I always try to visit the places I depict in my novels--realism matters to me personally, and has also become a key aspect of my brand as a novelist. This is why I have a Photos and Places page on my website, and more importantly a Mistakes page--people won't trust you to get it right if you don't own up to getting it wrong (media, take note).
But occasionally a place eludes me, forcing me to rely only on books, articles, and online images, maps, and videos. This was the case with the Salton Sea and All The Devils. I came close several times, most notably on a monster 350-bookstore, cross-country-and-back 2006 book tour, but I never made it all the way there.
Happily, last week I finally managed the trip. It was surreal--both because of the place itself, and also because after all the research and writing, I felt like I'd already been there. Here are some photos. I think I got my depicitions right, but of course that's for readers to decide.
If you looked up “desolation” in the dictionary… |
Some additional resources (more in the notes of All The Devils)
A brief history of the Salton Sea:
And some haunting photos, too. Careful of the Lost America site—it’ll suck you in.
https://www.katherinebelarmino.com/2016/07/photographing-salton-sea-ghost-towns.html
https://lostamerica.com/photo-items/the-salton-sea/
http://www.jimriche.com/salton-sea/
Great six-minute documentary film about the Salton Sea:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=otIU6Py4K_A
And the 2002 Tony Gayton noir film The Salton Sea is wonderful and surprisingly not well known.
https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0235737/