For Readers & Aspiring Writers
Every story has to happen somewhere. But in the best writing—the kind that stays with you long after the last page—place isn’t just a backdrop. It is a character. It breathes, it changes, it wants things. It shapes the people who move through it in ways they can’t always name.
This is something I have learned not from craft books but from living on Florida’s Treasure Coast. The Atlantic is not the same ocean on every morning. Some days it arrives silver and still. Some days it throws itself at the shore like an argument that has waited too long. I have written toward that horizon more times than I can count, and each time, the poem or the sentence I find is different—because the water was different, and so was I.
“The ocean does not ask permission to arrive—it simply comes, bearing salt and memory, and calls it home.”
Place as Inner Life
When I began writing 19 Poems from Vero Beach, I wasn’t thinking about landscape as subject matter. I was thinking about grief, about renewal, about the strange courage it takes to feel things deeply. But Vero Beach kept offering itself as a way in. The salt air on a morning walk became the scent of something I had lost. The horizon—that unbroken line between water and sky—became the boundary between who I had been and who I was slowly becoming.
This is what place can do for writing: it gives invisible emotions a visible form. The reader can’t see inside a character’s heart, but they can see the way she stands at the edge of the water. They can feel the sand, wet under her feet, and understand without being told that she is deciding something.
For Aspiring Writers: Learning to Write Your Place
If you want to bring a place to life on the page—whether it’s the city you grew up in, a coastline, or a room in a house you no longer live in—here are a few things I find myself returning to:
Go to the senses first. Before you name the place, let us feel it. What does it smell like at 6 a.m.? What sound wakes you there? The specific detail is always more powerful than the general description.
Let place disagree with your character. If your speaker is trying to feel hopeful, let the weather be indifferent. If she’s grieving, let the light be beautiful anyway. Tension between inner weather and outer weather is one of the oldest tools in literary writing.
Notice what changes. A place that shifts—with seasons, with time of day, with the mood of the person standing in it—feels alive. A place that never changes feels like a postcard.
Readers: this is also an invitation to pay attention the next time a book puts you somewhere. Ask yourself—what does this place want from this character? What would be different if the story happened somewhere else? You may find that the answer is: everything.
Anna M. Figueroa’s newest collection, 19 Poems from Vero Beach, is available now on Amazon and Barnes & Noble.
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