Blog Guest: Lindsey Duncan

It's been quiet around here, with selling the house, moving to temporary quarters, and now traveling to Phoenix for my wife's conference... For today, though, we have a special guest. My friend Lindsey Duncan is doing a blog tour to promote her recently published book Flow. So, welcome, Lindsey! Here's what she has to say:


Much thanks to Dan for having me on his blog ā€“ and the bravery of allowing me to pick a topic.  Since we both enjoy finding the right, evocative turn of phrase, I wanted to talk about the use of the sense of smell in Flow particularly and in description in general.

Iā€™ve always been really drawn to the use of scent in descriptive passages.  Thereā€™s something of an irony to this:  I myself have always suffered from severe allergies, so my sense of smell is almost nil.  I miss scents that other people consider obvious ā€¦ though my sense of taste is relatively normal.  Perhaps on a personal level, itā€™s because what scents I do notice are those that are most distinct and telling ā€“ details that leap out in my surroundings.  Many of these are warning signals, like the smell of fish (also allergic) and flowers.

On a more universal level, I find scent to be a very visceral and immediate thing.  Unlike sounds or sights, it cannot be transferred remotely (ā€¦ yet!).  Our experience of scent is more instinctive, less rational.  Our sense of smell is less developed than other senses ā€“ which on a descriptive level invites more ambiguity and metaphor.  Itā€™s also a sense less frequently used in fiction.  Descriptions tend to begin with the visual, sometimes include the auditory depending on the scene, but often donā€™t consider scent.

For Flow, I had decided early on that Chailyn would be particularly keyed into the scents of her surroundings.  As a dweller in an underwater city, I knew her experience with smell prior would be limited or at least very different ā€“ and decided it was something I wanted to highlight throughout.  (As a side note, a quick search through Google now seems to indicate that weā€™re only (fairly) recently exploring the possibility that certain mammals can smell and follow scent trails underwater.)  The recognition of the aromas of land was important to emphasize how much of a stranger she was to the world the rest of us take for granted.

Indeed, the characterā€™s very first point-of-view sentence is:  ā€œChailyn inhaled deeply of mist and storm, and then another scent that was unfamiliar to her: dirt and loam, cold under the fall.ā€  (Fall = autumn, in context.)

In some cases, I simply had fun playing with snippets of description, for instance in a diner that was incidental to the plot, where I mentioned the scent of lavender soap and open flame.  It evokes a different ā€œimageā€ of the setting than a strictly visual reference.

Chailyn was one of two viewpoint characters in Flow.  The other, Kit, was a contemporary teen, more accustomed to her surroundings ā€“ so for her, while I didnā€™t avoid scent descriptions, I put no emphasis on them.  Whether or not the difference is obvious to a reader, I tried to maintain the distinction.

In a novelette / novella (depending on where you break the word count for that) I wrote entitled ā€œScenting Rain,ā€ part of the premise is the main character losing her sense of smell as part of a pact with a spirit.  To establish that contrast, the opening (and the ending) of the story are rife with aromas ā€“ which was interesting to do in a desert setting, because to me, thatā€™s a distinct and much subtler set of smells.  I indulged in some metaphor to encompass it:  ā€œThe crisp, empty scent of infinity surrounded her.ā€

I think that scent is something we often taken for granted and perhaps donā€™t notice until it vanishes ā€“ or hits us over the head.  Maybe thatā€™s why I find it so compelling from a descriptive standpoint.  Regardless, I find it adds a new dimension to the atmosphere of any tale.



LINDSEY DUNCAN is the author of contemporary fantasy Flow, just released by Double Dragon Publishing.  Flow follows the water-witch Chailyn, on dry land for her first mission, and Kit, a contemporary teen with mysterious powers, as they seek the man who killed Kit's mother ... a goal which catches the interest of the darkest of fairies.  They must also deal with the Borderwatch, a zealous organization that hunts fairies and has been in a cold war with the water-witches for decades.

Flow can be found here:

Comments

Lindsey Duncan saidā€¦
Thanks muchly for having me!

Btw, Flow is here:

http://www.double-dragon-ebooks.com/single.php?ISBN=1-55404-936-9
Nyki Blatchley saidā€¦
A fascinating post, Lindsey. I too suffer from near "smell-blindness", so I can really relate to you making a special effort to incorporate scents into the story. This inspires me to do more in that direction myself.