Romantic Historical Fiction Lovers discussion
QUESTIONS
>
Historical setting...does it matter?
date
newest »

Great question Bailey! Our fellow member Carrie Lofty, and HR author who uses exotic settings has blogged and spoken about this topic in the past. I hope she will chime in.




Jennifer Blake did a series (Louisiana Gentlemen)a few years back. I read each book in the series and enjoyed them fairly well.







Well said Elizabeth - exactly!


But I really DON'T like (is it late 18th century?), when everybody is wearing powder, wigs and silly make up. It just puts me off the characters.


Men might wear pink and lace, and they weren't afraid of it. Since they wore swords by their sides, there was never any doubt of their masculinity! (Unless you were Hervey, but there was only one of those!)
Men these days seem afraid of their feminine side. It's a weakness, IMO, not a strength. If you can dress in lilac and still be a man, that's some powerful male mojo.
Lynne wrote: "On powdered wigs and make up (maquillage). It helped to emphasise the distance between public and private and it created a fashion that, to me, is the last hurrah of men being proud of making the b..."
AMEN to that !!
AMEN to that !!

The modern kilt, ie the pleated presewn skirt was invented in the 1730's by a road builder who was tired of his Scottish labourers taking so long to dress. So he developed the kilt.
Clan tartans came even later. They were developed in the early 19th century, when an enterprising Edinburgh tailor started to classify the regional patterns into "Clan tartans." This was further popularised by Victoria and Albert, who loved the Highlands and the romantic legends associated with it.
Whisky, too, is a Victorian thing. Developments in technology in the early nineteenth century, and the laws that allowed for its sale weren't passed until then. Before that, there was private rotgut moonshine for the poor, or a little privately made whisky and brandy. And it's always whisky, not whiskey, if it's from Scotland (love the stuff!)
I was appalled at the markup on nice single malt when I visited the States. Over here, you can get a nice bottle of single malt for around £20 or $30. And that's the good stuff.
I don't read Highlander romances because the constant cod-Scottish irritates me and they are rarely accurate.
Want books about a Scotsman who can make your heart beat faster? Dorothy Dunnett's Lymond saga. Nary a kilt in sight.

Only in romance novels :D
I agree about Dunnett. I loved the Lymond books.
Lynne wrote: "No, no kilts. They had what they called the plaid, or the great kilt, but this was a huge blanket that they wrapped and tucked around themselves. And rarely washed it.
The modern kilt, ie the pleat..."
I am eager to read Dunnett's Lymond chronicles. I first heard about the series from Judith James.
The modern kilt, ie the pleat..."
I am eager to read Dunnett's Lymond chronicles. I first heard about the series from Judith James.

I'm with you on this one, nothing quite like knights in amour and castles! but I also enjoy English war time novels. Not much of a fan of 1700's through to the 1900's but maybe it's just because I've not really read anything from that time! Also not a fan of modern romance unless it's fantasy young adult style!
I think the setting does make a difference to me personally, I find it harder to get into book's based in unfamiliar countries or I find my self googling to find out info to help create a picture.
Natalie wrote: "Terry (Ter05 TwiMoms/ MundieMoms) wrote: "I actually prefer novels set prior to the 1800's - I kind of like castles, knights, swords, knives and par..."
I'm with you on this one, nothing quite lik..."
Hi Natalie! "Not much of a fan of 1700's through to the 1900's"
If it's for lack of exposure, I don't yet despair of converting you!!! If you get a chance, I hope you will check out my 18th century blog where I endeavor to shed light on all aspects of the 18th century.
http://emerylee.wordpress.com. If you search the archives, I have articles on everything from dancing the Menuet to treatment for gout!!!
I'm with you on this one, nothing quite lik..."
Hi Natalie! "Not much of a fan of 1700's through to the 1900's"
If it's for lack of exposure, I don't yet despair of converting you!!! If you get a chance, I hope you will check out my 18th century blog where I endeavor to shed light on all aspects of the 18th century.
http://emerylee.wordpress.com. If you search the archives, I have articles on everything from dancing the Menuet to treatment for gout!!!


Right now I am completely obsessed with the Norman Conquest of England in 1066. This started because I picked up Kathleen Woodiwiss' Wolf and the Dove on a .50 table at the used book store which is set in the Conquest. This is not a great book, but the Conquest was a pivotal event in Western history, and that silly romance from the 1970's got me interested in it. I've read several books since then, including some pretty inane (and not terribly historically accurate) medieval romances, and now I'm slowly making my way through The Struggle for Mastery by David Carpenter, which is part of the Penguin History of Britain.
I also have become interested in 18th century Scotland, because of Outlander, as well as the Winter Sea, and at some point will likely do some more sustained reading & research into Bonnie Prince Charlie and the bloody Jacobite uprising. I had no idea that there was an entire genre of historical time-travel romance devoted to sending women back in time to fall in love with Highlanders. I find that completely hilarious, as well as highly entertaining.
So, for me, historical settings are incredibly important because they often become a springboard for me to learn a lot more about something that I've found interesting. Weirdly, I am completely uninterested in Asia -- Japan & China hold not even the slightest hint of attraction for me. Persia & the Middle East, though, I find extremely compelling.
Hi Christine- We have a number of great 11th and 12th century titles on our shelves. I think you'll find some great reading material there. As to Jacobite stories I love them. I'm currently writing a RHF novel with Jacobite intrigue and have been reading everything I can get my hands on.

@Christine. While I wouldn't call them *romantic historical for this group's shelf but have you tried Valerie Anand's quartet?







As a writer I like Renaissance England (particuarly Elizabethan) as there's something exciting about it, something that sets it apart from the brutal eras on either side of it. I like the dichotomy of it - an age of poetry and expansion of the sciences but men still carried swords in the street. I just love it.

Here are my two cents by an avid (is there a word for more than avid?) reader and reading group leader. I rarely read any "historical" work set in America- I like older history (scotland,ireland,england) I use to run a reading group on AOL called Romance on the Moors. So if you need any ideas from that area let me know. I have now moved onto broader settings. I will always buy/read a book that a friend writes too!



First as a reader: My whole family loves American history. I've been surrounded by it since I was a little girl and I love to read stories set in America. I prefer the colonial/Revolutionary era. There's just something so exciting about this period. Different experiences in different parts of the country...so much to read about.
I also gravitate to the Tudor era of British history. Probably because I am a theater geek as well and love Shakespeare.
As a writer (unpublished though I be): I learned that you write where the muse takes you. So while I want to focus on America as well, I found myself writing medieval England.

First as a reader: My whole family loves American history. I've been surrounded by it since I was a little girl and I love to read stories set i..."
I love it when someone resurrects old topics. A lot of the time I wasn't around when they got started so to me they're new!
My answer is yes, historical settings matter. There are periods and places I am so little interested in that you couldn't make me read a book set in them if you put a gun to my head. Fortunately there are plenty of people who are interested in those periods, and plenty of others who care more about story than setting and period. And plenty of room for us all!
I think we all have settings/eras we gravitate to. I am in love with England and France from the Stuart period to the Napoleonic era (to include American Colonial history of that time)but really don't care much at all about the Tudors or anything earlier.
Of course I particularly love the Georgians but still plan to branch out a bit in my future writing.
Of course I particularly love the Georgians but still plan to branch out a bit in my future writing.

First as a reader: My whole family loves American history. I've been surrounded by it since I was a little girl and I love to r..."
I'm also glad you resurrected this topic, and I agree with others' ideas that most of us do have preferences for setting.
I'm one of those few readers who can take or leave Regency/Victorian set stories (though I do like many of them if they are well-written).
I have little interest in Ancient Roman/Greek settings, Viking era settings, Egyptian settings, or Asian settings.
As a pubbed author of six medieval and one 1500's-set romances, and having witnessed the decline of the sub-genre as a whole over the past decade or so, I'd like to see more well-written English and French medieval-set stories, as well as medieval Celtic *other* than the Highland-set stories (which so often slip into farce territory for me, in terms of stereotyped language and characterizations).
I'd love to see more Colonial and Revolutionary American set stories, or post Civil War settings. I'd love to see more Canadian-set historical romance, too.
So I'm thrilled with the greater setting possibilities the indie movement affords; the key, of course, is finding a way to discern well-written indie books from those...well, not very well-written. Regardless, I think it's an exciting time for readers and writers alike.

That said, I also love this period in America. I just completed a book that is set between Paris, London, and Los Angeles. Having lived in LA, I became fascinated with the history there--in the land of reinvention--it was like finding a treasure beneath the glamour. Lots of hard working entrepreneurs built the city, many of them women, long before it was fashionable.
Really enjoying the thread!


You said " I just completed a book that is set between Paris, London, and Los Angeles "... what was the name of that book?
~ Susan
Books mentioned in this topic
Gildenford (other topics)The Disputed Crown (other topics)
King of the Wood (other topics)
The Norman Pretender (other topics)
The Book Thief (other topics)
More...
I find in my own reading that in most cases the characters themselves compel me to be comfortable with the setting, and I don't opt not to read an historical just because it's set in Hungary, or at least NOT set in England.
In selecting an historical to read, I do gravitate to English settings. Love them and always have. So I'm throwing this out to the group.
How does setting influence your reading choice in historicals?
Thanks for any thoughtful insights, humorous quips or inspiring tomes you might provide me in my "research".
Bailey