Recently I
read an op-ed piece in the New York Times written by Sean Pidgeon, a writer as
well as a reference publisher for John Wiley & Sons. Given his day job, it should be no surprise
that he is much invested in literary research, but he was surprised to find
that it had a formal name: research
rapture. He did some online digging and
formulated this definition:
…the delightful but dangerous
condition of becoming repeatedly sidetracked in following intriguing threads of
information, or constantly searching for one more elusive fact.
Sound
familiar, writers? Pidgeon was talking primarily about writers of historical
fiction, but I'm convinced it applies to any fiction, or at least to those
writers of fiction who have a fondness for facts rather than pure
invention. I'm one of them. Yes, I confess: I am a research addict.
The
Internet makes it far too easy—all those links, like breadcrumbs forming a
trail to that one perfect fact that you really, really need for your work in
progress.
I'm still
in the midst of writing the second book in my County Cork Mysteries. In it there's
a murder at a manor (I swear I wrote the original version of this long before
Downton Abbey premiered). I'm writing
about a real town, and I've seen the local manor—from the outside. Now, this is not historical fiction, nor do I
have to stick to "only the facts" about the place. I don't expect to see the interior; I could,
but currently it's a Catholic retreat house, and I daresay the interior in its
current state would not fit well with my story.
It has not
been difficult to find the history of the family that owned the place when they
first enter into my story, in which the last descendant is still living there
(not true in reality: the last descendant
died in 1983), going back to the 17th century. This I derived from multiple websites,
starting with that of the retreat house, and then wandering through sites that
discuss Irish social history and others focused on architecture.
One of the
most intriguing and relevant tidbits came from the Census of 1901 (also
available online), which shows the details of the house that year. For example, this was clearly the Big House
of that townland: where most residences
in that townland had two windows in the front (a basis for valuation in those
days), the Manor House had 17. Where the
other houses had mainly between six and 11 rooms, the Manor House had 25.
Equally
interesting are the individuals listed in the Big House as of the census date. There were three family members living there
in 1901: the widowed mother (the nominal
Head of House) and her son and daughter, both unmarried. All three belonged to the Church of Ireland
(Protestant). This family of three was
attended by four staff: a cook, a
housemaid, a parlor maid, and a kitchen maid; all were Catholic. The cook and
the kitchen maid spoke both Irish and English.
There was also a "Visitor" below stairs—a retired nurse from
America. So there you have the sociological make-up of a family that belonged
to "the gentry" of the day.
And that's the snapshot I needed for my book.
I went off
on other tangents, of course. For
example:
--laws
pertaining to ownership and registration of firearms in Ireland (strict)
--European
Union regulations for establishments serving food (lots of forms to fill out)
--Laws
pertaining to serving alcohol
--The
number of surviving nunneries in County Cork (more than you might think).
Many of
these diversion may result in no more than a line or two in the finished book—something
like, "What about opening a restaurant?" "Forget it—too much
paperwork." Others lead to questions that can best be directed to human
beings rather than the Internet—things like, "how strict are you really about opening and closing
hours?" (I asked—there's a lot of flexibility.)
Can readers
tell if we can back up those throwaway comments with fact, or if we're just
making it up as we go?
1 comment:
I think the more you know, the more authentic your writing will be, down to the smallest details. Can't you always tell when a writer doesn't quite understand her/his topic? I become extremely annoyed when a writer makes huge errors of fact and his/her fans treat the errors as inconsequential.
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