Aly’s
Comments
(group member since Sep 26, 2011)
Aly’s
comments
from the The Role of History in the Making of Stories: A chat and Q&A with authors Andrew Williams and Aly Monroe group.
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As for wishing you could have read better at school - you are more than making up for it now!

All my characters are real to me too - and I hope to other people. But, surely, creating an entirely fictional character is not the same writing experience as fictionalizing someone who existed. Not better or worse, just different.
Your book, by the way sounds really interesting.

It's great to have you in the group - and to hear that you're progressing with your book. Go ahead and adapt things you have have found.!Not just the big things, but the small details. It will give the book authenticity. Are you enjoying the research?

Another of the interesting things I had to deal with was the fact that now well-known spies, who were in respectable, prominent positions at the time - were not unmasked until well after the action of my books takes place. Some of them are there, or at least mentioned in the books. It is the readers' knowledge of hindsight that makes these mentions significant.


It was a bit weird using rela people at first, as if I'd dug them up and was making them dance for my amusement. I came to a similar conclusion, Andrew, that this is an integra..."
Yes, I recognise that feeling, Elliott. My books are all within living memory. So yes, that does make me a bit more squeamish - (though not that much!). what I really want is for the voices to sound credible - and that is often more problematic with real characters than fictional ones.
As for being hijacked along the way - Yes, of course I have had similar experiences. I love being hijacked! It's one of the pleasures of doing this. And I sometimes allow that hijacking in to let it reshape part of what I'm doing. You then have to stand back of course, and be ruthless about cutting things you have grown attached to if they're not right in the bigger picture. But - I wonder if you know what I mean - having included them gives more depth, even if you just leave a sentence, a phrase, or a passing comment in the end.

In my books, the famous historical characters are not the protagonists. They are there as part of the context and atmosphere. In this respect, similar to To Kill a Tsar. In Washington Shadow, we hear some of the things they have said – but off stage as it were, not as speaking parts on stage.
It’s a different canvas, Andrew. But definitely not a smaller one.

Really, this conversation could become interesting. So here goes.
Can you tell us more, Elliott? I’d be interested to hear how you’re going about it. Have you endeavoured to ‘be’ Jay Gould for a while? Did you put yourself aside? How do you justice to a man who is supposed to have said “I can hire one half of the working class to kill the other half”?
Now, of course, I don’t know yet how you have tackled (are tackling) this. But on the writers’ side, how ruthless are we in placing ‘real’ people in a pattern we devise? We use words instead of ‘creative finance’. But surely we are responsible for them too. When I consulted about using the real people I have in ‘Icelight’, I was told not to worry. The dead can’t bring charges.
Lastly - have you thought of the ‘Gordon Gecko’ effect (see the film Wall Street) in which a harsh portrait of the protagonist (played by Michael Douglas) acted as a highly effective recruitment drive!




That would be my point – that it’s not that simple. In other words. I let the ‘facts’ influence the development of the story. Yes, these facts are selected, but I select them to surprise or at least expand received opinion. This is not so grand. For example, I know that large numbers of Spanish school children are taught that the American Civil War was fought on a single issue – slavery. It’s easy to see why – time constraints, some information is better than none etc.
But in a novel we personalise clashes. The contentious issues occupy characters - with their ambitions, talents and failings. Opinions are rarely consistent. I want history to press on characters, but to let the characters react very much as people do now – without hindsight or tranquility.

At one level, I wonder if this attention to accurate historical detail is of such importance to us because we want readers to trust us on the detail – and then, by extension, on the assertions we make?
It’s not really that convincing a strategy – in other words, I wonder if we need it more than the reader.

Andrew's 'The Poison Tide' will be published in 2012. ' To Kill A Tsar' is published in paperback on September 29th 2011.
My new book 'Icelight', the 3rd Peter Cotton book, is published on October 13th 2011 and 'Black Bear' will be published late in 2012.
Andrew and I will be here to answer any questions and chat with you over the next few weeks.


And there was a real change in Icelight. In the first two books, I did not give speaking parts to real people. They were there, but as part of the setting. But when I was writing Icelight, some of the ghastly actions I discovered taken by certain people at the time made me decide to include them as speaking characters in the book, under different names. These things definitely influenced the push of the story.

I don’t begin with chapter by chapter plans. My plans are more in terms of key events or scenes that form the inner structure of the book – and that’s not only to do with the historical story. The final division into chapters is usually one of the last things I do – and it’s partly about the rhythm of the story. I also have different sections in each chapter – for the same reason.
So I do plan in broad terms, but as I’m working, I’m delighted when I discover or think of something I didn’t count on to begin with. Sometimes it’s a character who might have seemed insignificant at the first planning stage but grows and becomes more important. Some of these characters then go on to become significant characters in following books. This is the case with Ed Lowell, a Boston Brahmin in Icelight – he will have a significant role in Black Bear, the fourth Cotton book. And also Herbert Butterworth, the Chancery’s ‘archivist’ - in Washington Shadow. He will appear again in a much larger way in Black Bear.
What about you?
