TRAVEL INSIDER
Whether it's the Southern charms and secrets of Charleston or New Orleans, such Northern historic spots as Boston, or exotic foreign capitals, writers search for inspiration in them and often find it.
Thriller writers log thousands of miles in search of the best places for their characters to misbehave. Whether a story is set on the streets of Bangkok or in a small Southern town, authors travel widely to find the right location for the latest conspiracy, murder or mayhem.
Some of the best thrillers are set in America's most historic cities. With more than 70 books to her credit, author Sandra Brown set "Ricochet" in Savannah, Ga., where brick sidewalks, buckled by the roots of live oaks, and dripping Spanish moss create the perfect backdrop for a thriller.
"You peer through iron gates into walled courtyards," says Brown, the International Thriller Writers 2008 ThrillerMaster. "In Savannah, you just know those courtyards contain juicy secrets."
She's right. Frequent travelers to Savannah say it's practically crawling with ghosts. Brown's "Smoke Screen," set in Charleston, S.C., is about a disastrous fire in which five people die. While Brown was writing the book, there was a tragic fire in Charleston in which nine firemen died. "Smoke Screen" is dedicated to them.
Thriller writer
Supernatural thriller writer Alexandra Sokoloff thinks a Northern city makes a great setting. "You can easily believe the devil is still walking the convoluted streets of Boston and lurking in those Revolutionary-era graveyards," Sokoloff says. Her spine-tingling book "The Price" involves someone -- who may or may not be the devil -- walking the halls of a hospital and making deals with patients and their families.
The devil and witchcraft have a long history in
"Massachusetts is a gorgeous and complicated place, with Revolutionary history around every corner. [It's] so resonant that Boston easily becomes a character in anything I write about it."
Though Las Vegas native Vicki Pettersson travels extensively, it wasn't hard for the author of the "Signs of the Zodiac" books to choose her hometown as the setting for her stories. Her current dark fantasy, "The Touch of Twilight," is filled with paranormal beings and a strong-willed heroine who, Pettersson says, is in a fight for her city as well as her life.
Forensic anthropologist Kathy Reichs' "Grave Secrets" was set in Guatemala, where she participated in the exhumation of a mass grave containing the remains of women and children. The area was not far from Panajachel, in the highlands near Lake Atitlan, which she says was moving and extraordinarily beautiful. The coastal Carolinas also inspire Reichs, who frequents the Isle of Palms, just outside Charleston. No wonder several of her Temperance Brennan novels are set in this low-country setting. Reichs' "Devil Bones" takes place entirely in
Author J.D. Rhoades also prefers to take readers to the not-so-innocent coast of North Carolina and the beaches in Southport and
Suburbs that bridge the small towns and big cities of America attract author Shane Gericke. His books ("Blown Away," "Cut to the Bone" and the upcoming "Blood Hammer") are set in the Chicago suburb of
America has its fair share of spine-tingling destinations, but exotic locales are just as deadly. James Macomber set his book "Sovereign Order" in Monaco amid the Grand Prix. Dakota Banks chose a vast, desolate area of sand dunes in Asia for her thriller "Dark Time: Mortal Path." Tim Hallinan's current series, the most recent of which is "The Fourth Watcher," is set in Bangkok, which the author describes as "saturated, almost wet with light." What he loves about this locale -- the food, people, sidewalk life and even the smells and horrific traffic -- seep into the fabric of his stories.
Author Brett Battles says St. Petersburg, Russia, calls to him. "I know I will set a book there," he says. His next book, "Shadow of Betrayal," is set in Ireland. Steve Berry loves to set his stories in Germany and Denmark; he so loved Copenhagen that his character Cotton Malone prefers to live there.
Perhaps no thriller captures the creepy side of Puerto Vallarta, Mexico, as well as David Angsten's "Dark Gold." His "Night of the Furies" takes place in the Greek Isles. He likes to set stories in places that remain relatively remote and mysterious.
Destinations that deal with situations where something familiar turns scary or normal circumstances become threatening work for authors such as Tim Maleeny, who gets characters in trouble in San Francisco, with side trips to Hong Kong, Tokyo and Mexico.
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