Post by Glynn Young at Tweetspeak Poetry
I started writing my historical novel in ignorance. But I learned.
Writing one historical novel does not make one an expert in the genre. I have written exactly one historical novel, Brookhaven, a romance set in the Civil War era and in 1915.
To write Brookhaven, I didn’t turn to how-to works by historical novelists, historians, or romance writers, or read articles on the subject on web sites. In fact, I never intended to write a historical novel at all. Because I had the time, I began to pursue a lifelong interest in the Civil War, with a side-interest in the role of my great-grandfather.
At some point, I told myself, “This is a story worth telling.” And I began to write.
I also continued to read and do research, because writing this kind of story demands it. What did people wear? What did they eat? How would they send a letter when railroads and the mail service weren’t functioning? What were prisons like for captured soldiers? How does a society function when social order breaks down?
I learned some lessons along the way. Each was hard-learned and hard-earned. I stopped counting the times I had to go back and revise something, sometimes extending to almost everything I’d previously written.
If you’re thinking about writing a historical novel, I have seven suggestions for how to do it and not do it…
Get all 7 tips in the post by Glynn Young at Tweetspeak Poetry
and see the 1850 census that unraveled a family legend!