Do you know the story of Pygmalion?
The sculptor who falls in love with his sculpture? I don’t always talk about my
current writing projects here; but I am nose-deep in finishing a murder mystery
set in Edwardian Toronto. At the helm I have Jemima Watts and Merinda
Herringford---two bachelor girls who try their hands at private investigation.
Sometimes, they assist their long-time friend Jasper Forth
of the Toronto Police . When a few girls
are murdered in Corktown, Toronto’s Irish neighbourhood, they find themselves
ditching the commonplace mysteries they usually solve for the really, truly criminal
….
I have so much fun with them.
They’re two halves of the same coin, inverted parts of my strange little
personality and all giggles and spark!
(At least in my unbiased opinion)
a shoe-shiner in St John's Ward having a nap |
As much as I love Jem and Merinda, I love, love, love to
distraction, Ray DeLuca. Ray is my favourite play-thing these days. I
have to actively reel him in and sometimes shove him so far stage left because
if he pops out I cannot contain myself.
He’s just a really, really wonderful and unpredictable and surprising
character to write. I’ve been
scribbling since I was a kid and honestly, with the exception of one other
character borne of my hyper-sensationalized brain, I cannot think of anyone I
have such creative affinity with. He just fits. Ray’s a composite of a lot of things I wanted
to draw into the story: the immigrant experience ( Toronto saw a massive influx
of Italian immigrants at the beginning of the 20th Century), a
firebrand voice ( Ray is a muckraker: an investigative journalist who uses his
time on the beat to instill his articles and rallies with ideas for social
reform and the uncovering of political corruption) and a writer. I wanted a writer. A true blue, sensitive
writer. Ray is fun (and challenging )
because English isn’t his first language and one of the exciting adventures has
been to learn enough passable Italian to infuse his voice with some
authenticity as well as embrace the cadence of his speech. He is, thanks to his profession ( and so easy
for me ) quite fluent and proficient in English. A quick
study. But his timbre and vocal mannerism is something I try to infer without falling desperately into complete dialect. I try to see the stumbling blocks. I imagine his voice like a brook: trickling happily along and getting stuck on a few logs and rocks along the way. His writing is of huge importance in the story ( and of very huge importance to my lovely Jem ) and I try to capture what stepping stones he might have to ford, what little barriers might catch him in his way.
The fun part about writing this book is that it has become a
bit of an over-turned vessel. I cannot actively stop myself from ideas that
just cascade out. I think this is largely due to my fascination and love for my
characters ( they feel like friends) and because it is set in my city. A love letter to my town. Toronto has often, for me, been the greatest
love affair of my life. Ray reflects my
love for the city and, like Velcro, picks up pieces of my fascination and
historical and social curiosity.
Ray. Sigh. I turn into a giggly school girl:
Yonge Street, 1910 |
He’s also snarky, romantic, quick, witty and has an
abominable temper. When I first
started white-boarding and plotting the novel, I spent a ton of time going
through archival photos of Toronto in the 1910s: the city has a great historical
record and is well-documented in photograph. In ways it has changed
drastically; in other ways it seems very much the same --- chugging along;
spliced by street-car tracks, influenced by multi—culturalism; a patch-work
quilt of neighbourhoods sewn into a sprawling urban entity. Ray feels the city greatly and, as he says,
it digs its way into his arteries, winnows itself into his valves and pulses
through his blood. For Jem, Ray
emblematizes the best and the worst of the city: light and dark, somber and quick
--- she first detects this when she smells his old trench coat. Ray, to Jem, carries the snow and the smoke;
the lake and the ink of the press, the fog and the sunshine all on his coat.
Wherever he goes. Why wouldn’t he? He’s
a journalist on the beat.
immigrants in the tenement-like housing of St John's Ward |
I have been a bad little blogger of late because I have been
trying to finish this novel. It is, as
Jem says of Ray, “my favourite weakness.”
And part of the weakness is encouraged by my penchant for a certain reporter who is never without his bowler hat, or
ink around his cuticles, a snide half-smile or his notebook and pen poised at
the ready…
2 comments:
Will I ever find a reason NOT to like you more???
Loved this post.
Can't wait to meet Ray on the page.
1910s???
Sigh....
There's just something about that time period
Cary Grant, or maybe Ray Milland?
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