Comments - Don't Want to Blow Up Dana's Brain... - CrimeSpace2024-03-28T08:35:34Zhttp://crimespace.ning.com/profiles/comment/feed?attachedTo=537324%3ABlogPost%3A184902&xn_auth=noWhen I think of historical fi…tag:crimespace.ning.com,2009-02-26:537324:Comment:1850332009-02-26T22:46:47.208ZDana Kinghttp://crimespace.ning.com/profile/DanaKing
When I think of historical fiction, I like to think the history is right, or very close. The fictional aspects are, well, fiction. You can make up what your fictional characters do, and make up certain events in the context of the larger context. Real people can say things they may, or may not have said, and can encounter our fictional characters, so long as the real people are true to their actual characters. But Lee can't win at Gettysburg and the first atomic bomb can't be dropped on…
When I think of historical fiction, I like to think the history is right, or very close. The fictional aspects are, well, fiction. You can make up what your fictional characters do, and make up certain events in the context of the larger context. Real people can say things they may, or may not have said, and can encounter our fictional characters, so long as the real people are true to their actual characters. But Lee can't win at Gettysburg and the first atomic bomb can't be dropped on Nagasaki. T<br />
hose are gross examples, but I think the point is made. You make unknowns come out your way, and you can tweak a fact if you have to (and acknowledge it), but if you re-write history, you've gone beyond historical fiction into fantasy. Nothing wrong with that, and lot of good "what if this had happened differently? books have been written, but saying a book is historical fiction implies a certain respect for the facts. And let me add that the autho…tag:crimespace.ning.com,2009-02-26:537324:Comment:1849692009-02-26T20:02:13.092ZI. J. Parkerhttp://crimespace.ning.com/profile/Ingpark
And let me add that the authors I cited above did a considerable amount of research before hitting the keyboard. I have a fairly good background in both Restoration history and the Napoleonic wars.<br />
The background of MUSIC AND SILENCE is Swedish history. I know a good deal less about it, but Rose Tremaine would not choose the setting without the preliminary work.
And let me add that the authors I cited above did a considerable amount of research before hitting the keyboard. I have a fairly good background in both Restoration history and the Napoleonic wars.<br />
The background of MUSIC AND SILENCE is Swedish history. I know a good deal less about it, but Rose Tremaine would not choose the setting without the preliminary work. Oh, good grief. An author has…tag:crimespace.ning.com,2009-02-26:537324:Comment:1849672009-02-26T19:58:10.477ZI. J. Parkerhttp://crimespace.ning.com/profile/Ingpark
Oh, good grief. An author has an obligation to do the research first. Then, if the story absolutely requires bending the facts (it doesn't all that often), an author's note can explain what was changed. I don't like the sort of laziness that implies that anyone can write a historical novel without doing much more than reading about the period in an encyclopedia.<br />
The reason I said that a novel is fiction is that novels are measured differently from non-fiction, and because novels should not be…
Oh, good grief. An author has an obligation to do the research first. Then, if the story absolutely requires bending the facts (it doesn't all that often), an author's note can explain what was changed. I don't like the sort of laziness that implies that anyone can write a historical novel without doing much more than reading about the period in an encyclopedia.<br />
The reason I said that a novel is fiction is that novels are measured differently from non-fiction, and because novels should not be used in history classes. I.J.---didn't you say Fiction…tag:crimespace.ning.com,2009-02-26:537324:Comment:1849382009-02-26T17:53:29.446ZB.R.Statehamhttp://crimespace.ning.com/profile/BRStateham
I.J.---didn't you say Fiction was Fiction? I've known a lot of good researches to get the facts wrong. why should a thin smear of scholarship ruin a possible good read?
I.J.---didn't you say Fiction was Fiction? I've known a lot of good researches to get the facts wrong. why should a thin smear of scholarship ruin a possible good read? Funny you should ask. I read…tag:crimespace.ning.com,2009-02-26:537324:Comment:1849212009-02-26T16:12:24.314ZDana Kinghttp://crimespace.ning.com/profile/DanaKing
Funny you should ask. I read Dennis Lehane's THE GIVEN DAY last month, and loved it.
Funny you should ask. I read Dennis Lehane's THE GIVEN DAY last month, and loved it. Umm, hard to pick. I'll give…tag:crimespace.ning.com,2009-02-26:537324:Comment:1849082009-02-26T15:17:57.432ZI. J. Parkerhttp://crimespace.ning.com/profile/Ingpark
Umm, hard to pick. I'll give you two authors: Patrick O'Brian (most of his series), and Rose Tremaine (either RESTORATION or MUSIC AND SILENCE.) I'm not going to read Ariana Franklin after some of the comments about her lack of research.
Umm, hard to pick. I'll give you two authors: Patrick O'Brian (most of his series), and Rose Tremaine (either RESTORATION or MUSIC AND SILENCE.) I'm not going to read Ariana Franklin after some of the comments about her lack of research. Genghis: Lords of the Bow by…tag:crimespace.ning.com,2009-02-26:537324:Comment:1849042009-02-26T13:13:00.513ZJohn Dishonhttp://crimespace.ning.com/profile/whiteskwirl
Genghis: Lords of the Bow by Conn Iggulden
Genghis: Lords of the Bow by Conn Iggulden