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does Historical Fiction need to move with the times
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Colin
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Dec 10, 2015 01:03AM

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searching for a book to read . . :-0)
The fact that I can remember earlier than 1965 might be influencing me . . . and HF has to be (for me) earlier than the late 1800's because I knew people who lived in 1870.


I´m not sure what I think. But anything before I was born 1968 would be historical fiction for me anyway. But in one way, anything that isn´t current (and how long does that last?) would technically be historical.

Yes, you're right because when we talk about WW2, it seems we talk historically and after that can't be considered so. Historical fiction is related to the field of history.

But there is a big difference between 1650 and 1665. Imagine if someone in the future wrote a book about us in 2015 and we all walked around talking on verizon flip phones!

But there is a big difference between 1650 and 1665. Imagine if someone i..."
I've wondered about that before! History changes slowly, but not that slowly for those living it.



Perhaps define HF as a noticeable difference between today and the period in question.
Kennedy's death - 52 years ago is history, but the 6 Day war & the closing of Suez was 'only' 48 years ago, but ripe for HF. The hijacking of the airliners and flying them in to the twin towers was only 14 years ago, but already HF novels & films have been written & made about the incident, and the films can 'date' the period through dress, make of cars very large mobile phones etc so perhaps HF 'is' yesterday :- o)





So we think but...
In many ways we are of course, but not in others.
For our purposes in the group, the book must be set 50+ years in the past from when it was written. But we're really only sticklers about that for challenges and group reads.
But time doesn't stand still... why should Historical fiction? I think that there are some really popular eras - Tudor, Ancient Egypt, Greece, and Rome, Elizabethan, etc - but if people write about something that happened in the past, I would say that they are writing Historical Fiction (or at least period fiction). If it's contemporary when it's written, and just happens to be 50+ years old, then I don't count that. Only if it's someone looking back in time to tell a story.
But time doesn't stand still... why should Historical fiction? I think that there are some really popular eras - Tudor, Ancient Egypt, Greece, and Rome, Elizabethan, etc - but if people write about something that happened in the past, I would say that they are writing Historical Fiction (or at least period fiction). If it's contemporary when it's written, and just happens to be 50+ years old, then I don't count that. Only if it's someone looking back in time to tell a story.


Brian and Cheryl A made some interesting points about resonance and how we may relate - or not - to historical events. I think we can almost always find parallels between history and the present - that's why they say if you want to know the future, study the past.
I personally was born post-Vietnam, so I have no direct experience of that period. However, I do feel a deep resonance with the 60s and 70s, not only because of ongoing asymmetrical wars, but because of all the concurrent social issues. Everything that my generation experiences, in terms of progress in growing up with multi-gender, multi-racial schools and workplaces as the "norm," is because of the social justice fights that happened in the 60s and 70s - and still continue on today. American society is integrated in terms of race and gender but not yet fully equal - I had a part-time office job in college and still got referred to as my (male) supervisor's "girl."
For me, it's hard to see even the 60s and 70s as "historical" because it is very much in living memory for a lot of people. The music rocks and is 100x better than most of the stuff being made today. This era also has a direct connection to so many issues that are still being worked out today - and the fact that there's video and recordings of the period help immensely with immediacy and resonance. No one had a camcorder at Waterloo, so we are at a remove from that on the basis of not only time, but technology.

So I say, if you want to write a historical novel that is set in the 1980s, write it! If you want to write a novel that is set in 1700 but doesn’t treat historical events, do that! Of course, it may mean that nobody can find your book using an electronic search . . .

Or less. We get by without those genres. Only in libraries they sometimes shelf books by some genres, not historical fiction, though.




Kennedy's death - 52 years ago is history, but the 6 Day war & the closing of Suez was 'only' 48 years ago, but ripe for HF. The hijacking of the airliners and flying them in to the twin towers was only 14 years ago, but already HF novels & films have been written & made about the incident, and the films can 'date' the period through dress, make of cars very large mobile phones etc so perhaps HF 'is' yesterday :- o) ..."
I agree with Geoff.
On one hand it's convenient to have the 50-years-rule or 25-years-of-historical-person's-passing, no argument that it works on a larger scale, to have such rules.
On the other hand, I read great HF (of Herman Wouk) on this same mentioned 6-Day-War and closing of Suez and never thought his HF might not be 'qualified' being only 48 years old (I think they open archives of war after 40 years for the historians to pore through).
A tricky question, but I love the discussion it generated. thank you for that :-)

Or less. We get by without those ..."
On many sites which promote eBooks with free days their list of categories/genre do not include HF so you have to decide on an unsatisfactory alternative.
Becky, "looking back in time to tell a story" -- does this include flashbacks from the present to WW2?

I think I like the title "Indie" too. Fiction writing is developing all the time and I draw a comparison as to how music developed in the 1970's, with "Progressive music" becoming a category which later broke down into different genres. No doubt historical fiction will develop that way too in time. we already have 'time travel' historical fiction, although some people might think that should be in science fiction.


http://www.amazon.com/Lust-Comrade-Lu...

As Becky mentioned, we use the 50 year rule which is the "academic" definition, not a marketing ploy. The reason is that it is assumed that an author must do historical research in order to write a book that is set 50 years from the time they are writing.
This definition does make it a moving line. However, many people think that the definition is really just set 50 years in the past, and will categorize things like Pride and Prejudice as historical fiction. I don't because Austen was writing about her contemporaries.
This definition does make it a moving line. However, many people think that the definition is really just set 50 years in the past, and will categorize things like Pride and Prejudice as historical fiction. I don't because Austen was writing about her contemporaries.

I had a 2* review for my first novel (spans 1200 years) and the reviewer was most annoyed that what appeared to be a novel about Vikings in 9th century England, dashed off to the future via WW2 and 2015 before returning to the 9th century. The book cover shows both a Viking amulet and the silhouettes of two Tornado fighter aircraft, and the blurb mentions an archaeologist and a film director, but I almost added a disclaimer! Cross genre can annoy purists, but it won't stop me writing it and I suspect you may be of the same intent.
I do love well written historical pieces, but as an impure writer of hybrid HF I'm not really qualified to comment on what is historical and what is not; as I get older yesterday feels like history, when I can remember it.


I ..."
That's just not true, lots of HF fans love books that take place in two different time periods, sounds like you just got unlucky to get one reader who didn't like it and didn't pay attention to the book description. Both settings are still within history too, so it's still historical fiction.



I think Colin has it about right. A good read is just that, and individual readers, the purists and those of us who have sold our souls to the thrills of the genre/timeline hop, will enjoy all manner of HF as long as it informs and entertains.






Like I said before, I've seen novels about the Cold War set in the 80s categorized as historical fiction. The general "rule" is if it's set more then 50 years before it's written, it's considered historical (so Jane Austen is not historical fiction because although set more than 50 years ago, she was writing during the same period it was set in). That's what the Historical Novel Society goes by anyway.
So to me, the 80s is not historical fiction - but the Cold War covered a long period of time - if it's set in the 50s, for example, that is more than 50 years ago. When exactly during the Cold War is it set?

In a recent LinkedIn Historical Novel group chat, I made a casual comment that it seems in the world of historical fiction, history is almost automatically taken to mean Western History, and that such an assumption ignores a large part of humankind history.
To my above casual comment, one group member, who formerly taught History of Philosophy and World History at an American university, remarked that my observation is correct and that “Western History” is still assumed by some to be “history”. Gladly though, he added, things are changing for the better, a phenomenon borne out by the fact that even the “Epic of Darkness” (a collection of Chinese tales and legends depicting primeval China in epic poetry) is being taught and studied in American classes.
Another group member explained that the assumption is due to publishers and film producers only going with what is “popular” and thus to some extent limiting Western readers’ choices. It is assumed in the publishing industry that “Western” is what readers want, and so that is what readers get.
I am not a historian and my abovementioned observation arose purely from my reading experience, through which I noticed that the bulk of historical fiction written in English is related to Western History or has a Western historical setting. There is obviously a relative paucity of fiction with an Oriental or Chinese historical context or setting. When publishers, literary agents, booksellers or writers refer to “historical fiction”, they seem to have only “Western historical fiction” in mind.
Being bilingual, I can easily satisfy my interest in Chinese history by reading fiction and non-fiction in Chinese. But I can see this would be a problem for Westerners who may share my interest but who only read English. Their only option would be to read translated works, and even these are in short supply in the historical fiction genre.
As readers, would you agree with what the two LinkedIn members said? Would you like to see the historical fiction genre diversify into the Oriental history field?


I think you are making a similar mistake, equating "Western world" with the American or English speaking world. Personally I am very careful when reading novels written by people who are not natives of the country they are writing about. I also remember studying some non-Western history in school. Besides, I live in a Western country but I still don't "recognize" the historical fiction by foreigners written about my country. I keep wondering "what?".