by Anna Castle
The Internet is great for overviews, generating ideas
and picking out clothes or cars for contemporary characters, but it can only
get you so far. The library is indispensable for a writer of historical fiction
like me. But the most fun can be had by getting out there and looking at the
world in which your story is set.
My to-be-published-someday-soon Francis Bacon mystery
series is set in Elizabethan England. I can't travel back in time and London
has changed a tad since 1585, but many wonderful old buildings have been
preserved. Museums are full of intriguing furniture, tools and other things my
characters might have used. Places like Kentwell Hall (http://www.kentwell.co.uk/) host
Tudor-themed events where costumed re-enactors engage in traditional tasks. I
found a character at Kentwell.
I do a lot of walking, a major pastime in the UK. The
cities may have changed, but parts of the landscape would still be familiar to
my characters. I love the English countryside and trust me, it is all kinds of
different from Texas, where I live. They have rain: lots of it. They have these
soft, cool breezes drifting out from under dark thickets. In Texas, thickets
are full of snakes and rarely cool or soft. Descriptions from my favorite
British authors make more sense now that I've walked where they walked when
they were writing. Christopher Marlowe might have walked up this very road on
his way from Canterbury to Cambridge. How cool is that?
One of the characters in my current WIP, set in
Victorian London, finds herself obliged to burglarize some Mayfair houses and
country estates. (Her intentions are honorable, I assure you!) My problem was
getting her and her crew in and out with the goods undetected. Crime fiction
lends a whole new perspective to touring the stately home!
I study these houses like a villain, not an
architect. If it weren't for those burglar bars (surely modern), could my gal
get in these windows? Then how far is it to the library? Which rooms will she
pass on the way? Do they have gas lamps on the landings?
To make the most of my trips, I do a lot of planning;
online, of course. I look for houses in my period of interest on sites like the
invaluable National Trust (http://www.nationaltrust.org.uk/).
Wikipedia has lists of museums in most major cities with links to their
websites, where you can get hours of operation and directions via many forms of
transport. The Brits have lots of online resources for ramblers: favorite
walks, long and short, all over the country. Everybody everywhere has lots of
travel info these days. I know where my characters are from and how they spend
their days, so I try to go where they would go and see whatever I can see. I
hope these experiences enrich my books. And hey: nice work if you can get it!
Anna
Castle is writing two mystery series. The Francis Bacon series is set in
Elizabethan England.
The
first book, Murder by Misrule, will be published one way or another in
2014. The Lost Hat, Texas
series
is set in the present, in the hill country west of Austin, where Anna lives. Black
and White and
Dead
All Over
is under revision. Find out more at www.annacastle.com.
Oh what a fun and interesting way to do your research. I love exploring old buildings and interesting sights. I often dream of turning them into a book. Thank you for the fun post and introduction.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Julie! There's nothing like having a book in your head to make sight-seeing more fun.
ReplyDeleteNot your usual, dry old research, for sure.
ReplyDeleteDefinitely not dry in England in May! Umbrella is a must. Or better, since
ReplyDeleteit can also be very windy, a bright yellow poncho.