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Fear Factor: How Embedding in Extreme Environments Can Lead to Compelling Fiction
March 4, 2022 @ 3:03 am
by docdna54
in Be Inspired, Doing Research, Fear Factor: How Embedding In Extreme Environments Can Lead To Compelling Fiction, Publications, researching tips, Settings, The Writer's Life, Write Better Fiction, Writing Habits and Practices
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Fear is a big, dumb mutt of a word. It’s what you feel when a bus barrels at you head on, when a wonky email lands in your inbox, when your kid says he’ll be home by nine and it’s nearly 11. But fear is useful. It springs you from the path of that bus, lifts your hand from the keys, fires up your detective skills to track down your kid. But fear, in all its incarnations—dread, apprehension, anxiety, unease, even awe—can do more than save you from buses; it can also make you smarter, more adept in your surroundings, […]
Research and Storytelling for Successful Historical Fiction
February 9, 2022 @ 3:09 am
by docdna54
in author quotes, genre, Historical, historical fiction, Publications, Settings, Write Better Fiction, Writing Historical Fiction
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“It must be easy writing historical fiction. You already know what’s happened.” That comment always makes me laugh. When you write historical fiction, you wonder what really happened. According to historian Patrick Collinson, “It is possible for competent historians to come to radically different conclusions on the basis of the same evidence. Because, of course, 99 percent of the evidence, above all, unrecorded speech, is not available to us.” That 99 percent leaves a lot of gray areas. Happily, those gray areas are where historical novelists get to play. That’s where our imagination fills in what might’ve happened behind and […]