Novel mini-synopsis
This past year I've been writing a novel that entwines the lives of two women through historical and current day storylines. The current day story starts in Puebla, Mexico where the young heroine is spending a week with her professor mother and sister. The protagonist is going through a life crisis after her romantic relationship abruptly ends, and she is pressured by her mother to do the pilgrimage to Santiago to collect a valuable literary diary for her mother's research. Her journey across northern Spain in the dead of winter takes the form of self-discovery, as she is forced to reflect on the direction her life has taken, her relationship with her loved ones, and the people she meets along the way on the Camino.
The historical day story is set in Galicia, Spain during the late 19th century. When the historical heroine discovers that the overbearing woman who has been raising her is not her biological mother, she sets out on a quest to find her true mother.
Themes for both storylines involve self-discovery, self-identity, forgiveness, love, and explore relationship dynamics between mother and daughter, sisters, and man and woman.
Father passed away
I haven't gotten beyond my 85% mark (65,000 words). The day after I returned from Spain I learned that my father had suddenly died of a heart attack, so I flew to Arizona to help my brothers clean out my Dad's cottage and give a memorial service. Ever since then, I've felt disoriented. Writing was the main connection I shared with my dad, and so it has been hard to get back into it. Also, many of the things that happened in my novel paralleled with the way my dad died--kind of unsettling. I'm hoping to ease myself back into writing this coming week.
Research diary in northern Spain in January 2008:
Wednesday, January 9: Exhaustion
I missed a connecting flight to León from Zurich, so I edited my novel while waiting for the next flight. I also discovered that I left my jump drive at home. I was fighting off a cold and already feeling homesick.
I felt better once I arrived in León. The historic area is small but pretty and was lit up with little golden lights. My hotel, Hotel Paris, was very close to the cathedral and the San Isodoro monastery.
Thursday, January 10: Some disappointment
The sun rose at 8:15 am. I searched for something to eat, but found out that the Spanish idea of breakfast consists of bread and coffee. This poses a big problem for me since I’ve been avoiding wheat this past year. Good thing I bought candied almonds yesterday.
The Cathedral was closed for renovation, so I checked out the frescos at the San Isodoro Monastery.
After having Caldo Gallego soup for lunch, I took a bus to a town called Hospital de Orbigo. The bus drives along the old highway that parallels the Camino, so I could keep track of the sights the Camino passed. I saw a couple pilgrims walking on the dirt path, but they were walking toward toward Leon. I assumed they were returning to their starting point by foot, as some pilgrims have started to do in past years.
Hospital del Orbigo is a tiny sleepy town. Most window shutters were closed. I walked around the outskirts of Orbigo looking for the long medieval bridge. First I walked away from the town down a dirt road toward the countryside because I saw a sign with a symbol of a bridge pointing that way. I walked through some leafless forests and found the refugio by chance. After taking a closer look at what I thought was a cottage, I read a plaque saying it was a refugio. An elderly man pointed me the way toward the bridge. It was an incredibly long, beautiful Romanesque bridge as far as bridges go. I can't imagine jousting on that bridge as knights once did, including Don Suero de Quiñones who was the main character in Cervantes’ novel Don Qixote. A restaurant I had wanted to use in my novel for one of my settings is closed in the winter. The refugio looked closed for winter, too.
Around 5 p.m. I considered taking another bus onward toward Astorga, but got tired and hungry so I returned to León instead and found a large, crowded cafeteria near my hotel that served a chicken and vegetable paella, called Paella Valenciana. I was the only person eating dinner, as all the other 50 customers were drinking coffee and socializing. Restaurants don't serve dinner until 8 p.m.
People here work until 5 or 6 in the evening, shop for a couple hours (end of season sales), then eat out at a restaurant. I like watching the three-generation families dine interact as they dined and walked around town. I also like it that Spanish fathers kiss and hold their sons a lot.
I studied the map of Asturias to decide whether I want to take a bus tomorrow to Astorga and beyond, or rent a car and try to visit a lot of towns in one shot before returning for another night in León. I'll play it by ear and see what the weather holds for me.
Slow down!
I just realized I've been pushing too hard to finish writing my novel at the expense of my health and family. I’ve been missing out on quality moments I could have been having fun with my sons. As I walked through Hospital del Orbigo, I began to realize that my novel is going to require many more months of rewriting to get it up to the level of quality it deserves. This coming year, I'm going to simplify my life by slowing down my writing pace and spending more time with my family. Also, I am going to eat better and work out to gain weight and muscle. Making these changes will hopefully put my life in balance.
Friday, January 11: Snow blizzard
I am so glad today is over with. The gates to the Gothic cathedral in León were finally opened this morning so I took a stroll around inside. The stained glass windows were long and massive.
This morning I rented a car and drove to Astorga in heavy rain. To be honest, I felt nervous about driving to Astorga and beyond because I hate the idea of getting lost in a foreign country, especially in bad weather. But I didn't want to think that I had come all the way to Spain only to chicken out. My first stop was Astorga. I drove up the hill the old city sets on while listening to a song from the album “Lunas Rotas” by Rosana. I saw the cathedral and Episcopal church as well as one of the albergues then grabbed a cup of hot tea to warm up. At one point the cold rain turned into snow.
After a couple hours in Astorga, I drove beyond the city to places my main character passes through. I hurried
before because I didn't want to drive back to León in the dark. As I drove on, it started snowing hard! I was nervous because I’ve never driven through snow before. I drove through El Ganso and saw that the Cowboy Bar she is supposed to visit was closed for winter. Next I drove through Rabanal del Camino and Foncebadon.
By then it was snowing very hard and I had to drive at a snail's pace. I had to drive up a mountain toward Cruz de Ferro (Iron Cross), but the snowstorm got out of control and the snow got so deep I felt the tires sinking into the snow and mud. No one was around except for a few poor pilgrims several miles down the mountain standing around in the snow waiting for an albergue to open. The snowstorm forced me to turn around on the
narrow road, armpits sweating, though I was only a few kilometers away from the top. I was just glad to get out of there in one piece and find my way back to León before it got dark.
I miss my family so much it hurts. I want time to pass so that I can get back to them. I've been questioning why I chose to take so many days to do this research.
I'm exhausted and disappointed to find out how little the reality of the setting here matches my expectations. I'm going to have to rewrite a lot of chapters. Now I wish I would have heeded Tracy Chevalier's (via her secretary) advice to focus more on the story than historical and setting accuracy.
Of course, I'm grateful to find out now rather than later what must be changed in the story. And I'm also grateful for discovering how important my family is to me. Maybe the time and money I've spent here so far make it all worth it in the end?
My 2008 resolutions:
- Spend more quality time with family
- Slow my writing and editing pace
- Exercise more and gain weight
- Study more Spanish
Friday, January 11: Arrival in Santiago
Today I took a bus from Lugo and arrived in Santiago late at night and took a taxi to the historic quarter where the Santo Grial was located. My hotel room was very nice. The owners renovated it so that the architectural integrity was kept intact. It had free Wi-Fi in the rooms, a large flat-screen TV, and a balcony that overlooks the narrow street Rua Franco. The whole city is car-free, so I there shouldn't be much traffic noise.
I felt so much better once I got to Santiago. I feel so connected to it. One-third of its 90K population consists of students, so it is quite lively. It has so much to offer any curious tourist: art, music, history, cuisine, etc.
Saturday, January 12: Santiago
Santiago is such a pretty old city despite its wet, gray skies. This morning I attended mass and walked all over. I'm going to take a guided city tour around 4 p.m, then record mass vespers.
I met a very sweet informative guy named Fernando who studies English philology and works at the tourist center who answered a lot of my research questions about architecture and history.
Sunday, January 13: Santiago
Today I attended noon mass after eating a large plate of jamón serrano and tortilla España. I thought I had asked for a piece of tortilla, but got a whole pie plate of it. Then I only had 20 minutes to scarf it all down before the pilgrim's noon mass began. At the cathedral, it was fun to watch the religious rituals being played out. The priest and a nun took turns giving the sermon, and there was a young altar boy who stood behind the priest, preparing the holy water. He looked kind of sleepy and kept yawning. I walked around the interior of the cathedral to etch a mental image of how the pews were arranged and other details, and hugged the St. James statue.
I took a guided tour with Diego around the city in the afternoon. I was the only person that showed up, maybe b/c it was raining. Diego knew so much about architecture, the cathedral, the history of the city, the pilgrimage, cuisine and folklore. He finished his PhD in Galician history, but hasn't gotten around to doing his thesis. He also had lots of interesting personal stories about witches and ghosts that his grandmother had told him. We had to take occasional walking breaks due to the weather. At one point when we were standing outside it started raining so hard then a strong gust of wind blew in and broke my new large umbrella.
I've been doing a lot of walking here. Yesterday I probably walked around for 5 or 6 hours. I feel invigorated from all the cold weather walking. Maybe exercise is helping me keep my food tolerances at bay. I don't seem to need as much sleep either. Or maybe it's that I'm sleeping more soundly so I don't need as much sleep.
Monday, January 14 Santiago
Today the storm shattered the umbrella I bought only a few days ago. I was going down to the train station during the storm when my umbrella blew to pieces. So I took a picture of it then threw it away in the trash can. The train to Padron left too late, so I went to the music store nearby to listen to Galician vocalists. I didn't find anything good, though.
Today I walked through the park and around the outskirts of the city. I was thinking that this was the last time I'll probably ever return to Santiago. Then I thought that if I have the success I'm striving for, I'll probably return again within a few years.
This afternoon I visited the Pobo Galego Museum. I took a lot of pictures of things regarding how people looked and lived in the 19th century that might help me with my writing.
At night, I bought ten semi-precious stones from a woman at a very small unique shop last night. The shopowner was very mystical about the purchase and educated me about the stones I was buying. She told me that citroen quartz aids creativity and restores the immune system (perfect!). She told me how to care for the stones. She said I should wash the stones in a fountain, river, or in the sea to wash off other people's energies. If I lose one of the stones, that means I didn't need it. If a stone breaks by chance, then that brings me good luck. That night I washed my stones in the Toural fountain near my hotel.
Tuesday, January 15 Santiago
For dinner I returned to a tavern called Maria Castañia. I had a Caldo Gallego soup again and a glass of Albariño wine that is so smooth I could drink it every day. For dessert I had a hot tea and castañias in some kind of fruit juice. I also asked if I could have a small taste of their Galician soft cheese with marmalade. The waiter was so nice. He brought me out a small plate of three slabs of cheese and a firm slab of their honey-like marmalade.
I've been so lucky with the people here. I reach out a lot more to others when I travel alone. In this way, I like myself better when I'm on my own. I've talked to so many interesting people and have had some nice exchanges. People here have been very helpful and patient with my low Spanish/Galician proficiency.
Wednesday, January 16 Santiago
According to my mom’s suggestion, I’m thinking about starting my book from the historical storyline with the main character’s diary entry. It’s a powerful passage and a good place to start reading. I used to worry about it sounding too poetic and was afraid of turning off readers who would then think the entire book is like that. If it were at all possible to express in words, I would like to create a prologue in which the aged literary diary moves through time to the past, generation by generation, held by a woman's pair of hands who is holding or repacking the book into another box. Time passing backwards would be shown by change of dress and furniture and lighting, until the diary ends up in its author's hands.
I haven't been writing much since I've been in Santiago--have been trying to soak everything in for now. But I think I have only 4 more current day chapters, and then 3 or 5 more historical chapters. That sounds about right considering word and page count. I'm finally feeling hopeful and interested again in continuing the novel. When I first got to León, I hated everything I had written thus far.
I took a short train ride out to Padron by train this morning. Rosalia de Castro lived in quite a large house near the train station the last years of her life. The exhibits in each room of her house were all pretty interesting. I think you know she had a scandalous birth right? Her father was a priest and her mother was of lower nobility, and so her birth certificate stated neither parent's name and she was raised by her paternal aunt. She was brave, too. At a time when it was frowned upon to write in any language other than Castillian Spanish, she wrote a book of poems "Cantares Galegas," which helped spur on the Galician revival in the late 1860s. Her husband encouraged her to write in Galician and publish her stuff. One sad thing is that she outlived all seven of her children. Even so, she seemed to love life and her homeland, and her poems and novels reflected her passion for life, family, nature, and Galicia. I felt honored to visit her place and see all of her things.
Afterwards, I walked to the Padron's historic quarter, but shops were closing up for the afternoon and it started raining hard. I got drenched on my way back to the train station. Earlier this evening I visited a chocolateria and ordered a cup of hot chocolate with churros. Talk about rich! Then I went down to the music store and bought a CD by a Galician folk music band called Berrogüetto. I put one of their more recent songs titled "Un Volta e unha Poema" on my blog a while back.
I'm leaving my hotel early Friday morning to return to León via train. It's a 5-hour train ride, but it should be very pretty.
Thursday, January 17 Santiago
It's 8 p.m. and Paloma, her husband Miguel, and their 3-year-old son Andres just returned home. They arrived in town around 1:30 p.m. and after we had a tea at the nearby cafe, we went to a good restaurant where we ate a long lunch. From the time we met until the time they left, we talked the whole time about so many things, mainly music, the music industry and medieval poetry, but many other things as well such as literature and her family history and how her great uncle was a friend of President Franco. We walked all through the city, through the park and to another cafe for a cup of that rich hot chocolate and churros.
Before she arrived, I became a little nervous. I meditated on us having a very interesting and exciting time together as two women who have a passion for creating art, and so it happened the way I had envisioned it, much to my amazement. We talked about music, art, business, child-rearing, Rosalia de Castro, Galicia, and so many other things.She teaches music in an elementary school. Her husband Miguel makes a variety of wooden instruments such as the Galician bagpipe in their home. Their 3-year-old son Andres is a great kid--well-behaved, intelligent, funny, and fun to be around. Meeting Paloma and her family made today fantastic for me.
Friday, January 18 Santiago
I left Santiago by train at 9 am this morning and just arrived into León this afternoon. It's now about 4 pm. It's a chilly sunny day, so I'm going to step out and enjoy a short walk to the chocolate store:) Tomorrow Saturday afternoon I take a train down to Madrid and stay the night at a hotel near the airport. Then early Sunday morning I begin my flight back towards Zurich and Dubai. I just pray that I make the connecting flight this time. Tomorrow I take a train down to Madrid and stay the night at an airport hotel. Then Sunday morning I begin my flight back towards Zurich and Dubai. I just pray that I make the connecting flight this time.
thesis writing help
this kind of blog always useful for blog readers, it helps people during research. your post is one of the same for blog readers.
Posted by: thesis writing | 07/01/2010 at 12:52 AM
Hello Fernando,
So good to hear from you! I was hoping that you weren't too busy with work to write. By the way, I didn't get your email! Maybe Yahoo blocked you? Would you by any chance still have the information that you wrote? Please try to contact me again. How are you?
Posted by: Sylvia Shipp | 04/23/2008 at 07:06 AM
[this is good]
Hi Sylvia,
Remember me? So long since our last time... Hope you received my last e-mail answering your questions about our "witches".
I'm happy to know that your time in Santiago was so good.
Fernando
Posted by: Fernando | 04/23/2008 at 06:14 AM