Writing Historical Fiction discussion
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Introductions

Yes, reading the actual directions can be so tedious, but ultimately helpful.

Welcome Daniel! Any advice you can give will be appreciated. Hope we can give you some help, too.

Ah, I can tell you that: Jack Weatherford, Genghis K..."
There's nothing wrong with being Indie! Whatever it takes to get published!


Good luck with the sequel!

Looks interesting.

I was googleing tips for writing Historical Fiction and found this group. It's such a great idea for a discussion group.

Writing stories is a tough business and does not buy the bread – Three sales in 5 days and I wander around the garden whistling.
I go to my workshop, fire an enamel onto copper in one hour, and the art gallery pays me more than the novel earns in two months.

So tell us about your experience with marketing your book?
You mention some historical issues readers have had, but I have to say that I have read some big selling books with many huge historical issues, so the two things you mentioned should not have been a turnoff. I took a writing class with Steve Berry about a year ago and one thing he said was that when he started out he spoke with a successful writer (can't recall who) who told him not to quit his day job until he had a back list of 4 or 5 books. You need to reach a critical mass before you really make much money.

I was scrolling through this thread and noticed the question about Roanoke again. I just got an advance reader copy of Jenny Barden's new book

Given that Jenny is English, I am a little embarrassed to realize she knows so much more about early American history than I do!

On marketing:
I've tried Amazon Prime with a novel and an anthology of shorts. Several hundred were downloaded on the free days, but I'll never know when/if they'll be read.
I've placed paperbacks in local bookshops and there is a steady movement. Sadly though, I've lost copies when the store has closed down and the owners did not alert me.
The local garden centre holds a stock - some months they outsell Amazon. I take payment in compost, garden plants and wild bird food. We now have fresh vegetables on the table.

http://www.ted.com/talks/andrew_stant..."
Great video. Good things for a writer to be reminded of.
I can appreciate your feeling that income is not a first concern, but if you want readers, then it should be a concern. I heard Lindsey Davis speak on this - one equals the other. A way of being able to tell if your downloaded books have been read is from the reviews on Amazon. Amazon does remind readers of downloaded books to review them a few weeks later, so that should help.
There's an author I have been following on line who was published on Amazon and has had a great experience with it - Robert Bidinotto. He writes thrillers, which aren't my cup of tea, but plenty do enjoy them. He has a blog and updates it monthly with his insights into getting your books sold. You might want to check it out.
Recently I've read some books published just on line that have been terrible; and I've read a couple of books that were published by small publishers and gotten little press, but were absolutely wonderful. Even so, I am afraid the good ones won't be read as widely as they would have been if they'd gotten more publicity.
There's a lot to learn about the publishing industry today - and it is changing constantly. Getting involved in writers' groups (I'm involved in the Historical Novel Society, but there are many of them) that publish your kind of fiction can help you figure out how to manage it.

Hi Harold. You might also want to have a look at Geraldine Brook's Caleb's Crossing. Set in 1665 in Martha’s Vineyard, it's about a young man who's became the first Native American to graduate from Harvard College. Not your time period, but would certainly fit the "urge to learn more and achieve something beyond what the culture allows" criteria.

Found it!

I'm new to this group but not to Goodreads.
After taking a short (35 year) break from writing I have returned with an Historical Detective novel set in 1482 in Moorish al-Andalus. It concerns an Englishman who has trained to be a surgeon and finds himself involved in solving a crime.
The book is currently being torn apart by an editor but I'm hoping to self-publish around May all being well.

I'm new to this group but not to Goodreads.
After taking a short (35 year) break from writing I have returned with an Historical Detective novel set in 1482 in Moorish al-Andalus. It concerns..."
Welcome David.
Don't think of it as being torn apart. Think of it as being groomed!

I'm Diane, new to this group but have been around Goodreads for a couple of years.
My first self published novel is set in WWII Nazi occupied Normandy. It's entitled "Through These Doors" and has a rather unique POV.
Have written a slew of short stories without a common theme, mostly just as writing exercises.
A dissolved group on Goodreads "On fiction writing" published an anthology in 2008 which led me to believe in the group effort. It's always a boost to the morale to exchange ideas with a set of people who share your interests. Glad to be a newbie to this group.

I'm Diane, new to this group but have been around Goodreads for a couple of years.
My first self published novel is set in WWII Nazi occupied Normandy. It's entitled "Throu..."
Diane- do you have any unpublished short stories? The Historical Novel Society has a short story contest (entries due by April 1st) and they are looking for submissions. The website is historicalnovelsociety.org. There is a tab at the top of the home page that tells about the short story award.



I'm a fan of historical fiction of many diverse times and places. I have two HF WiP projects and joined this group to learn about the perils and pitfalls of HF writing and to share what I have learned.

with my compliments.
My series The Juno Letters (junoletters.com) is set in France, WWII, and revolves around the Fr..."
Thank you, I will check it out. I am interested in WWII historical fiction.


My name is David Cook and as of the weekend a self-published author. My first novella in the series, entitled Liberty or Death, and I couldn't be more happy.
I have two unpublished books which I'd like to see in print form and currently editing them as I write.
Spent the weekend updating my Twitter, Goodreads, Amazon and facebook profiles - busy, busy and I can't wait to interact with readers who like historical fiction, action, military, medieval, Napoleonic Wars and good story-telling.
My influences are quite wide, Jane Austen, Simon Scarrow, Bernard Cornwell, Ken Follett, Charles Dickins, Adrian Goldsworthy and George R.R Martin.
Great to be a part of this group.
Best wishes,
David

Looking forward to learning more about writing good historical fiction,

By coincidence my book is about a physician too, but in 15th century Moorish Spain. Oh, and a murder, too...


Wow Cameron, is that synchronicity or what? I've been working on my novel for around 2 years and it's due to appear in three weeks - also set in Spain (al-Andalus) in 1482.

I joined back in April 2014 (at least I think) and really didn't do much with the site. I was more confused than anything else. I did figure out how to show what I'm reading.
What I wanted to say is that I've been revising my first novel. I'm tackling the subject of slavery (not the slavery in America) but at least a generation earlier and in England shortly before they abolished the practice. The basic premise is "an Anglican vicar turned abolitionist inherits several slave plantations."
I did forget to mentioned that if anyone needs any kind of information dealing with the early Anglo settlers in Texas up to the Texas Revolution either I or my sister (who I don't think she's a member of good reads) can answer it. Between us, we can write another textbook with everything we know. :)

I'm going to throw Jack Whyte out there as a favorite author in this field..... here goes!


I've been writing almost full-time for ten years now and have five "drawer" books to my credit. At least some of my short stories and essays are getting published now.
I had my novel ready to go for a substantive edit two months ago, but got the harebrained idea to make it more "high concept" by adding a contemporary protagonist related to the historical protag but living 130 years later. I know that idea has been done, but seemed the appropriate choice for this book. Hopefully this Métis novel will get published because I'm Métis and am writing of my own experiences growing up in that world.
Now I'm stuck on synopsis and query letter writing to further refine the concept and author platforming, so the actual book writing has stalled. I'll get back to it, but these things seem necessary. What a long process it is to write a book!


I'm looking forward to sharing ideas and tips with you all :)

Books mentioned in this topic
The Slaying of the Bull (other topics)Mother (other topics)
Anna Karenina (other topics)
Resurrection (other topics)
Caleb's Crossing (other topics)
More...
Thanks for the info. I'd heard the name before, but never knew anything about them. Do they distribute to Amazon, or do you have to use Amazon's system?