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Writing About Places in Fiction – Maryland’s Eastern Shore in Inn Significant

By Steph's Scribe @stephverni

Writing About Places in Fiction – Maryland’s Eastern Shore in Inn Significant

As a writer, it’s important to research the places you may feature in your writing. I spent a ton of time walking around Annapolis, Maryland, for my first novel, Beneath the Mimosa Tree, and I did the same with the novel I launched yesterday, Inn Significant. It’s part of the fun, really. As my students in travel writing class can attest from last semester, it’s envigorating to write about a place, but there’s a trick. You have to allow yourself to be completely immersed in the place. Your writing won’t be as vibrant if you’re just a spectator. You have to become one with the place…become a local while you are there and learn what you can from observation, conversation, and getting involved.

The main character in my novel, Milly Foster, has been summoned by her parents to run their Inn on the Eastern Shore of Maryland in Oxford out of desperation—a desperate attempt to help their daughter move past the tragic death of her beloved husband. It’s a last-ditch effort to bring her back to life.

I wanted to set the story in a small and picturesque town, so my mother and I spent time there, and I went back a couple of other times to just walk the streets and talk to people.

Come on–how great is that type of research? It’s simply the best.

I gave it my all to make this work of fiction feel realistic, and I wanted to stay as true to the setting and feel of Oxford as possible. There are also jaunts to neighboring towns St. Michaels and Easton.

To help you visualize the place if you have not been, I thought I’d share some of the photographs I took this summer as I did that dastardly and taxing (ha ha) research.

I hope you enjoy Inn Significant, and as well, this little photo-essay of the places the characters visit in the novel. I’m looking forward to going back for a visit very soon.

To purchase via Amazon for Kindle, click here.

To purchase via Amazon in paperback, click here.

To purchase via Barnes & Noble for the Nook, click here (paperback version should be available later tonight).

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Writing About Places in Fiction – Maryland’s Eastern Shore in Inn Significant
Stephanie Verni is Professor of Business Communication at Stevenson University and is the author of Inn Significant, Baseball Girl, and Beneath the Mimosa Tree. Along with her colleagues Leeanne Bell McManus and Chip Rouse, she is a co-author of Event Planning: Communicating Theory and Practice, published by Kendall-Hunt.

About the Inn Significant: A Novel

Two years after receiving the horrifying news of her husband Gil’s death, Milly Foster continues to struggle to find her way out of a state of depression. As a last-ditch effort and means of intervention, Milly’s parents convince her to run their successful Inn during their absence as they help a friend establish a new bed and breakfast in Ireland. Milly reluctantly agrees; when she arrives at the picturesque, waterfront Inn Significant, her colleague, John, discovers a journal written by her late grandmother that contains a secret her grandmother kept from the family. Reading her grandmother’s words, and being able to identify with her Nana’s own feelings of loss, sparks the beginning of Milly’s climb out of the darkness and back to the land of the living.

OXFORD, MARYLAND

Writing About Places in Fiction – Maryland’s Eastern Shore in Inn Significant

Writing About Places in Fiction – Maryland’s Eastern Shore in Inn Significant

Writing About Places in Fiction – Maryland’s Eastern Shore in Inn Significant

Writing About Places in Fiction – Maryland’s Eastern Shore in Inn Significant

Writing About Places in Fiction – Maryland’s Eastern Shore in Inn Significant

Writing About Places in Fiction – Maryland’s Eastern Shore in Inn Significant

Writing About Places in Fiction – Maryland’s Eastern Shore in Inn Significant

Writing About Places in Fiction – Maryland’s Eastern Shore in Inn Significant

Writing About Places in Fiction – Maryland’s Eastern Shore in Inn Significant

Writing About Places in Fiction – Maryland’s Eastern Shore in Inn Significant

Writing About Places in Fiction – Maryland’s Eastern Shore in Inn Significant

Writing About Places in Fiction – Maryland’s Eastern Shore in Inn Significant

EASTON, MARYLAND

Writing About Places in Fiction – Maryland’s Eastern Shore in Inn Significant

Writing About Places in Fiction – Maryland’s Eastern Shore in Inn Significant

Writing About Places in Fiction – Maryland’s Eastern Shore in Inn Significant

Writing About Places in Fiction – Maryland’s Eastern Shore in Inn Significant

Writing About Places in Fiction – Maryland’s Eastern Shore in Inn Significant

Writing About Places in Fiction – Maryland’s Eastern Shore in Inn Significant

Writing About Places in Fiction – Maryland’s Eastern Shore in Inn Significant

Writing About Places in Fiction – Maryland’s Eastern Shore in Inn Significant

ST. MICHAELS, MARYLAND

Writing About Places in Fiction – Maryland’s Eastern Shore in Inn Significant

Writing About Places in Fiction – Maryland’s Eastern Shore in Inn Significant

Writing About Places in Fiction – Maryland’s Eastern Shore in Inn Significant

Writing About Places in Fiction – Maryland’s Eastern Shore in Inn Significant
Writing About Places in Fiction – Maryland’s Eastern Shore in Inn Significant

Writing About Places in Fiction – Maryland’s Eastern Shore in Inn Significant

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Writing About Places in Fiction – Maryland’s Eastern Shore in Inn Significant
Stephanie Verni is Professor of Business Communication at Stevenson University and is the author of Inn Significant, Baseball Girl, and Beneath the Mimosa Tree. Along with her colleagues Leeanne Bell McManus and Chip Rouse, she is a co-author of Event Planning: Communicating Theory and Practice, published by Kendall-Hunt.

About the Inn Significant: A Novel

Two years after receiving the horrifying news of her husband Gil’s death, Milly Foster continues to struggle to find her way out of a state of depression. As a last-ditch effort and means of intervention, Milly’s parents convince her to run their successful Inn during their absence as they help a friend establish a new bed and breakfast in Ireland. Milly reluctantly agrees; when she arrives at the picturesque, waterfront Inn Significant, her colleague, John, discovers a journal written by her late grandmother that contains a secret her grandmother kept from the family. Reading her grandmother’s words, and being able to identify with her Nana’s own feelings of loss, sparks the beginning of Milly’s climb out of the darkness and back to the land of the living.

OXFORD, MARYLAND


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