Historical Accuracy in Fiction.
I've reached a complicated chapter in my novel in which I need the geographical features, proposed plans and timeline to be correct. I read the relevant parts of five historical non-fiction books and made notes, but I still didn't have a clear picture in my head. So, after considerable thought, I wrote chapter headings and typed up the relevant information under each titl3. Next I made a list of things my protagonists would do, and their reactions to events as they occurred in sequence, in each chapter and finished by typing up a few quotes from historical personages.
For the last three days I've been working on Chapter Thirty-One. Thanks to my notes everything, as the saying goes, has fallen into place.
Labels: 5 historical novels in 1 bundle, False Pretences, Far Beyond Rubies, Historical Accuracy, Rosemary Morris Historical Novelist, Sunday's Child, Tangled Love, The Captain and The Countess
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