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As it came time to work on her novel Cult Classic, the author Sloane Crosley was unable to find any inspiration within a single location. She knew that she would like to create a deep examination of love and relationships. But, the elements of the plot came from every source such as personal research, and even an old synagogue that was abandoned in Manhattan's Lower East Side.
The mix of resourcefulness as well as creative thinking is what also assists Sloane to meet the needs of being a professional writer. Find out how Cult Classic was able to have its writer read a variety of documents from the cult movement, the method she uses to balance writing and administrative tasks, and how her site assists with maintaining her online presence, while also giving her the liberty to throw in some fun surprises for those that visit.
Get inspiration to create your own ideas from the ordinary
Cult Classic tells the story of Lola who is a journalist located at New York who, though she's just engaged, is having a sense of frustration with her relationship with. When she goes out for an night out, she encounters one of her ex-boyfriends, then another. Lola quickly realizes that a cult governed by her boss had been placing these former lovers in her path in order to carry out an investigation. The story that follows is an entertaining and insightful story about reliving the past and maybe finding peace with it.
Sloane is unable to pinpoint a specific "aha" moment in which she can define the concept of the book, but her own personal experiences with health and contemporary dating were incorporated into the story. "I consider that any person reading this will be the best health and relationship expert today," she says. "We're constantly absorbed in the topic and often they appear as satire within the novels."
The actress conducted a specific study on cults to make sure that the specific information right. "I needed manifestos or instruction guides, from inside the cult, so that I could draw on the language to make an observation that was funny," Sloane says.
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