Subject: Research is everything
Author:
Posted on: 2012-08-01 19:12:00 UTC
I prefer to think of the adage "Write what you know" more as "Don't write what you don't know." If you have a character who's a particle physicist, but you know nothing about particle physics, you probably shouldn't write about that - or, at least, not without doing some research.
Especially for something like particle physics, reading up on it, looking through the internet, or checking out books from the library is a perfectly valid way to know something and therefore write about it.
As for how much you need to know, that depends on what you're writing and why, as well as how big of a part it will play in your story, and how much you or your audience will care if you get some details wrong.
You think, say, Tom Clancy was a spy or a government agent? No, but he clearly did a ton of research to the point that the government was, according to rumor, worried that he actually was a spy because his books were chillingly accurate. And Michael Crichton was no mathematician, paleontologist, or biotechnician - he was a doctor - but Jurassic Park was a brilliant piece of work that got very in-depth in... well, what was cutting-edge science at the time, viewed as a bit dated now, but it's still so good because it's clear that a lot of effort went into the research.
You probably don't need to go to the same lengths as those guys, who are known for showing every single detail of their work. But a working knowledge of whatever you're writing about is important. And if you're not a particle physicist, and never will be a particle physicist, as a writer you should still know what you're talking about. (If you're actually looking for information about particle physics, I'd recommend Stephen Hawking's A Brief History of Time - it's from the 80s, but I think it all still holds.)
When I was working on my NaNoWriMo a few years ago, for example, I came to a part where I needed to write about black holes. I had very little idea of how black holes actually worked, so I spent several hours of valuable writing time researching. In just a couple hours I was by absolutely no means an expert, but I'd learned enough to be able to finish my story.
As a closing note, I'd just like to say that if everyone wrote from their direct life experiences only, fiction would be a much, much more boring place.
... wow that went longer than I meant it to.