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Something So Divine
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Mystery > Get It Right

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J.R. | 465 comments If you use history in your story, it's your responsibility to get it right. I'm guesting on the topic with the prolific mystery writer Marilyn Meredith. Comment welcome. http://marilynmeredith.blogspot.com/2...


Wayne Turmel (wayneturmel) | 91 comments Nice post, JR. You certainly got the time and place down in your book. Something So Divine is a good read.


message 3: by Jay (last edited Sep 10, 2015 07:51PM) (new)

Jay Cole (jay_cole) | 292 comments J.R. wrote: "If you use history in your story, it's your responsibility to get it right. I'm guesting on the topic with the prolific mystery writer Marilyn Meredith. Comment welcome. http://marilynmeredith.blog..."

On the whole, I agree with you. It's annoying to have obvious historical errors arise in a novel. However, I can think of one obvious exception to the rule, the alternate universe story (sci-fi, and often a mystery). When you take a historical event and alter the outcome intentionally, there's no telling where it might lead.


J.R. | 465 comments Wayne wrote: "Nice post, JR. You certainly got the time and place down in your book. Something So Divine is a good read."

Thanks, Wayne.


message 5: by K.D. (new)

K.D. McQuain (kd_mcquain) | 97 comments If you are writing history or historical fiction then you need to stay true to the period, anything else I think you have a wider latitude.


J.R. | 465 comments K.D. wrote: "If you are writing history or historical fiction then you need to stay true to the period, anything else I think you have a wider latitude."

Readers will be sure to tell you if you stray.


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