Historical Fictionistas discussion
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How did you get into Historical Fiction?
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Stephanie
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Mar 05, 2018 04:37AM

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Yes, Treasure Island is hist fic. RL Stevenson set that book more than a century before his own time (written in 1881).








That's how I feel about the novel I've completed and the one I'm currently working on. Historical incidents/situations grab my interest and motivate me to write. Yes, I'd like to make money from my writing but that's not what keeps me writing. I was surprised to learn what a small percentage of readers are HF fans compared to romance, fantasy, sci-fi, thrillers, mysteries, and etc. It would make sense to go for the biggest segment. Alas, my interest is HF.

This man had made WWI and had survived, since I'm here!
One day, he told us that a shrapnel had crossed his cheek and that a part of his buttocks’ skin had been taken to fill the hole in his cheek. I never knew if this story was true, but I was just a little girl, and I didn’t really want to kiss him after that!
In the little apartment he lived next to us, there were primitive ebony statues, a memory of a moment in his life when he lived in Africa.
I felt unconsciously that he was a man from another time and I liked it.
Later, I lived for two years with my maternal grandmother, who was twenty years old and married at the very beginning of WWII. One day, she had told me that, finding nothing to buy at the market to eat, she had to buy a cow udder. She had cooked it as best she could because she had no idea how to cook cow udders. My grandfather, an authoritarian husband and not funny at all, had spit everything out and shouted after my grandmother because it was not good!
I still managed to extract some stories from these parents. I have always had the pleasure of knowing, not the dates and the battles that have marked the great history, but the details of the daily life and the mentality of the people who have lived during these past epochs.

In elementary and high school, history/social studies was one of my favorite subjects. Specifically, I was always very intrigued and fascinated when we read and learned about real world events that took place during WWII, early 20th century, and during the European Renaissance. One teacher in particular was very poetic and thorough in her teaching of our history lessons and it made me very interested in those time periods because she taught so well.
Second, I’ve been a lover of classic films from a young age. Films made from the dawn of cinema all the way to the late 1960s and everything in between piqued my interest in the films that were contemporary in their time, plus the period productions that were made.
Both of these preferences stayed consistent while I grew up and stayed into my adulthood, plus my appreciation of classic literature, it was only natural that historical fiction was a genre for me to gravitate towards when reading.
I of course read outside of it, but it is one of my top favorite genres to curl up with on a lazy Sunday with wine or hot tea.
My grandmother was an English Lit teacher and she gave me my first Complete Works of Shakespeare when I was eleven; but I started reading Victoria Holt (more Historical Romance/Gothic/Mystery) around the age of 14. That hooked me into the historical genre. From then on I have loved historical fiction novels, so much so that I started writing them; especially the Tudor era.






Johnny Tremain is one of my favorites, too!

I loved Salt to the Sea!


Hi, Mary Ellen, I don't know why, but while reading your comment, I though of this book you would maybe be interested in My Journey to Lhasa: The Classic Story of the Only Western Woman Who Succeeded in Entering the Forbidden City by Alexandra David-Néel
I read this diaries when I was 15 or so, it's fabulous! I should read it again one day... :)




Also "The Six Wives of Henry VIII" with Keith Jackson as Henry? Amazing.
And yes, Glenda Jackson will ALWAYS be the benchmark Elizabeth.


I, Claudius was wonderful. But it tends to color my interpretations of those history shows about Ancient Rome. They never mention how many people Livia killed and they don't portray Caligula nearly as mad as I think of him.
That show was smack full of great actors. We have an old VHS cop and it was shot beautifully. You can tell it was on a set, but it's still enjoyable all these years later.
I remember watching a show of the best Masterpiece Theaters and it didn't make the top 10!!!! What were they thinking?

And, yes, Kirsten I am a slave to Masterpiece Theatre! Nobody does historical dramas like the British! Top notch.

Never underestimate Santa. He is a wise man, Calvin!

Me too! I was screaming at the TV!!!!!



But Labyrinth by Kate Mosse is what got me into medieval historical fiction - it was a pretty bulky book and I was 14 at the time but I read it in a few days.


That is one of my favorites too!!

It is hard to choose a favorite Taylor Caldwell book but if I had to I think I would go with Answer as a Man.


Started to enjoy reading stories set in the past, hence I've enjoyed historical fiction ever since.

It is hard to choose a favorite Taylor Caldwe..."
Another great book from Caldwell.


Started to enjoy reading stories set in the past, hence I've enjoyed historical fiction ever since."
This book has been sitting on my shelf for a couple of years now. Maybe this should be my next read! :-)
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