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What The Concept Of Home Means For Writers

    Categories: Writing

OLD POST ALERT! This is an older post and although you might find some useful tips, any technical or publishing information is likely to be out of date. Please click on Start Here on the menu bar above to find links to my most useful articles, videos and podcast. Thanks and happy writing! – Joanna Penn

Big news! I'm moving back to England from Australia and in this video I talk about what ‘home' means for us as writers.

In the video I explain:

I left London in 2000 and am returning in June 2011 having spent seven years in New Zealand and four in Australia. I won't say the move is forever but I'm looking forward to going home!

When I was writing Pentecost, I set my protagonist Morgan’s home in Oxford, England which to me is my spiritual home. My Dad lives near there and I went to University there. If you ask me where is home – Oxford is it for me.

It also stems from Thomas Hardy’s Jude the Obscure – excellent classic but in it, Jude sees Oxford from afar and calls it a new Jerusalem. That image has stuck with me for nearly 20 years because Jerusalem is the other place in the world I am so ‘romantically' involved with. I’ve been ten times over the years and I love it. As someone who is deeply fascinated by religion, it’s just an amazing place.

So home is an inspiration for us as writers – aspects of our home pop up in our writing. We all know the physical landscape of home so we can weave in the little details that make our writing real. It grounds our work in specifics which makes for better writing.

We also bring the feeling of home to our writing – whether it’s a sci-fi adventure or thriller or romance, the emotional pull of home runs deep. Home can also mean people, coming home to our partner or children and those emotions can give our writing real strength.

Joanna Penn:

View Comments (30)

  • (gasp) Moving back to England?!? from AUSTRALIA?!?!? Quick, someone, get Joanna a hot pack and something to put her feet up on! She must be feeling faint!

    :D

    Seriously, all the best with the move, Joanna. I moved here from there when I was ten and have only been back on holidays twice. It was lovely to visit, but my wife (also a UK expat) and I do prefer here, even though we have some awesome friends in Swindon (amongst other places).

    Sydney was my home for nigh on two decades before my wife and I upped sticks and moved to Cairns. On one hand it's nice being away from the Big City craziness - but on the other, were it affordable, I think we'd consider moving back. My first novel is set in an alternate modern day Sydney, which gives me license to resurrect a couple of places that closed down a while ago.

    In the end, though, home really is wherever my lady wife is.

    • You're right Rob - home is where those you love are - but my husband is coming too! :)

  • Welcome back to England's green and pleasant land. Offer of advice avoid British newspapers and BBC news, they are so negative.
    I have lived abroad a few times; Germany, Cyprus and Kenya and I did consider going to live in Spain or the USA a few years ago but I'm glad I didn't. I enjoy travel and visting places, but I love returning to England. Anywhere in England is good for me because as a service child and ex military myself, I've moved around a lot and wherever I am is my home. One of the things I love about England is that we are just above the Mosquito line and just below the Midges line; it's a simple thing, but simple things please me.
    I also love your posts, but of course we can get them anywhere in the World. :)

    • I find newspapers and indeed news is negative everywhere! I haven't had a TV for nearly 5 years so just avoid it - I do still read The Guardian online which keeps me up to date but I agree, it's always the same!
      I'm looking forward to being without mosquitoes, huge spiders, sweltering heat and humidity - and in fact wearing a coat and scarf again!

  • Welcome back - subtle product placement btw.
    Home to me will always conjure up a vision of a lone whitewashed bungalow sprawled in the veldt on the outskirts of Boksburg in South Africa.
    Before moving to SA at the age of 12, I attended 13 schools here in the UK.
    Discovering this slippery word, home, actually meant something to me when I returned from university was an emotional moment for me.
    Still is.

    • obviously not so subtle product placement! Glad you approve :)
      I went to school in Malawi - which was never home, but I have a fondness for it - and I think the years of traveling mean I will always be a nomad but like you, surprising to feel so emotional about returning to at least a spiritual home

  • Welcome back to Oxford! :-D

    Having been to university in The Other Place (lived there aged 0 -10 too), I'm not sure I'll ever quite feel at home in Oxford. But my parents and granny live nearby, and it's definitely nice to be back after four years in London. :-)

    • boo hiss to the other place!
      I'll be living in the big smoke, working centrally but will definitely be out to Oxford for some Pimms and social networking :)

      • Ah, should've read the first line of your post more carefully! *ahem* Welcome back to London too! I'm quite often popping back to see friends at Goldsmiths, so I've still got a soft spot for it.

        And any time you want to get together for Pimms... :-)

  • Hi Joanna,

    I explored this very topic recently, albeit from a different angle. I visited F. Scott Fitzgerald's birth home about a month ago, and was strangely underwhelmed by the pilgrimage. I'm still not sure why, but it's probably because I think of Fitzgerald in NY, or Paris, or the Riviera. Not St. Paul. I had a great discussion with Kelly (in the comment section) about what home might have meant to Fitzgerald, but ultimately that proved to be an exercise in projecting our own sentimental (or lack thereof) thoughts of home.

    http://www.afewstrongwords.com/2011/03/babylon-visited-or-my-trip-to-fitzgeralds-house-day-190/

    I think home is, to paraphrase Hemingway, a moveable feast. That might be a slightly less cliché way to say "home is where the heart is" but I think in terms of writers and other creative types, it is quite different. You're right, home is an inspiration for us writers, either directly or indirectly. Home has meaning, even to those (especially to those?) who wander the globe. Home centres us and grounds us, and acts as a big ol' reset button sometimes.

    That's because writing is a very personal thing that plumbs the depths of who we are. Nothing really quite reflects that like our deep, personal connection to home.

    Anyway, those are my thoughts. I was about to say "congrats" on the move, but I always feel strange about saying that in these situations because I'm sure you have both good and bad feelings about moving. How about this: fare well on your next adventure!

    ~Graham

    • Thanks Graham! We've been looking at which way to fly back and I'm looking at all these hotels where famous writers stayed - the James Michener suite at Raffles, Singapore! (that would be lovely!)

  • Hi Joanna,

    Congrats on the move. Have fun and try not to stress out too much. I've never moved to another country (lived all over the U.S.), but it sounds like a great adventure.

    -Martin

    • I am a crazy person - having moved all my stuff from UK to New Zealand, then New Zealand to Oz and now back again... so this time, I'm selling everything so it's not so expensive :)

  • Welcome back to England. I moved to the London area from the US three years ago and I love it. International moves are terribly stressful as I'm sure you know. Good luck with the move.

    • Am trying not to stress - but the paperwork is killing me already :) I hope to organize a writer's tweetup once I'm settled so I'll look forward to meeting you sometime!

  • Hi Joanna,
    I can tell that you are really looking forward to retuning home and I'm so excited for you.
    My home is Mayne Island, British Columbia, but I'm from Eriksdale, Manitoba.
    I was born and raised in rural Manitoba. This is where my philosophical and spirtual views were formed and nurtured. However, strangely, it never felt like "home" to me.
    I found my island home in 1999.
    I set my first novel (Maynely A Mystery) on Mayne Island. The first part of The Sweater Curse (published by Decadent Publishing) is set in rural Manitoba, the second half in urban BC. Currently, my WIP has four main settings--Manitoba, Newfoundland, Ontario and Quebec. As you can tell, being at home and feeling at home has had a profound effect on my writing.
    Yesterday, I was rescaling with a problem: how much information should I include about Eriksdale in my next book?
    Your post has helped me see how important setting is. Thank you.
    Much like Martin, I too have never lived outside my coutry of orgin. Although, I've often dreamed of embarking on this adventure.
    I admire your courage, Joanna.

    • I love your "island home" - that's gorgeous! Definitely include your feelings and details on setting - it's one of the most important things to me in books I read. I still think Michener's The Source is responsible for my obsession with Israel!

  • Good question - complicated answer. The deepest roots are still in River, the hamlet in West Sussex where I was born. Even after eleven years London was never home; Liverpool was immediately I moved there, and remained home for 20 years. Now I'm as close to a true home as possible, not able to return to Sussex - the air and earth of Magura (which means Hill in Romanian) carry echoes of the chalk downs of Sussex and 40 years after leaving River, I'm rooted again in Hill.

      • oh wait, just saw you have now moved to Transylvania - now THAT is an amazing move and somewhere with deep literary roots! will you be writing horror?! / gothic?

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