by Shannon Baker
I’m adaptable. Until I
went to high school, I’d never lived in the same place for more than two and a
half years. My father worked for a big retailer
and we moved every two or three years as he climbed up the corporate ladder. We
grew up like Army brats, until my mother had enough and forced us all back to
my parents’ hometown in western Nebraska. When I graduated from
college (Go Big Red) I’d lived in Lincoln, NE for the longest I’d lived
anywhere.
I
marvel at people who still live in the town they in which they grew up. Or live
in the same house for twenty years. I have friends whose children graduated
from the same high school where they marched to Pomp and Circumstance. That
kind of continuity seems like a fantasy to me.
Then
I got married and moved to the Nebraska Sandhills. I had a couple of kids and
put down roots enough to feed me for twenty years. I even lived in the same
house for fifteen of those. When I left, I didn’t take much with me.
Since
then, I’ve been light on my feet. I moved from Nebraska to Colorado, from big
family house to apartment to townhouse. Then from Colorado to Flagstaff, AZ, a
rental house and then a small cabin. And now, whew, I’m back up on the Front
Range and loving it. But we have a house in Tucson, too, and I hope to bounce
back and forth with some regularity. (The pic is Mt. Humphreys just outside of Flagstaff and the ski area I used as inspiration for Tainted Mountain.)
Modern
communication makes accumulating friends in all these places fairly easy. I can
email, text, catch up on Facebook and call friends several hundred miles away
with as much frequency as when we lived in the same town. It’s a little harder
to share a bottle of wine at happy hour, though.
Each
place brings challenges and new experiences. As a child, that first day of
school could be intimidating but soon I’d have a whole posse of friends. Now,
it’s an adventure to find a new dentist, figure out the best grocery store, and
learn the walking paths and routes around town. While I have been known to pull
into a random parking lot and yell obscenities because I’ve been lost for the
last half hour and keep going the wrong way on one way streets, for the most
part, I love discovering my new digs.
Is
it any wonder that without giving it much thought, I’ve ended up taking Nora
Abbott, the main character in the (duh) Nora Abbott Mystery Series, all over
the west? She seems to have the same transient spirit I do. The first book is
set in Flagstaff and book 2, Broken Trust, is in Boulder. (You see a trend?)
Book 3 takes her back south to Moab, UT. (The pic is in Canyonlands, where Nora will find trouble in Book 3.) I’ve got ideas for her doing time in
Nebraska and Wyoming and maybe even Tucson.
As
a reader, I’m drawn to books with a strong sense of place. I love the way
writers set me down in bustling London or in the middle of a nor’ easter in
Maine, or on a sweltering New Orleans veranda.
For now, I’m keeping Nora in the west. It is a landscape I know and
love. But I don’t see her gathering any moss in the near future.
What
are some of your favorite settings in books you’ve read? Where would you like
to read about?
4 comments:
Shannon, I live 8 doors from where I did in high school. My kids go to that same high school. My best friend from 4th grade lives three blocks away. And yet, there's plenty to write about here in my hometown of Palo Alto, the heart of Silicon Valley. Why don't you keep on wandering and I'll stay staid? Whatever works.
If you have to pick a place to stay, you could do a lot worse than Palo Alto! It beats the hell out of Nebraska.
My parents still sleep in the room where I was born. Does that count?
I believe if the miles were counted, you've moved more of them than I have, Catriona.
Post a Comment