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Well, back when I was doing the college thing... I was heading for a educational degree in drama. Though, I had started with just doing a General Studies (lame), trying to put all the lame stuff behind me (Math, Science). It has its place, but it isn't for me, that's for sure.
Topics that influence my writing are crime, history, folklore, mythology, etc. I'm not sure if I could say I'm a one genre man. When it comes to writing short stories, I tend to lean towards the dark and disturbing, so most of my stuff is either horror or mystery.
As I co-own an independent production company, I do a lot of script writing. I'm actually pretty decent at both the dark and disturbing and comedy. Though, comedy in short story form for me, doesn't usually happen. I try to avoid it, because it doesn't seem to come out quite right. It's the dialogue that I can be funny with, but you can't rely on dialogue in a short story.
I'm getting distracted and digressing.
I believe I already answered the question. I do a lot of personal research, even though I am not going to school now. I study a lot of crime, serial killers, vampire mythology, Greek mythology and history, etc. More than anything, though, most of my stories contain a lot of personal experiences.
I'll confess, I watched the old "Little Women" movie that starred Katherine Hepburn. But, I'm glad I did, not because I really liked it much, but because a very true point was made. At one point in the movie, an older gentleman friend of Hepburn's character read some of her stories and gave her a little lecture about what she was doing wrong... she wasn't writing what she knew. The most important thing when I write is to make it relate to something real, no matter how surreal a story it may be. There must be themes that I can relate to, so that I can write them accurately and so that the reader can get something from the story. When I write something about crime, I pay less attention to all the little details of what hair landed where or what grease whiped from what forehead to what hand to which bedpost and pay more attention to "what is the point?" And I try to make sure it's something that I have experience in, so that I truly understand it first. Because if I can't understand what I am writing about, then how can I expect others to understand?
Good grief, I have written a novel. As you can see, I can be longwinded sometimes. Laters.
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