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What to Do When You Make a Boo-Boo
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Mary
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Aug 31, 2017 06:43AM

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You could brave it out though.
Do what your heart tells you xx

There was a real town originally called Pottsgrove that had it's name changed to Pottstown not long after it was founded. I liked the name Pottsgrove a lot more, so that is the name I used in my story, even though the characters in that time period would have most likely used the new name. I suppose a historian might correct me someday, but I am fine with making a few stretches if I think it will make for a better story. For another book, I used a London neighborhood that my research said was the most affluent area in its time. A British reviewer later commented that it didn't make sense for the character to live there. I intend on keeping it the way it is.
In my opinion, the story is everything. It comes first while the details come second. Since you are writing fiction, you get a certain amount of leeway. Even "true stories" contain embellished and changed facts. It's really up to you whether to express regret over the blunder or use it to your advantage to claim freedoms as a fiction writer :).


LOVE your take, Marie. I agree that the story is everything. The truth is, my historical novel, The Woman in the Photo, is about the tragic Johnstown Flood in PA, 1889. In the research phase, when I rode the train from NYC to Johnstown, I went around the extraordinary Horseshoe Curve. It was so special, I inserted it in the novel without realizing that the train from PITTSBURGH to Johnstown doesn't go around the curve. Oops. It adds to the story, sort of, but I hate that I made a stupid mistake. Sometimes you don't know what you don't know, you know? Now, everybody on Goodreads knows! Eek. haha