South Florida does not make writing easy. Mia Martin will say this plainly, and with enough warmth to make clear she has no interest in leaving. The heat, the light, the quality of a region that seems to resist looking inward — these are not problems she has found ways around. They are, she says, the conditions that formed her voice.
“There’s no melancholy infrastructure here,” Martin says of the region she calls home. “No gray November light, no long winters to think in. If you want to write seriously in South Florida, you have to create your own interior weather.”
That phrase — interior weather — gets at something central to how Martin works. Writing, for her, has never been mainly about observing the external world, though she pays close attention to it. It is about the harder task of capturing what takes place inside a person — the contradictions, the resistances, the slow shifts in thought that rarely surface clearly and almost never reach a clean conclusion.
She describes her early years as a writer in South Florida as a process of learning to take her own experience seriously. The region tends to appear in fiction as a backdrop — a setting for crime novels, holiday thrillers, stories about people starting over. Fiction that concerns itself with the inner lives of people who have simply chosen to stay is harder to find.
That gap became, in part, an opening.
Martin writes at home, mostly in the early hours before the day takes on its South Florida character — which is to say, loud and pulling in several directions at once. The early morning is not quiet exactly, she notes, but it belongs to her. Living somewhere with this much energy means that solitude takes a certain amount of deliberate effort.
Her relationship to South Florida as a writer is neither sentimental nor dismissive. She does not write about it the way a visitor might, reaching for the palm trees, the neon, and the hurricane seasons. She writes about it the way a person writes about something they have had to think carefully about in order to love with clear eyes.
“Place isn’t background,” she says. “Place is pressure. It acts on characters. It shapes what they want and what they can’t have. The best thing South Florida ever gave me as a writer was an insistence on the present. Everything here exists right now. You learn to write in the present tense, emotionally, even when the grammar says otherwise.”

