by Sandy Parks
I recently posted a photo of a door to my Facebook page and asked
people where they thought it was located and what might be behind it. Some guessed
it might belong to a church or a home or it opened to a public place. Their
questions set me to thinking about how a book starts with the cover and the reader opens the book to enter into a new, often unexpected world. How many times do we
prejudge a book, a person, or a home by what we see on the outside, without any
hints or knowledge as to what might lurk beneath the cover? As a reader that is
part of the adventure of a good book.
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Alley in Marrakesh |
Morocco is famous for its bland and dusty alleys with
ancient doors that open to true surprises. A typical lane might have a door
like the one you see above. Below could well be the treat that is waiting
inside.
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Riad in Marrakesh |
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Rabat, Morocco |
A door represents the start of a story, whether it be mystery,
romance, or any genre. In a mystery, the protagonist investigates a crime. The
reader stands at the door with the detective or sleuth ready to discover what
happened. How did the art get stolen? Who murdered the person found in the
alley? While a door may give hints, they can be misleading and the reader and
protagonist will gain little information until the door opens.
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Fez |
A door like this one above offers questions before it is even
entered. Why is there a smaller door inside a bigger one? If the book is an historical,
the reader might discover the smaller one is for people and the bigger one is for horses.
Or might a good sleuth discover other explanations. And what does a door say about the
characters in a romance? What kind of hero or heroine lives behind the fancy
gold or brass door? Or perhaps one built of sturdy wood? Or the door deteriorating
and covered in graffiti?
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Palace doors |
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A house in Greece |
A door can also be more of a portal that simply beckons the
reader to walk through.
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Portal in the hills around Sparta, Greece |
A door can hint at what a reader might expect to find within. Are there symbolic things hanging over, on, or around the door? And lastly,
what if the door is something we expect, but offers a surprise. Below is a door
to a church…or is it? What if it represents so much more than that. This one is the door to a monastery…a
very old and unique one, built in a place that promised solitude (see the photo below it). This is the way authors want to tell a story. Start with what seems a simple premise, but take the reader on a journey that is something greater than the door promises.
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Kalambaca, Greece |
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Monastery, Kalambaka, Greece |
So what doors are you preparing to open as a
reader or what adventure are you cooking up behind closed doors as a writer?
4 comments:
Oh, I love all your pictures of doors! What a great blog and the way you tied it to writing! Beautiful photography. :)
I also love door photos! Those are gorgeous!! I agree, they seem like portals to adventure :) <3
I think this might be one of my favorite blog posts of all time! :) I love pictures of doors, and these are so intriguing. I hadn't thought about starting a book being like figuring out what's behind a door, but I love that analogy.
Ah, shucks, thanks Julie, Anne Marie and Toni for the compliments. I love doors, too, and have way too many photos of them. They do tell a story and the more ancient the door, the more I'm curious about all the people who have passed through them.
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