Categories
brazil zero moment

Capoeira Boys on a Beach in Brazil

Capoeira Boys on the Beach in BrazilOriginally uploaded by mgharris
We came for the sun, the vibe, the comfort of their native country for our Brazilian friends, and for the capoeira.

It’s Josh Garcia’s favourite sport and has got him out of more than one tight spot when it comes to dealing with enemies. And capoeira forms an important part of the plot for book 3.

So we came to see capoeira in it’s natural form, on the beach, in the streets of Brazil. Okay we didn’t see it used in rough Rio neighbourhood streets as a fight, but we did catch plenty of graceful displays, both rehearsed and impromptu.

Here’s a lovely photo that my husband snapped earlier this evening, as the sun was going down.

Categories
travel zero moment

Tiny Ali and MG

Tiny Ali with MG in Natal
Everybody takes their own version of this picture at the sand dunes near Natal.

What a day! We hired a couple of heavy-duty dune buggies and expert drivers, took a ride up north of Natal where we:

  • rode giant sand dunes like we were in a big snow powder basin in the Rockies (no safety belts or anything)
  • stopped to swim at a fresh-water lagoon filled with teeny little fishes, and drank caipirinhas
  • sat in a creek in the middle of a cashew nut tree wood, drinking cocktails of pineapple and strawberry juice with vodka, eating freshly barbequed shrimp and crayfish (one of our six-year old friends, however, is a natural vegetarian and wept bitterly as we tucked into the crustaceans with I’m sorry to say, as little pity as the Carpenter showed for the oysters they gobbled in “The Walrus and The Carpenter”. We tried to comfort her…)
  • rode a zipwire down a high sand dune, straight into another lagoon

No seat belts, no safety nazis, no washing hands before lunch at the creek, cheerful Brazilians everywhere.

 This is a great country.

Categories
mexico nostalgia zero moment

Looking for inspiration: Remedios Varo

Some writers like to have a vague idea where they’re going when they write and make it up as they go along, some writers like to spend a great deal of time with the plotting and planning.

I’m one of the planners. I’ve tried it the other way – with me it tends to produce plot structures that lack sufficient impact at the key points. So now, I plan.

But a story also has needs to have some magical, organic quality; something that feels as though it crept in by itself, wasn’t calculated into the mix from the start. Even if actually, it was…

Every writer has their own way of factoring in that magical bit. I suspect we all discover it on our own. Mind-altering substances might do the trick, but that’s a bit risky…

My own ‘method’ came from the realisation that even working to a structured plot, there was still room for movement. So even my ‘finished’ plot plans are in fact only about 85% of the way there.

The last 15% has to be found during the writing. And with me, it is always inspired from outside.

It seems to be something about understanding what makes you tick and connecting something in the story with that.

Without getting too psychoanalytical, we all have something deep down that we really care about and drives us.  Some people are very self-aware; they know what this is…the kind of people who care deeply about politics or religion…are probably going to write books that reflect their thoughts on that.

But if lie me you’re generally vague and mixed-up, it’s a bit more complicated!

However, by accident, I did find the way to extract this magic final 15%. And so far it has worked every time.

I’m not telling though! Nope; that’s going to be my secret.

Here’s a clue though, one thing that inspired me today, in finding the some of the magic 15% for Joshua book 3.

It’s a picture by Remedios Varo, a Mexican artist, a surrealist painter of fantastical works. A close friend of mine in Mexico City introduced me to her work when we were teenagers. I remember a very happy afternoon we spent together in the Museum of Modern Art in Chapultepec looking at these paintings…

The painting above is called Naturaleza Muerta Resucitado which translates as ‘Natural Death Resuscitated’.