for spontaneity with your travel itineraries!

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  5. Hi, Stacy! Welcome aboard!

    I love a great setting. I'm happiest when the setting is as much a part of the book as the characters, and that's a trick-and-a-half when you're writing category romance because the word count minimizes things... but it can be done!

    This is great advice, and I love the image of that cafe/ice cream shop. And I do the same thing with the camera, it becomes my personal field guide. Thanks so much for being here and congratulations on your success. It's absolutely wonderful!

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    1. Thank you, Ruth! I'm thrilled to be here. :) I agree - it's fantastic when the setting plays such a pivotal role in the story. And if you're ever in Munising, MI, the cafe is the Falling Rock Cafe and Bookstore!

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  6. Welcome, Stacy! Thanks for sharing your helpful tips. After growing up outside of the DC area and visiting The Shenandoah Valley as often as I could, most of my stories are set in fictional towns around the valley. Thanks for visiting!

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    1. I love the Shenandoah, Jill! Travel it each time we visit our Northern VA kids! So beautiful. Steeped with history!

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    2. How cool, Jill, that you've visited the Shenandoah Valley often! That's a place I'd love to visit. And I think that's such a great idea to create your own fictional towns in the valley.

      Debby - It sounds amazing!

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  7. Such a lovely post, Stacy. I want to go to Michigan. Right now! :)

    Really want to stop by that icecream/book/band hangout! What an interesting eatery!

    I like to experience places firsthand. Although writers can pull enough detail to make a story work through their research...but there's nothing like being there.

    I recently visited Holmes County, Amish country in Ohio. I keep going back there as I write. Those memories and pictures put me smack dab in the middle of my setting so the trip was a win-win for me!

    Your cover is gorgeous! Oh my! That heroine grabbed my heart!

    Congrats on your success. Thanks for being with us in Seekerville today!

    Hugs!

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    1. Thanks, Debby! I'm with you - there is something to be said for being able to visit a setting in person. And how fun that you've been able to visit Amish country in Ohio. That sounds really fascinating!

      Thanks about the cover - I really love it too!

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  8. Welcome to Seekerville, Stacie. Such a kick to have you here. (Though it is a wee bit early in her time zone).
    I brought local flavor to the Village today.

    Local flavor from Western New York and a recent trip. Timbits (Tim Horton donut holes).

    I am actually trying to decide how to use my visit to my folks for a story. I should have read this before my trip.

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    1. Timbits! We don't have Timmy's here in VT, but it's way better than DD!

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    2. Thanks for having me, Tina! It's a such a pleasure to visit, especially because I've been lurking the blog for a long time. :) And I love donut holes - these sound yummy!

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  9. Hello Stacie, my story takes place in London, so I haven't been there to research. A sacrifice by having less money every month because I'm a stay-at-home mom who homeschool our boys.we ARE saving for a month long vacation to London in ten years after our youngest graduates high school. For now, the Internet is a HUGE help. I have road maps and images of roads. I even use Google map to take a walk on the road like my characters would. A big help. Thanks for your suggestions! God bless.

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    1. Hi Kelly! I know you will make that dream a reality. If you are writing a historical, don't forget http://www.sepiatown.com/ a great way to see the past.

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    2. Kelly - I hear you! It can be so expensive to travel. And I agree - the Internet is pretty amazing in what we can experience of the world right from our own homes. How cool that you have a trip planned - and to stay a whole month; that would be awesome!

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  10. Hey Stacie! As a reader I would love to take a "bookish' tour of amazing libraries!

    I brought Earl Grey and chocolate chip scones to share.

    Please enter me in the drawing for a copy of The Keeper of Her Heart.

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    1. Caryl, have you ever visited a place that an author describes in a book? I've done that. Lots of fun. I'm also a fan of touring out of town libraries.

      Chocolate chip scones...yummers. Thank you.

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    2. Chocolate chip scones - that sounds so delicious, Caryl! And I love that idea of taking a tour of amazing libraries.

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  11. Stacy, great to see you in Seekerville! I want that ice cream.

    One of our bosses brought in TamTams the other day. I've never had these and have no idea where you get them, but I'm going to have to find out. I had to google what they were: Tim Tam is a brand of chocolate biscuit made by Arnott's. It consists of two malted biscuits separated by a light chocolate cream filling and coated in a thin layer of textured chocolate. They were so good!

    When we go on vacation to the beach, I plan to sit on the beach. And eat food. That's the extent of my planning. I enjoy the thought of visiting hangouts of the locals.

    One year we were trying to get to the beach. You would think traveling from Southwest Va to Myrtle Beach wouldn't be a problem. But every time we get directions, they are different. We get lost in the same stretch of road every time. One of those times we got lost we came across a plane hangar. They were huge planes. I got out and took pictures. My husband wasn't as enthused lol. Another time we kept getting lost, we were traveling with some friends, my friend and I got out of the cars and danced around the South Carolina state sign when we stopped. We didn't think we were ever going to find that state lol. Research trips sound like so much fun. I'm going to have to plan one.

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    1. Sally - I'm so with you about the beach! Sitting and eating food sounds like a great plan.

      LOL - what cool things you found when you were lost! And South Carolina is on my bucket list of places to see.

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  12. Hi Stacie!

    I envy your trip to the UP. It's always been one of my favorite places. When I was growing up in Michigan (under the bridge), I was able to visit often. :)

    For most of my books, I've used a physical setting where we lived for seven years - Indiana's Amish Country. But for my current WIP, set in Holmes County, Ohio, I'm depending on the memory of a visit there a few years ago. Memories work, though!

    And your clue about taking pictures of signs or plaques is a great one. I did that on a recent trip to Yellowstone and the Grand Tetons to help me remember which mountain or geyser I was photographing!

    And I'm like you - someday the details about that vacation will make their way into a book. :)

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    1. Jan - yes, memories do work! And how neat that you grew up in Michigan. I lived there for a year and a half and was told how pretty the UP is.

      How fun that you visited Yellowstone and the Grand Tetons. That would be a fun setting!

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  13. Hi, Stacie, Trips always inspire me-regardless of where I go. Just being out of my house, doing something different gets the creative juices flowing. Hands down, my favorite places to visit are Stowe, VT (about a 40 minute drive from my home) and Quebec City (where I'm from). Since my books are set in VT and Quebec, this works out very well. I get to visit family and gain inspiration for my WIP.

    BTW- the cover of your book is so pretty!

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    1. Josee - I agree; there's definitely something about road trips that can get those creative juices flowing. Both settings sound like neat places to visit!

      And thanks about the cover! :)

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  14. Stacie, I loved your post. I just got back from Virginia, where my family went last week. There were so many historical romances brewing in my head, but I write contemporary. However, I was listening to one of the tour guides and spinning a story before I told myself to listen and enjoy all he was saying about Jamestown.

    I loved your details from your trip. Now I want to take my daughter to the place where they sang "Sweet Caroline" because that's her name. However, since she's young, she would think they were singing to her.

    Thank you for sharing details from your trip and reminding writers to do research about the setting and the local flavor of the setting.

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    1. Tanya - sounds like such a fun trip to Virginia! I think Jamestown would be a fascinating place to see.

      So cute about daughter! If you ever get to the UP, the place is called the Falling Rock Cafe and Bookstore in Muinsing, MI.

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  15. Fun post, Stacy. I love to travel and sometimes think about how I could use it in my writing. I mostly just write about places close to home, though. I also enjoy having some time unscheduled for finding unplanned things to do. When we travel, we also try to eat at as many local places as possible. No chain restaurants, unless it's a chain we don't have around here.

    This weekend my husband and I are taking a little getaway to a place that has already been written about. We are going to De Smet, South Dakota, one of the hometowns of Laura Ingalls Wilder. Our goal is to visit all of the places associated with her. This is one we haven't been to yet.

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    1. Sandy - what a cool trip you're taking! That would be so fun to see those places associated with Laura Ingalls Wilder. Especially because my kids and I recently started watching the first season of Little House on the Prairie. :) Hope you have a wonderful time!

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    2. Sandy, have you been to the Laura Ingalls Wilder home in Mansfield, MO? We drove past the exit on our way to a family reunion last week, and I regretted we didn't have time to stop.

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    3. Myra, I have been to Mansfield. It is where she lived as an adult and wrote her books. There are two houses she lived in and she and her family are buried there. You should definitely try to get there.

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  16. Good morning, Stacy.

    I'm a spontaneous vacationer. I'm pretty much up for anything and will stay anywhere is there's a/c.

    I'd love to visit a ghost town. I guess that does away w/enjoying the local foods.

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    1. LOL, Connie! Love what you said about the a/c. Ghost towns are so fun. We have quite a few here in Utah. It's been years since I visited one, but I'd like to take my kids one of these days. And yes, we'll pass up the local foods while there. ;)

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    2. Connie, our Montana daughter took us to see a ghost town during our visit last May. It was fun imagining what life would have been like when the town was alive and active. Also sad to contemplate the reasons that cause communities like that to simply fade away.

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    3. LOL on the A/C. I am so with you.

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    4. One of the worst "vacations" was camping at the lake. Extremely hot and humid, and the mosquitoes were out. A 4-man tent, is NOT a 4-man tent. After we couldn't keep our sweaty arms from touching each other, my husband and son went and sleep in the vehicle. We learned fall is the best time for camping.

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    5. Oh, Connie - that sounds miserable! I like your idea of camping in the fall instead.

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  17. Stacy, what a great post. And the UP looks beautiful! I've never been there, but I'd love to visit someday. :)

    My hubs and I both tend to be planners when it comes to vacation. He comes by it naturally, having a mother who is a big planner for about everything. We visit Hawaii about once a year to spend time with his parents. And, we've learned to add more spontaneity to our time there. Especially now that we have two boys with wildly different interests.

    I'm debating between setting my next story in Colorado or in Hawaii. Both offer unique opportunities to share the beauty of the area as well as offering potentials for obstacles. ;)

    GREAT post today!

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    1. Jeanne - I so get planning out vacations because I'm a planner too. And yes, having kids is a great way to learn spontaneity. :) Colorado or Hawaii would both be fantastic settings.

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    2. Okay, Jeanne, it's so NOT FAIR that you have in-laws in Hawaii! ;)

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    3. I know, right, Missy? But, having in-laws in Hawaii still carries the same drama as it does having in-laws anywhere else. ;)

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  18. Great post, Stacy! I've found myself jotting notes while on vacation. Trying to remember sights or smells or sounds. Most of my books have been set in fictitious towns. But my first one was set in Gatlinburg, TN. We used to vacation there a lot when the kids were young, and on one of those trips I made it a point to keep a notebook with small details that would be important for my story. After that book was published, I got a reader letter from someone who lived there, and she commented on how real the setting felt. I was very pleased about that!

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    1. Missy - what a compliment to have a local say how real the setting felt! That's awesome. And I like the idea of bringing a notebook along for jotting down details.

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    2. I should add that I also took time to go out on my own without my family (while they played putt putt golf!) to do more intensive research. It was so fun!

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    3. That's a wise idea, Missy! My kids definitely don't find all of the history stuff quite as exciting as I do. :)

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  19. Hi Stacy,

    I'm visiting family in Waco right now and keep wondering about setting a story here. Your post is perfect timing.

    Congratulations on your book and thanks for sharing!

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    1. Thanks, Jackie! I think Waco sounds like a great place to set a book.

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  20. Welcome, Stacy! These are great tips for researching while on vacation. BTW, I've taken lots of photos of informational signs and plaques--a quick way to collect details we want to remember!

    Actually, vacation travel inspired several of my novels. We used to have a timeshare condo in Hot Springs, Arkansas, where we visited almost annually, and I grew fascinated with the history of the area. So, in some form or fashion, Hot Springs has worked its way into 6 or 7 of my novels. In addition to touring the various sites and attractions, I got a lot of help from the local historical society for more in-depth research.

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    1. That's fantastic, Myra, how you incorporated Hot Springs, Arkansas into your novels and used the help of the local historical society! And it's fun to hear I'm not the only one who takes pictures of the signs and plaques. :)

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  21. Stacie, welcome to Seekerville! Thanks for the excellent tips on gathering information for researching our books while vacationing. I love all things historical so have taken oodles of photos of the signs in museums.

    Our trip to Mt. Rushmore turned into a setting for a novella and possibly a book. I was fascinated with the huge task of carving four presidents into the granite and with the era it was done. I have lots of questions for the Keystone museum if I do write the book. I usually set my books in fictitious towns, but always know where it really is to make it feel real. The good part of using made-up towns is I can add and subtract whatever I want to the town.

    Your cover is gorgeous. The Keeper of her Heart sounds riveting! It had to be daunting to write a novel set in England during WWI. Did you get to visit London? Or go there via websites?

    Janet

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    1. Mt. Rushmore would be such a great setting for a book, Janet! I love using made-up towns in my books as well.

      Thanks about my book! I researched WWI for a series I did a couple years ago - one of which took place in England just after the war. So I had some research already completed. And though I have been to London, I relied on websites for knowing what it was like there during that era for this book.

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    2. Stacy, please forgive the spelling of your name. Must've confused your first and last name's endings. :-) Setting books in the same location makes a lot of sense. I've never been to England. Is Henrie an English name? My dh's ancestor came from England. Would be fun to visit his hometown.

      Janet

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    3. No worries, Janet. Henrie is an English name. Supposedly one of my husband's ancestors decided to change the spelling from "Henry" to "Henrie" so everyone would know who came through him.

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  22. Welcome to Seekerville, Stacy. :)

    And, yes, I tend to use any excuse to research. Several years ago, my mother and I took a road trip along the Natchez Trace to Natchez, MS. I had the germ of an idea at the time for a series set in MS. That idea later became The Natchez Trace Novel series, and the first book came out in August.

    Like you, I planned my trip and mostly toured the buildings and homes that were built in the late 1700s -- or at least those that were replicas of the era as opposed to the antebellum homes.

    And, when it came time to create memes, covers, and trailers, my publisher was able to get a feel for the area from my photos and videos.

    Same with our 2-week long trip through Montana, Wyoming, and all the way to the west coast. The entire time, I'm researching. :)

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    1. How fun to know that germ of an idea on your trip became a series, Pam! Congratulations. And what a cool trip that must have been travelling through Montana, Wyoming and to the west coast!

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  23. Great post! I'm spoiled by my husband who LOVES to plan out our vacations. Even though we have a well-prepared itinerary (in it's own binder with page protectors for each day's reservations) he also builds in time for spontaneous discovery. Our road trips usually revolve around the national parks we are visiting, but we also like to find quirky or off-the-beaten-path gold nuggets :) We never eat at chain restaurants for dinner, instead we ask for recommendations from the locals we come in contact with.

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    1. Heidi, that's amazing! Your husband must be super organized. Such a great idea to find local restaurants!

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    2. Hi, Heidi! That's awesome that your husband is that organized and still builds in time for spontaneous discovery. And I love that idea of asking locals where to eat.

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  24. Stacy, I love your post! I'm born and raised Ohio, but never got to visit Michigan...rivalry and all, ya know. lol

    I lived in Montana for 18 years and the small town I lived near has been the inspiration for the setting of my contemporary western romance. I have so many pictures, but the real-life memories are the ones I will draw from to write my story.

    Mr. Wonderful and I usually take the same trip every year, but I can see changes every time we go there. Especially Yellowstone National Park. As our population increases and the visitor count goes up, they are implementing new guidelines and rules every year. The awe and beauty is still there, but it has become very commercialized. We will still visit every year as long as we can...we were working there when we met 23 years ago, and love re-visiting the "scene of the crime".

    Blessings,

    Marcia

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    1. Marcia, how cool that you met at Yellowstone!

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    2. LOL about the rivalry, Marcia! How cool that you have this setting you know so well that you've been able to use in your books. And that is so awesome that you two met at Yellowstone National Park!

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    3. Thanks, Missy and Stacy. Yes, we were both working at Fishing Bridge, and we always go back there for a meal or two each visit. When the waitresses hear our story they just gush. We've only missed one year of going back. It is a unique one...maybe I'll incorporate it into a story one day. It's so special to us.

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    4. What a neat story and how cool that you've been back every year minus just one.

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  25. Stacy, you're a girl after my own heart. I love, love, love traveling and using the sites, sounds and research in my novels. Thanks for sharing with us today here in Seekerville. Great post and love the photos. Have a great day and thanks again.

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    1. Thank you, Sandra! So fun to find like-minded travel fans. :)

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  26. Stacy, I love the idea of taking pictures of any and all information when visiting a museum! Next vacation...
    Yes, please add me to the list of those who'd like a chance at receiving your book.

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  27. Wow. this is a very cool post. I have always absorbed cool vacation sites as possible fodder for stories in the past, but you've added great stuff for me to actually remember the cool stuff I may encounter. You're about the third or fourth person this summer to talk about the UP of Michigan. Now I think I want to go visit just because all the people who've visited have loved their visits so much.
    I love the cover of your book. The blurb sounds oh, so interesting too. Stories where "marrying down" occurs for love occurs always pique my interest.
    Thanks again for your vacationing researcher list and suggestions. I will find this post most handy in the future!

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    1. Deb - how funny that you've had several people talk about visiting the UP. :) It's a cool place.

      So glad you liked the post and that you found the book blurb interesting!

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  28. Frankly I never heard of UP Michigan before now but it's now on my bucket list.

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  29. Any ideas where your next writing vacay will be, Stacy?

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    1. Great question. I'm not sure right now. We've got a couple family trip ideas we're considering for next year so maybe one of those will end being fodder for a story. :)

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  30. We like to figure things out as we go along. I am amazed at all of the research authors do, and I get to reap the benefits as I read great stories. Thanks for all the time you put into it!!

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    1. I think that's awesome you like to figure it out as you go! And research is something I really do enjoy doing.

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  31. I'm a little homesick now, lol. I'm a displaced Michigander, and I miss the Great Lakes VERY much. Sometimes we go back to visit family, and there's always at least a little bit of planning involved. We haven't been back to the UP since we left Michigan about 5 years ago, though. When we lived on the east coast, we discovered that some of the best food is found in little hole in the wall diners and restaurants. Our local diner had amazing pot roast sandwiches, and the Italian restaurant down the road had average pizza but incredible stromboli. I'm curious where you found good fish and chips, lol. I want to add it to my next UP trip itinerary!

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    1. Karen, welcome to Seekerville! Thanks for stopping by and commenting.

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    2. Karen - that's so cool you're a Michigander! The Great Lakes really are amazing. And we found good fish and chips at Brown's Fish House in Paradise on the east side of the UP. So so yummy!

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  32. Stacy, in case I miss you, I wanted to thank you for spending the day with us in Seekerville. Praying for continued success for your projects and may you find all the best local flavors!

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    1. Thanks so much for having me, Tina! This has been a lot of fun.

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  33. While visiting Missouri this Summer we went to the City Museum... and if any place would be a good one to base a book off of it's this one. It was wild there. There was an indoor cavern, and you could crawl through the ceiling, and under the floor... and just about everywhere. I crawled through places I didn't think a person could crawl through!

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  34. Hi Stacey. Loved this post. We've done both kinds of vacations/travel...planned and spontaneous! And I've taken copious notes and photos. Even a quick trip into the City (San Francisco) is enough for me to imagine romantic hand-holding- hugging- in- the- mist- on- a- bridge- scene.

    I've never taken a trip specifically for researching a book idea...must brainstorm a story and take a vacation! LOL

    Congrats on your book!

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    1. Thanks, Kathryn! Love that image of the romantic hand-holding-hugging-in-the-mist-on-a-bridge!

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  35. Oh my goodness, Stacy, if I'd known today's blog was going to be this fun, I would have arrived a lot sooner! But the day got away from me, so I apologize, but this was a fun great break, so THANK YOU!!

    One of my biggest regrets as a writer is that I missed a planned vacation to Isle of Hope, GA, which is where my latest series is set. I was all set to go, but our house was on the market, and wouldn't you know, it sold the week before our trip to IOH, so we had to cancel it. But I was SO blessed when one of my readers went to IOH and sent me pictures of all the places in my book, including the hero's and heroine's houses, which was SO cool!!

    I promise that the next time I vacation, I will have research foremost in my mind. ;)

    Great post, Stacy -- thank you!!

    Hugs,
    Julie

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    1. Thanks, Julie! I've never heard of the Isle of Hope in GA - sounds like a neat place. That's such a bummer you had to cancel your trip and how cool that you got what you needed from one of your readers!

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  37. My husband is very type-A with vacationing (and most everything else in life), so he plans all the sights and attractions to visit during our vacations. I'm grateful because with four children ranging from teenagers to toddler, we so need that structure!

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    1. MIH - sounds like you've found what works well for your family! And I agree, that structure can be so helpful on vacations with kids.

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  38. My husband is a funeral force so our vacations are often daytrips or just a few days. Many times we have a general destination but we don't do a lot of advanced planning. Thanks for sharing your tips today!
    Blessings!
    Connie
    cps1950(at)gmail(dot)com

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    1. Thanks for commenting, Connie! I like that idea of having a general destination and largely seeing what you want to do when you get there.

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