Historical Fictionistas discussion
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How did you get into Historical Fiction?
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J.
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May 10, 2014 01:19PM

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I read a lot of Tudor HF and have read quite a bit ever since.
But in reading this thread, I realize that it was thanks to my 5th grade teacher that I can really appreciate HF. He had me read Johnny Tremain, and My Brother Sam is Dead, and a whole lot of Steinbeck. Books like that helped me enjoy any (well-written) fictional book that was a window into life in the past.
Incidentally, he had us read The Hobbit as well, which led to my general love of fantasy, but also to Arthurian tales. I owe a lot of my loves to that teacher!


ETA: She gave me the wonderful Williamsburg novels when I was 12. I still love Elswyth Thane.

ETA: She gave me the wonderful Williamsburg novels when I was 12. I still..."
I love stories of books given as gifts that open the receiver to something entirely new.
Incidentally, I have read neither of those books yet, so I've added them to my Want To Read shelf.



I was, and still am, a huge fan of Little House on the Prairie. It was one of the earliest non-picture books I read as a child, and I was so happy to find that it was part of a series. I actually still own all the volumes.
Maggie Anton









For me it was seeing my grandmother's collection of John Jakes' Bicentennial series on her shelf for all the years I was growing up. They were such thick books, I used to think, but they had such colorful covers and so there was some kind of mystery about what lay inside. I finally pulled the first one down when I was in high school. I was hooked and read one right after the other. It really brought history alive for me and since then I have gone on to many other historical novels.


John Jakes! I remember those old paperbacks. But were they actually any good?





Have you tried Karen Kay Penman, Allison Weir, Antonia Fraser? They read like well written novels and are true, as opposed to the best sellers that have so much pure fiction. My favorites are: The Sunne in Splendor by Penman, The Autobiography of Henry the Eighth by Margaret George, Mary, Queen of Scotland and the Isles, also by Margaret George, Katherine,by Anya Seton, The Housekeeper and the Professor by Yoko Ogawa (a gem!) and the Josephine Triolgy by Sandra Gullard.
Well, you can see how obsessed I get. Hope you find some things you enjoy. Let me know.
Hope I didn't overwhelm you.
Barbara




It's funny how some books do and others don't. I think the plain, direct nature of the style helps, and the fact that the characters are based on real people which helps them be plausible people rather than archetypes.



I certainly share your taste for 'ordinary people' hf, D.J. One of my favourite blogs is called Royalty-Free Fiction, and it's not talking about royalties - just hf that hasn't got a monarch in sight!

Have you tried Karen Kay Penman, Allison Weir, Antonia Fraser? They read like well writ..."
No overwhelm here! Just gratitude for the list. Yes, I read Shogun, and loved it, and Pearl Buck years ago. Not wild about Antonia Fraser, not sure why; but I'm going to look up some of the others you mention.

In any case, historical fiction, as well as historical mysteries, are favorites of mine.



Catherine of Braganza is famous for many things, including bringing a huge amount of tea with her from her native Portugal. Conversely, when I went to live and work in Portugal I took with me a huge amount of my favourite tea - Sainsbury's Earl Grey. No Sainsbury's in Lisbon. I called it my Braganza extravaganza!

I must check out that blog, Sheila.

Catherine of B..."
A portrait of Catherine hangs in the Ballroom of the Governor's Palace in Williamsburg, Virginia. A portrait of Charles hangs on the other side of the door. They are impressive portraits.
Portia wrote: "My mother belonged to The Literary Guild, a book-of-the-month sort of group. I still have her Literary Guild copy of Gone with the Wind. She had a number of books by Samuel S..."</i>
I was a member of the Literary Guild and that was how I got started into Historical Fiction by the book [book:To Dance with Kings by Rosalind Laker
I was a member of the Literary Guild and that was how I got started into Historical Fiction by the book [book:To Dance with Kings by Rosalind Laker


Originally reading books by Bernard Cornwell which have inspired me to turn to writing myself


L.M. Montgomery's awesome books surely continued the trend. I guess they're technically not HF since they were contemporary, or only a couple of decades in the past, when she wrote them. But they certain function as HF to a modern reader, providing just the right "fix" we crave. :)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
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