![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Sinkholes are ubiquitous and yet mysterious, I wanted to include one in the novel. As a writer with a background in the natural sciences and working as a science journalist, I’m very fascinated by and interested in all natural phenomena and aspects of nature. They can open up due to natural or manmade causes, slowly or very suddenly. Sinkholes are a natural phenomenon known throughout the world. Sinkhole – from Chapter 9 “Night at the Edge of the Abyss” I hope to see it in person some day because the details in it are extremely well made and truly spectacular. I thought this was an interesting reflection of the team itself, and that was the second reason I was inspired by this painting. The painting itself has an interesting story, which was used in the film Nightwatching by Peter Greenaway, to indicate that there is a mystery behind the placement of the people in the painting. I included this painting in the novel because I love the works of the Dutch and Flemish master artists, and this is perhaps the most accomplished and impressive of them. The edges of the painting have also been cut, and it is worth seeing both versions of the artwork to see how these cuts have changed what the painting looks like. This painting is very large (363 cm × 437 cm), so large that the people in the painting are almost life size. One of these is The Night Watch, or The Shooting Company of Frans Banning Cocq and Willem van Ruytenburch as is its full name, painted by the Dutch master Rembrandt van Rijn and completed in 1642. Here they see a lot of artworks and marvels, both manmade and natural. Towards the end of the novel the rescue workers visit a half-drowned museum in the city. The Night Watch – from chapter 29 “The Company, Preparing to Move Out” Today, this is one of the many stories and tales of the Antarctic continent and surrounding islands which over time have developed a kind of mythos all its own. In the 1970s a lifeboat was discovered on the landing spot, but it’s still a mystery who that was and whether they survived and were rescued. Due to the glaciers and steep cliffs that edge the island, there is only one place people can land with small boats. There is a weather station and some huts for the research teams, but there is no permanent habitation. It’s one of the most remote islands in the world and even researchers only go there once in a while to study the wildlife on land and in the ocean. This is Bouvet Island, a Norwegian dependency located in the South Atlantic. This place is so remote and barren that only birds and seals live there.” He describes having worked as a search and rescue physician in the Southern Sea and receiving a distress call from “an island mostly covered in ice, looking like a damn fortress, with a crown of piercing cliffs that drop right into the sea. In this chapter, Jens, the team’s emergency medicine specialist, tells what he did before he joined “The Corpse Counters”. Now We Can See The Moon received a starred review by Publishers Weekly, an excerpt was printed in the May issue of renowned literary magazine Lightspeed, and there is an interview with more information about the book in author Steph Post’s blog.įor these research notes I’d like to share some of the places and things that inspired Now We Can See The Moon, as researching these were part of the general research for the novel.īouvet Island – from chapter 26 “An Empty Lifeboat Floating at Sea” The novel is a loose continuation of my previous novel, Not Dark Yet ( Two Dollar Radio 2015), and came out at the end of May this year. Now We Can See The Moon ( Snuggly Books 2018) is a novel about a drowned city and a group of rescue workers/identification team who are, for various reasons, staying behind in the ruins. This week, Berit Ellingsen writes about Now We Can See The Moon from Snuggly Books. Our Research Notes series invites authors to describe their process for a recent book, with “research” defined as broadly as they like.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |