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Seven Rules for
Writing Historical Fiction
By Elizabeth Crook
Author of
The Night Journal: A Novel
We grow up being
told to “write” what we “know”, but history is the unknown. You have to learn
almost everything about a period and the social customs just to get your
characters out of their beds, (or off of their skins,) and feed them
breakfast.
Rule #1: Sweat the Small Stuff.
The authenticity of historical fiction depends on your knowledge and use
of historical detail. It is not enough to say a character walked down
the street. The reader has to be able to see the street, see the
conveyances; he has to smell the smoke from the factories or the sewage
in the gutter. If there are street vendors, he has to know what they’re
selling. This is a new world: the reader can’t fathom it unless you give
him images. These should be accurate and not recycled from old movies.
Here are two
suggestions apart from the usual methods of research.
1. Find experts on
the topics you need to learn about. It’s easier to track down someone
who knows about sheep ranching in the 1890’s or the origins of the New
York subway system, and to call them up when you need to know about
scabies or the early methods of blasting tunnels, than it is to find, in
documents or on the internet, the exact answer to every question that
comes up in the course of writing a book. If you're going to write a
scene involving a train wreck in 1891, get some books on train wrecks,
read enough to know what you’re talking about, google the authors and
find out where they work. Call them up and see if they’ll talk to you.
Latch on to the friendly ones. “What about the couplers?” you can ask
them, having read enough to know that faulty couplers were a major
factor in train wrecks. “If this is 1891, what kind of couplers would we
have?” I once needed to know about Mormons in Mexico. I googled “Mormons
in Mexico,” found a woman who had written a dissertation on a Mormon
settlement near Juarez and tracked her down through the school. She
spent two hours on the phone with me describing vividly the Mormon
settlement that my characters needed to visit. Dozens of experts on a
wide range of topics have generously helped me in similar ways.
2. If your story
takes place after catalogs were in use, get hold of reprints of old
catalogs. I have an 1895 Montgomery Ward Catalog that has descriptions
of, and prices for, almost every personal item used by people of that
time: hardware, books, stationery, toys, guns, toiletries, wallpaper,
stoves, laundry equipment, harnesses and saddlery -- the list goes on
and on. It represents the lifestyle of that decade.
Rule #2: Dump the Ballast.
In order to write authentic historical fiction you must know a period of
time well enough to disappear daily through a wormhole to the past and
arrive at the location of your story. There you must understand the
customs and use the manners perfectly enough to be accepted by people
walking the streets (if there are streets) and to dress yourself, and
make a living. This said, the major trick of writing good historical
fiction is not in compiling research or knowing the details, but in
knowing the details to leave out. Try to avoid overwriting. Keep
perspective on what will interest the reader. Historical fiction writers
tend to be overly conscientious and excited by minutia: if you succumb
to excess, and put in too much detail, then go back later and take some
of it out. Think of your novel as a boat that is about to sink from
having too much weight on board: some of the loved items will have to
go. Toss them over with impunity! Throw them out! If a rare, surprising
statistic, or a moving anecdote, or an obscure reference you saw to an
interesting thing that happened in the county adjacent to the one where
your story takes place, does not advance your plot or provide your
reader with important information about your characters, then it is
irrelevant to your story and must go overboard.
Keep in mind that
the care, and time, it took to assemble all that you have just thrown
out has not been wasted. It was necessary to gather these facts and
assess their worth in order to know which ones to save.
Rule # 3: Keep Your Conscience Clean.
If your characters are based on real people and you are using the names,
be reasonably responsible to the originals. You are probably going to
have to fill in a lot of gaps in the historical record: you may know
from the record what a person did and when he did it, but not why. It’s
the “why” that defines his character. Ask yourself: Am I getting this
right? Am I getting it close to right? Am I doing this person a
disservice?
Rule #4: Resist Judging Your Characters.
We live in the 21st century with certain shared values: our society
disapproves of prejudice and chauvinism and provincialism. But your
characters are people of their own times; allow them to be bigoted or
politically backwards. Don’t pass judgment on them, don’t apologize for
their mistakes, and don’t attempt to make them all into free thinkers
who are ahead of their times. You have to be able to see the story from
their perspective, even if it offends you. If you judge your characters,
you will date your book. Years from now when your own moral
sensibilities are antiquated, your book will be too.
Rule #5: Watch Out for First Person.
I put down three books recently because I was annoyed with the first
person viewpoint, which came across as self-absorbed. Unless you’re
writing in the form of letters or journals, make sure any first-person
character has a good reason to be telling his story. People tend not to
like people who notice themselves too much or describe themselves or
seem overly aware of how others perceive them. Anyone relating a story
about himself -- what he said, what he was wearing, what inflection he
had in his voice or what gesture he made as he spoke some pronouncement
-- we dismiss as annoying and self-important. We feel the same about
characters. There are many beautiful books written in first person, but
know the challenge of this before you start out, and be sure to give a
credible reason why your character needs to tell his story and why he
deserves an audience.
Rule #6: Don’t Get Bogged Down by Back-story.
It is easy to be overly dutiful and bore your readers with too much
background information delivered too soon. There is no surer way to lose
your reader than to answer every question before he wonders about it.
Don’t explain everything up front or set things up too thoroughly.
Instead, let your story unfold dramatically. Clarity will emerge
eventually. The trick is to delay telling back-story for as long as
possible. You will find that most of it is never needed. It percolates
up through the real story when the real story gets going.
Rule#7: Anticipate a Long Process.
Historical novels usually take several years to write, as they require
research at every turn. You won’t always be able to anticipate what
you’ll need to know for a scene, and will constantly have to be
returning to your references. This is entirely different from writing
contemporary fiction.
Take, for example,
in my part of the world, a trip from Austin, Texas to the nearby town of
San Marcos. If you are going to write a present-day scene in which your
character makes this trip, you will simply need to put him into a
vehicle -- a pickup, or a Volvo -- and head him south for forty minutes
on the flat terrain of interstate 35, passing strip malls and fields and
the town of Buda. He will then take the exit marked “Wonder World”,
named for a local cave and visitor’s center, and arrive in San Marcos.
The only research needed to write this scene will be to drive the route
yourself.
But if your
character takes this journey in 1906, you will have to learn a few
things before starting him out, and learn more things along the way.
First of all, you need to know where the road is, and what’s on either
side of it, and what kind of conveyance your character is driving. If
it’s a flatbed wagon, what’s pulling it -- a horse, a half-lame mule,
two mules? How often do mules need water? How much traffic will there
be? Any cars? What kind of food or luggage do you have along? And what
if a wheel breaks, and you have to fix it, and you cut yourself with a
rusty tool -- how do you disinfect the cut? Do you even know about
disinfection? When did people figure out where tetanus came from? And --
assuming that you eventually make it to San Marcos, what’s in San
Marcos, anyway? As for the Wonder World exit -- when was the cave called
“Wonder Cave” actually discovered?
But here is where
the magic comes in: you begin to think, “Wow. The discovery of Wonder
Cave. Now that would make a scene . . .” And then suddenly you have a
story, and a book to write. The only problem, of course, is that you
will soon find out that Wonder Cave was discovered in 1898 instead of
1906, so you will have to move your story back eight years and find out
what sort of vehicles they drove in 1898 and along what road, and the
rest of it, or else joggle the facts and sacrifice credibility in the
name of literary license. Or ditch Wonder Cave.
Writing historical
fiction is like trying to get to San Marcos when you have no car, you
don’t know where the road is, and you have never in your life harnessed
a half-lame mule to a flatbed wagon.
Assume it is going
to be a while before you arrive.
None of these
rules, obviously, is iron-clad. I’m sure there is a brilliant
counter-example somewhere for each and every one of them. I hope you
find them useful. Good luck! Happy Travels! God’s speed.
~Elizabeth
Crook
Copyright © 2006 by
Elizabeth Crook
About
the Author:
Elizabeth Crook is the
author of three novels The Night
Journal (Viking; February 2006; 0-670-03477-0), Promised Lands (Doubleday
1994) and The Raven’s Bride
(Doubleday, 1991), and has been published in anthologies and in
periodicals such as Texas Monthly,
Publisher’s Weekly, and the Southwestern Historical Quarterly.
Born in Houston, she has lived in Texas, Australia, and Washington, D.C,
and currently lives in Austin with her husband and two children.
For more information, please visit
www.elizabethcrookbooks.com
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