When you choose to read a book, how much of the novel's setting do you you take into consideration? When you read the book blurb, is it the connection you feel with the characters? The conflict and plot? The length of the story? The author? What determines your choice to buy the book?
Do you look to see where the story takes place?
Perhaps you love fantasy/paranormal and the story is set in a world far different from the one we know, or it's an historical novel set two hundred years ago. Is it in the American West? The beaches of the Caribbean? Alaska in the winter? Countless stories are set in many locations throughout one book, but there is usually one place the protagonist calls home. Or desires to call home. As writers, it's imperative we understand our character's reasons for living in Tampa, FL or Chicago, IL or New York City.
There are certain locations I love to read about. New England, Florida, New Orleans, Seattle... Parts of Europe, and many more. These are some of the places I feel a strong visceral connection and love it when featured in a novel.
If I pick up a book and it takes place somewhere I haven't been or don't care to read about, I may not be so inclined to buy the book. This doesn't mean the book isn't wonderful, and to read stories about places and people much different than us can be exhilarating.
It's important for an author to take the time to understand why a story works better in one location than another. To introduce strong, fascinating characters is essential, and to understand why they live where they do, or why they have chosen to move to a new town or city, is important to the character development.
A small town in northern Florida captured my interest as I drove through on Route 301, north of Ocala and south of Jacksonville. The town of Lawtey. It seemed big enough to offer a variety of characters and activities, and small enough to create the atmosphere of country life. What really made me interested in Lawtey for a location was the nearby Lawtey Correctional Institution.
A very juicy seed of an idea took shape, and as I drove the hundreds of miles toward New England, I had a pretty good story beginning by the time I arrived at my destination. :)
It's up to a writer to develop the skill to offer an intriguing, exciting novel for readers to experience, and equally essential to understand and describe a believable setting -- no matter where or when the story takes place.
Is there a particular town, city, or country you love to read about in a novel?