My next book—the one after REDEMPTION—is true historical fiction. Not historical fantasy, like Aurelia and Robert’s series. But real HF.
Which means
the research has to be more real. (In other words, I can’t cheat).
Don’t get
me wrong. I do a lot of research for Aurelia and Robert’s novels. And it’s a
blast. Scimitars. Loading rifles. Battle plans. Eighteenth century furniture,
torture devices, high-heeled shoes. I get to use all kinds of crazy historical
details within Aurelia and Robert’s books.
But for my
upcoming novel, I knew I needed to kick that into a whole other gear.
This meant
a LOT of reading. Starting off with some general topics: the Oregon Trail,
pioneer life, school teaching in the Pacific Northwest, Native American tribes
in Eastern Oregon, homesteading. I got to read some fiction and some great
non-fiction. I also got to read some really lousy non-fiction. And some stuff
written by people who definitely don’t or didn't write at a
professional level.
But some
of that stuff . . . was the best. Because it was the most specific to the county I was researching. And it’s great to know that’s all you can get because
it means there’s definitely room for a novel about the topic. I mean, that’s
one of the reasons I want to write about it. Because no one else has.
So, as I
was saying, that was a lot of reading. Most of which, won’t get into my book.
Because I
had to pick a specific date, or series of dates: September 1904-1905. Ding,
ding, ding!
My major
achievement after a month of reading.
Once I had
done that, I could actually write the
whole first draft of the book.
And then
launch into the second wave of research.
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