Wednesday March 18th, 3.30pm The History Detectives dlr LexIcon, The Studio
GOING
BACK IN TIME
BY
BRIAN
GALLAGHER
Wednesday March 18th, 3.30pm The History Detectives dlr LexIcon, The Studio
What’s the worst part of writing historical
fiction? That’s easy - facing the blank
page each morning. (Just like it’s the
worst part of writing any kind of
fiction.) And what’s the best part? That’s easy too – the sheer fun of stepping
into a time machine every working day, and going back to a point in history
that you find fascinating.
How many jobs are there where you get paid
to imagine that you’re present as dramatic events from the past unfold? Not many, I suspect. But that’s what a writer of historical
fiction does. Which isn’t to say that
it’s an easy job – far from it – but it is an interesting one, where no two
days are the same. And few things beat
the thrill of sitting down to plan a new book and wondering what exciting
period from the past you’re going to pick..
Readers often ask me was I good at history
at school, and - shocking admission – I hated
history at school. Looking back now I
can see that it wasn’t actually history
that I disliked, but rather the boring way that it was taught back then. It seemed to be all about learning off lists
of dates, whereas now I love history, but regard it as being about people,
great and small, and what they did, and why.
And people, unlike lists of dates, are fascinating.
So when I sit down to write a new book the
first thing I do is pick an exciting, action- packed period in which to set my
story. But my next priority is to populate
the story with interesting, credible characters that the reader can care
about. So when writing about the past I
want to know what people really cared about, but also what songs they were
singing then, what kind of food they were eating, what were the hit films and
books of the day. I want to immerse
myself in that world so that the reader too can travel back in time, and see
things through the eyes of my fictional characters.
Writers have always used libraries to do
this sort of research in the past, and today we have the internet to check up
on all those tricky little facts and figures that can trip up an author. For me though, the best research source is
always people. If I can find someone who
has lived through the era I’m writing about, I know I’m likely to get the kind
of telling detail that really brings a story to life. And so, having done my research, created my
characters, and worked out my plot, all that remains is to travel back in time
- and start writing the book…
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