S.S. Julian
asked
Yangsze Choo:
What is your research process like, and how do you check your work for historical accuracy? Can you describe an instance when you decided, for dramatic or plot purposes, it was better to overlook historical precedent?
Yangsze Choo
Hi Sam,
"The Ghost Bride" is set in my home country of Malaysia, so I was quite familiar with the setting and history which helped when I got started. My uncle used to live in the town of Melaka which is where the book is set, and when I was a child, we used to go and visit the ruins of the Fort, as well as the old shophouses that still line the streets of this historic town. You can still see the open grave where the body of St. Francis Xavier was briefly buried before being disinterred and sent back to Goa - I always thought that was very eerie when I was a child!
In terms of historic events, the book happens to be a domestic drama that occurs within a great household and also in the world of the dead, so fortunately there weren't any specific external incidents that I had to reference, or overlook. I was very thankful for that, as I can only imagine the notes and cross-references involved if one were writing a novel like "Wolf Hall"! That being said, I read a lot of historical sources about colonial Malaya, as well as British traveler's accounts of the roads, layout etc. of historic Melaka. Museums such as the Peranakan Museum in Singapore, which had some fantastic batik sarongs on exhibit as well as Peranakan household items, and the National Museum in Kuala Lumpur were also helpful in reconstructing domestic life at the time. And of course, there were always the oral histories and ghost stories passed down by family and friends!
"The Ghost Bride" is set in my home country of Malaysia, so I was quite familiar with the setting and history which helped when I got started. My uncle used to live in the town of Melaka which is where the book is set, and when I was a child, we used to go and visit the ruins of the Fort, as well as the old shophouses that still line the streets of this historic town. You can still see the open grave where the body of St. Francis Xavier was briefly buried before being disinterred and sent back to Goa - I always thought that was very eerie when I was a child!
In terms of historic events, the book happens to be a domestic drama that occurs within a great household and also in the world of the dead, so fortunately there weren't any specific external incidents that I had to reference, or overlook. I was very thankful for that, as I can only imagine the notes and cross-references involved if one were writing a novel like "Wolf Hall"! That being said, I read a lot of historical sources about colonial Malaya, as well as British traveler's accounts of the roads, layout etc. of historic Melaka. Museums such as the Peranakan Museum in Singapore, which had some fantastic batik sarongs on exhibit as well as Peranakan household items, and the National Museum in Kuala Lumpur were also helpful in reconstructing domestic life at the time. And of course, there were always the oral histories and ghost stories passed down by family and friends!
More Answered Questions
Julie
asked
Yangsze Choo:
Thoroughly enjoyed reading The Night Tiger! It was thrilling and such a page turner. Ren is my favourite character. I really hope you are planning to write a sequel as I would like to know how their paths cross again in Singapore!! Also, will it work out between Shin and Ji Lin? I’m from Singapore and I’ve heard of some of the eerie tales when younger. Brings back memories
Paperkite
asked
Yangsze Choo:
What is your writing "regime"? Do you schedule time every day? How do you protect that time? What advice would you give people trying to get published for the first time? Thank you! (Btw, Ghost Bride took my breath away. I can't wait to read a sequel or prequel or anything at all tangential. Love that world and in love with Er Lang!)
Austin Perry
asked
Yangsze Choo:
I just finished reading The Ghost Bride for class and I absolutely fell in love with it. I was wondering if you could make a sequel to it with the wedding and maybe add a major plot twist to where Er Lang meets someone else and tries to marry them? I feel like The Ghost Bride left your readers on a major cliff hanger. Thank you for any possibilities. If you could please email me at austinperry345@gmail.com. Thank you.
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