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HERE'S HOW
"HOW TO WRITE CONVINCING FICTION"
"Do They Sweat In Duke City?/Fiction As Research" By Stephen Bly
"New Mexico heat blanketed Albuquerque that July like too many
covers in a stuffy cabin. . .the kind of day that you sweat from the
inside out and feel sticky dirt in places that you don't ponder much
except in the shower."
From Cowboy For a Rainy Afternoon
Released: June 2010
Every novel's got a place and time. That often means plenty of research. My next release,
Cowboy For A Rainy Afternoon, is set in Albuquerque, New Mexico, 1954. So, I needed to know
some things about a specific city, a state, and what the world was like that year.
Research Thru Travel
It's tough, dirty work. . .but I love any time I can go to New Mexico. The only other site
I've been that boasts similar layers of culture stacked one upon another: Rome. Yet,
New Mexico's still a cowboy state. From the Pecos River in the east to the Plains of San
Agustin in the west, from the Sangre de Christo range in the north, to the "bootheel"
in the south, it's full of great ranching country. A perfect setting for a cowboy story.
My wife, Janet, and I drove up and down Historic Route 66 that runs through Albuquerque.
It was known as the "Main Street of America" or the "Mother Road." It was the primary route
for those leaving the dust bowl of Oklahoma and moving to California during the Great
Depression. Albuquerque was selected as a stop on the first transcontinental air route
in the 1920s and Route 66 brought the first transcontinental motorists through the city.
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