M.L. Longworth on The Writing Process: Up in the Attic

Inspiration is a funny thing. It can come to us like a lightning bolt, through the lyrics of a song, or in the fog of a dream. Ask any writer where their stories come from and you’ll get a myriad of answers, and in that vein I created the WHAT (What the Hell Are you Thinking?) interview. 

Today’s guest for the WHAT is M. L. Longworth, author of Disaster at the Vendome Theater (A Provençal Mystery) where calamity befalls the little Vendome Theater in the tenth installment of the sun- and wine-soaked Provençal Mystery Series.

Ideas for our books can come from just about anywhere, and sometimes even we can’t pinpoint exactly how or why. Did you have a specific origin point for your book?

I have a very specific origin point for my books: my friend Juliette’s attic. It’s actually the attic in a very big old country house that belongs to her in-laws. I can’t remember why she asked me to help her fetch some items from the house’s attic; it had to do with her children: I think she was looking for some props for a school play. 

For years I had been mulling over the idea of how well suited our town, Aix-en-Provence, was suited to a mystery series. Like Morse’s Oxford, it is a celebrated university town. Like Brunetti’s Venice, it’s much visited for its picturesque well-preserved buildings. And the thrill of writing articles about Provence for magazines and newspapers was beginning to fade; so much time was spent pitching, more time than researching and writing the article. And I was longing to write a book, preferably an old-fashioned mystery, the kind I liked to read. 

But I was shy of starting, and needed that initial push. It came to me that afternoon, in the attic. 

When Juliette opened the attic’s door, it took a few seconds for my eyes to adjust. Dust floated around the immense room, and a sole bare light bulb made it difficult to make out the many odd shapes that filled the space. Juliette unlatched a thick wooden shutter and flung it open with a bang, allowing the bright light of Provence to come streaming in. Slowly I saw the treasures, as Juliette rummaged around in boxes for whatever she was looking for. There were two ancient gilded mirrors leaning against the stone wall, one of them over eight feet high. I lost count of the many rush-seated kitchen chairs, the ones common in Provence in the 19th century and so fondly painted by Cézanne. Stacks of delicate porcelain lied here and there, next to bunches of silver cutlery sets tied up with colored ribbon. There were sporting trophies, rolled up Oriental rugs, dozens of marble-topped tables and old commodes. 

Juliette began telling me stories of the family, how in 1900 one of the family’s Counts had to marry a wealthy young woman from Philadelphia in a marriage arranged by their parents: his noble status in exchange for her family’s money. We found photographs of them in Cannes, on the beach in the 1920s. Fascinated, I took the photographs towards the open window to have more light. “Be careful!” Juliette yelled. It was then that I saw that the window didn’t have any glass, and we were four floors up. The first scene of my unwritten book came into my head: a wealthy young nobleman from Aix falls, or is pushed, to his death out the attic window of his family’s château.

Once the original concept existed, how did you build a plot around it?

At that point I only had one scene, and a principal character. I built the plot beginning with the rest of the characters. He victim needed a brother, to whom he had been close as children but now rarely saw. One was good, the other bad. There would be a caretaker at the castle, one the same age as the brothers but without their advantages. The brothers would need wives, or girlfriends, and occupations. I then added my sleuths: the magistrate, Antoine Verlaque, a Parisian and not used to small town politics; and his on-again off-again girlfriend, Marine Bonnet, a law professor and native to Aix. She knew the brothers as children. Marine is devastated by the murder and begins asking old friends and colleagues about the family, giving me more characters and possible suspects. The plot grew from there. I added details about Aix, revealing its history and describing its beauty as best I could, rewriting and correcting as I went.

Have you ever had the plot firmly in place, only to find it changing as the story moved from your mind to paper?

Yes! All the time. I write out character details before starting each book, and then very roughly the plot, but I change the plot as I write. I feel it liberating to be able to do that, and it makes the writing process longer but more fun!

Do story ideas come to you often, or is fresh material hard to come by?

Yes! Story ideas can come from so many places: conversations overheard in a café in Aix, reading an article in the local newspaper about a feud in a nearby village, or using Aix itself as a jumping off point (its buildings, famous sons and daughters, its fountains, its opera festival, its Roman and/or medieval past).

How do you choose which story to write next, if you’ve got more than one percolating?

I’ve just completed book ten of the series, and so far it’s been a natural choice of which book to do next. I try to mix up the themes from book to book, and instinctively know which one I want to write next, which I hope means it’s the same one my readers would want to read next.

I have 6 cats and a Dalmatian (seriously, check my Instagram feed) and I usually have at least one or two snuggling with me when I write. Do you have a writing buddy, or do you find it distracting?

I would find writing with someone around very distracting. Sometimes I have a little classical music playing, on commercial-free stations, but often it gets turned off after an hour or so.

M.L. Longworth has lived full-time in Provence since 1997. She has written about the region for the Washington Post, the Times (UK), the Independent, and Bon Appétit magazine. She writes a mystery series, set in Aix-en-Provence, for Penguin USA: the tenth book, Disaster at the Vendôme Theatre, will be released in October of 2022. The books have been adapted by Britbox and ITV as a television series, Murder in Provence, starring Roger Allam and Nancy Carroll.

Suzanne Moyers on the Ghostly Inspiration for ’Til All These Things Be Done

Inspiration is a funny thing. It can come to us like a lightning bolt, through the lyrics of a song, or in the fog of a dream. Ask any writer where their stories come from and you’ll get a myriad of answers, and in that vein I created the WHAT (What the Hell Are you Thinking?) interview. 

Today’s guest for the WHAT is Suzanne Moyers, a former teacher who spent more than 20 years as an editor and writer for the education press. Suzanne is the author of ’Til All These Things Be Done

Ideas for our books can come from just about anywhere, and sometimes even we can’t pinpoint exactly how or why. Did you have a specific origin point for your book?

I was a teenager when my grandmother, aka “Nana”, moved from her Texas farm to our home on Long Island.  I’ll never forget the first time I witnessed her staring into an empty corner, crying to the ghost of her long-lost father: Papa, come back! Please!  She was in the early stages of dementia, but her emotion was utterly real, driving me to learn more about her father’s inexplicable disappearance way back in 1919.   

Papa had supposedly loved his family, but after being maimed in a terrible accident, left to seek clerical work in newly-booming Houston, 350 miles away.   When they stopped hearing from him, his family assumed he must be dead, but they were in survival mode and didn’t have the wherewithal to find out for sure. It was only when my grandmother was in her fifties that she learned Papa was still alive and living a day’s train ride away, that even knowing his children needed him, he hadn’t returned to claim them.  Though my grandmother had never made sense of this betrayal, over the years, new details emerged suggesting a more hopeful postlude to the story.  I’d long ago crafted my own fantasy around these details, imagining a closure my grandmother never had but that I like to believe could be true. 

 Once the original concept existed, how did you build a plot around it?

Deep research into the rich but troubled ‘cotton culture’ of early 20th century Texas provided ample inspiration, as did my grandmother’s recollections of events like the ‘great influenza’ epidemic and day-to-day life on her grandfather’s farm.  I also had stories from other kin who lived in Texas during that era, and plenty of photographs and heirlooms to juice my creative endeavors. I used these details and my imagination to create plot twists, conflict, and also develop unique but believable characters. 

Have you ever had the plot firmly in place, only to find it changing as the story moved from your mind to paper?  

I am a pantser/plotter hybrid.  I like having a basic outline for a novel and, in this case, I already had certain key elements of the story in mind. But creativity often feels like a supernatural force to me, driving me down unfamiliar yet eerily vivid paths. I always follow those paths, surprised at where I end up but always glad I’ve gotten there.     

Do story ideas come to you often, or is fresh material hard to come by?

Anything I wonder about becomes fodder for potential stories. And since I’m constantly wondering (sometimes annoyingly so), I have a lot of ideas! Usually my best inspiration arises from a need to understand what makes ‘ordinary’ people do unlikely things, from following a charismatic guru around the world to abandoning their families to killing their families (see below).  My problem isn’t coming up with ideas; it’s finding the time and, frankly, the willpower to develop them. A great idea is one thing, but the work of turning it into compelling fiction is another thing entirely.  Even if you’re not writing historical fiction, you have to do the initial research into your setting, learn as much as you can about your subject, get into other peoples’ messy minds—and turn yours inside out too.       

How do you choose which story to write next, if you’ve got more than one percolating?

Having just written this heartfelt, intense historical saga, I’m thinking I want to challenge myself in tackling something completely different. To that end, I’ve started a thriller based on a true crime in which a stressed-out, religious, suburban mom persuades her ‘golden child’ to murder the rest of their family. Of course, there’s also the temptation to use my hard-won skills in writing another historical drama. I have a thick file of research about this family of Dutch female traders living in New Amsterdam (now New York City) in the 17th and 18th centuries. It’s such an intriguing subject and I’m a fool for history, so who knows where that might lead?   

I have 6 cats and a Dalmatian (seriously, check my Instagram feed) and I usually have at least one or two snuggling with me when I write. Do you have a writing buddy, or do you find it distracting?

My six-year-old Havenese, Tuxi, is also black-and-white and adorable like your Dalmatian.  Both breeds are notoriously neurotic too.  Sometimes Tuxi sits next to my desk and stares at me with these soulful eyes and, even though I know he’s recently been fed and walked and belly-rubbed, it drives me crazy.  It’s how I used to feel when my kids were toddlers and they’d stick their heads into my office and ask, “Now, Mama? Now can you play?” I do keep a big bag of treats on my desk, and I’ll take five minutes here and there to throw a couple down the hall for Tuxi to chase.  If he still keeps staring at me after that, I’ll take him downstairs and put the gate up and try to forget him for a while. Because that’s the difference between having a dog and a toddler.  

Suzanne Moyers is a lifelong history geek who spends her free time as a volunteer archeologist, mudlarker, and metal detectorist.  Suzanne is the proud mom to two amazing young adults, Sara and Jassi, and resides in the greater New York City area. 

Matthew Donald On the Inspiration for Teslanauts

Inspiration is a funny thing. It can come to us like a lightning bolt, through the lyrics of a song, or in the fog of a dream. Ask any writer where their stories come from and you’ll get a myriad of answers, and in that vein I created the WHAT (What the Hell Are you Thinking?) interview. 

Today’s guest for the WHAT is Matthew Donald, author of Teslanauts

Ideas for our books can come from just about anywhere, and sometimes even we can’t pinpoint exactly how or why. Did you have a specific origin point for your book?

For my upcoming book Teslanauts, I remember when I first started looking into Nikola Tesla and learning about his crazier inventions, and I thought, what if he got the funding for them? Naturally this is a pretty common idea for a book, but most others with this concept seem to be in the alternate history genre, with Tesla's inventions radically changing the historical timeline. What truly made the idea spark for me is the concept of the inventions always being there, but locked away in the shadows and forcibly kept secret by government conspiracies. Why would they do that? What is the benefit of keeping all this wonderful technology hidden? And what would happen to anyone who discovered it? That's what really got my creative juices flowing.

Once the original concept existed, how did you build a plot around it?

I figured post-WWI was the best place to set the story, with the war itself being a backstory to what had happened. I knew that Tesla himself couldn't be the main character, as he would be in his mid-sixties at that point, so I figured he would be more of a mentor, leader type that showed up only in passing and at key moments in the story. Instead, I thought it would be more interesting to have a teenager discover this hidden world of Tesla technology, and learn about it as the reader did. Then the plot came about when trying to figure out how he would learn of this organization, and what prompted him to look for it to begin with, and what it would be that the organization was trying to stop. The Roaring Twenties were defined by catharsis, with the Great War ending and people wanting to celebrate and have fun and forget that the horrors of the last decade ever happened. Would the war be continuing in the shadows, or some smaller conflicts? Would someone be mad enough to try and restart the war, and why in the world would they want to do that? The influx of ideas came not only from figuring out the place of the main character, but the time and place I had decided to place it. 

Have you ever had the plot firmly in place, only to find it changing as the story moved from your mind to paper?

The way I tend to write stories is to have a beginning and ending already in mind, for both each individual story and, if applicable, the series as a whole. I also tend to have certain elements or concepts in mind in the middle, but those are much more malleable. The middle is where I can truly go bananas, as I know where I'm going and I get to concoct all sorts of rampant buffoonery getting there. Sometimes certain events in the middle get changed or eliminated, but in terms of the ending itself, I rarely change it, or at least rarely change the important parts. 

Do story ideas come to you often, or is fresh material hard to come by?

Brand new story ideas tend to not come by very often. I tend to stick to big concepts and work with them for a while, adding to them and coming up with more and more of my nonsense to build them up. My ideas tend to be kind of high-concept, ones that I can do a lot with, so it's only occasionally I get one big enough to keep my interest. Currently I've got my previous book series Megazoic, my upcoming Teslanauts and its sequels, and at least two other major ideas in the pipeline, with the possibility of spin-offs and expansions for each idea always on mind. I think of my works as franchises, with the potential of adding to them indefinitely if need be. My Megazoic books may have concluded with its current four installments, but that doesn't necessarily mean that's the last you've seen of that world.

How do you choose which story to write next, if you’ve got more than one percolating?

A combination of which one is most intriguing to me, which one I have the best ideas for, and which one I think I should be writing. As much as I love Teslanauts and the world and characters I've built within it, Megazoic is my baby, and I could write endless spin-offs and sequels to that forever if I wanted to, and honestly, part of me kind of does want to. But I also recognize that in order to grow as a writer, I need to challenge myself. I want to be known for a lot of stories rather than just one. I want to be known for my style rather than any individual story. 

I have 6 cats and a Dalmatian (seriously, check my Instagram feed) and I usually have at least one or two snuggling with me when I write. Do you have a writing buddy, or do you find it distracting?

I have a cockatiel that lives with me in my apartment, and she's absolutely on my shoulder when I'm there on my computer, which is pretty much all the time. However, my computer at home is far too distracting for me to write there; so many games to play and YouTube videos to browse. Therefore, I take my tiny old laptop to a local coffee shop and do my writing there, free of distracting video games, and since I don't bring headphones I can't browse YouTube or any other streaming service there either without annoying everybody around me. Once my draft is finished though I can definitely edit it at home, so while I do have an animal companion, they're not so much a writing buddy as an editing and gaming buddy, haha.

Matthew Donald graduated from the University of Northern Colorado in 2014 with a B.A. in English and Creative Writing. He lives in Highlands Ranch, Colorado with his cockatiel, Lyra.