Monthly Archives: September 2011

The Stories Old Photos Tell: Visualizing Your Characters in Writing

Their Photo by Red Haircrow

Their Photo by Red Haircrow

Out wandering one Sunday morning, having promised to take my son to the traditional weekend institutions in Germany, namely flea markets, we returned to one of our favorites in Berlin at Rathaus Steglitz. It’s my favorite because there’s a vendor specializing in old books, postcards, letters and photos. I can literally take hours going through all boxes and boxes of material, but a 14 year old has little interest beyond the cursory. So, randomly choosing ONE box to go through, after considering to buy a number of postcards from the early 1900′s, and a newer one with the image of a kitten, I decided to go deeper, and I was lucky I did…for I found the perfect photo for my next project.

It was absolutely perfect.

It immediately drew my eye despite its small size and slightly out of focus nature: a tall dark-haired man walked besides three others in a nature landscape with trees on either side. They are casual in dress shirts and sweaters, two distinctly have jackets that look homemade, but its the positioning of the men, the way they look into the camera that is so arresting.

The time period could be anywhere from the late 50s to mid-70s, but I would guess it to be perhaps early 60′s. On the back of the photo there is a pencil written number but it could be interpreted as a quickly written “55″ or flipped around “39″. It’s also stamped with a violet ink mark saying: “Foto-Boss 11/15 Trept, Puschkinallee1″.

Whatever the date, two of these individuals are my muse for a literary novel tentatively titled “Zero Hour”. If you don’t know that term, it’s suggestive of the base state many Germans, Jews and others who survived WW2 came to following the monumental slaughter of millions, violence and devastation, both personal and societal, greater than any experienced in recent history. They came to an absolute state where there was total nothingness, zero, and had to somehow rebuild their sanity, their lives, their world.

My story is based on a young person who never felt comfortable in their gender. Growing up during this time period, in a small village in Germany where anyone different could be considered dangerous, he lived a mentally and physically precarious life, yet maintained an odd friendship with another older children who was a mix of protector and challenger. Nearing the end of war, they, like the rest, were broken and forced apart until several years later they met in Berlin.

Despite being overjoyed to see one another again, the scars the war left on each are deep, with some still healing. New wounds are sustained as one needs to express his sexuality and desire for change, and the other is both repulsed and attracted by the courageous struggle of his friend, yet their tumultuous feelings for each other may cause the death each had previously escaped.

I’m a long time student and researcher of the Holocaust and world war two era Germany; the precendents which led up to the events and the various hardships that occurred during its rebuilding. This is a project I’ve planned for several years, wishing to incorporate my knowledge of the people and their times, as well as the unique, often deadly situation homosexuals and others, especially transgenders or intergenders found themselves in both before and after the war.

(Side note: I recently met and became friends with a young man here in Berlin who, among other things, volunteers at the Gay Museum in Mehringdamm, Berlin. As we discussed this project, his enthusiasm for the history he works with every day really fired my own for telling this story, and accurately portraying local and gay history in this way.)

It is a story in which my own struggles will be situationally included. Often considered a “bittersweet” author, this fits within some of my usual themes of internal battle, inexplicable love and heartbreak and healing.The nature of the photo conveyed this same mood for me.

We don’t know where they came from or where they’re going, or their relationship to each other, save they appear to be on quite familiar terms and are likely friends. The two central figures in the photo are the basis for my main characters. As soon as I saw them at the bottom of the cardboard box I knew they had to be mine. I could sink myself into the image and look out from their eyes:

I am the shorter figure, I could look left up to the taller form of my friend. I trail him just a bit, glad to be near but not obtrusively close. I feel a small shiver of excitement to be photoed this way next to him. I don’t want to smile too widely and appear forward, but my pleasure shows on my face and the relaxed set of my shoulders.

I am the taller figure. If I glance down to my right I can see him just in the corner of my eye. I am out front, the leader, the protector, one hand unencumbered to reach out and help if necessary, or hold him back with caution while I assess any coming situation. My head tilts just enough to show a mild exasperation with the photo taker. I can’t do anything but submit but I would have preferred not to be in the photo. We are only walking after all, so why take it?

I love old photos. I love the stories they can tell. I love to immerse myself into them, into other people, feel their feelings and express it through my writing. Sometimes I become them. With the old, old photos I have, I know the people are dead now, but I make them live again inside my head. Some of the characters in my stories are incarnations of myself, the situations based on actual events, while the two individuals from “Zero Hour” are, I believe, those who actually existed somewhere in time…and I found them again through their photo.

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Review by Valentina Heart of “The Angel of Berlin”

Reviewed by author Valentina Heart at The Romance Reviews, “The Angel of Berlin” again received comments I especially found satisfying in that it a special mix of magic, reality and every day living, and a short story based entirely on a dream I experienced. Upon awakening from such a vivid and detailed experience, I immediately went to my computer and recorded it all.

Valentina said:

“I never would have thought that such a short story about one stranger rescuing the life of another could win me over so completely. The plot is simple enough, yet it was written so beautifully that it felt as if I’ve never read anything even remotely similar to it…”

Description: “When Robin, a young university student, saves the life of a beautiful youth, he finds he’s made a devoted friend. But without memory and voice, the newly named Angel is a mystery, occasionally exasperating with his child-like qualities yet with touches of darkness that make Robin wonder what kind of being he’s really taken in.” A speculative fantasy of magical realism and innocent love set in modern Berlin.

To read the full review, please visit their website at the link above.

Published May 22nd 2011 by Flying With Red Haircrow
ISBN13: 9781452441665
Primary language: English
Setting: Berlin, Germany
Available at Amazon.com, .de and .uk, Smashwords and several other online distributors.

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Berlin After Rain: My Balcony View and Updates (Somewhat)

Strasse by Red Haircrow

Strasse by Red Haircrow

Life is so very busy these days, but also has a strange kind of formlessness. Still working on projects as ever, especially The Agony of Joy and the collaborative anthology/series with writer Cheryl Headford based on an androgyne people and world of my creation, The Children of Driy.

With my review site, as well as my studies in Psychology at university, I don’t have so much time to add to my blogs though I often begin posts or think of what I’d like to share. When things are more settled, I will again post at “Songs of the Universal Vagabond” more often…after all, it’s the story of my life.

I have finally expanded my profile at LinkedIn (this is the most updated site currently with a list of projects and publications, as well as some of my work, personal and creative details), as well as various pages on Facebook regarding my fictional character, Katrdeshtr, my Independent Publishing site Flying With Red Haircrow, and as always my review/interview site.

Hopefully, updates will be provided soon, they are rather hit or miss at a few of  my other sites and profiles, such as:
My Review/Interview site: http://flyingwithredhaircrow.wordpress.com/
My Twitter: http://twitter.com/redhaircrow
My Smashwords: https://www.smashwords.com/profile/view/redhaircrow
My Articles at Queer Magazine Online: http://www.queermagazineonline.com/component/k2/itemlist/user/579-redhaircrow
My Facebook Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/TheRedhairedCrow
All Current Books and Works in Progress: http://bookworld.editme.com/redhaircrow

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