Today we have the wonderful and talented Allison Knight, historic author extraordinaire, who gives us her secret on how she started writing historical romance. Please join us in giving her a big welcome!
“One night, while the Earl of Sandwich was playing cards, he got hungry...” So began another dinnertime tale about people to whom my father swore we were related.
“One night, while the Earl of Sandwich was playing cards, he got hungry...” So began another dinnertime tale about people to whom my father swore we were related.
Allison's 17th Historic Novel |
With every story Dad told, he instilled a love of history in all of us. For example my sister has become a genealogist. I wonder if it isn't inherited for I have a granddaughter following in my sister's footsteps.
But Dad wasn’t the only one. My grandfather, a great story teller, would delight in gathering his grandchildren around him and telling us about his life. He described how the snow came through the cracks of their one room log cabin on the night he was born, why he never got further in school than third grade, although by all standards he was a very successful man. Of course there was the tale about our great grandmother who had been capture by the Sioux and released in a trade in Detroit .
And believe it or not, that story was true. Although I'm not so sure about the Earl of Sandwich being related to us.
Mother also had stories to tell. Her tales also centered around an antique left to her by a distant relative who journeyed to the US from Germany, Holland, even a bride from Spain who was supposed to have been a purchased bride. I even have a rose bush that has traveled around the US with us, which supposedly came with one of the relatives from Holland nearly two hundred years ago. Notice -- I said supposedly. Unfortunately, it must not like the southern climes for it has only given me one rose in three years.
Is it any wonder I turned out to be a historical romance writer. Not only do I like to visit the past but I also have to have a happy ending to my stories. Yeh, I really like those fairy tales which have 'and they lived happily ever after' endings. And I find the past intriguing.
I also love delving into facts, researching a book. I can get lost in research. Finding an old book, a reference to an unknown fact on the 'net', get fascinating information from ,y sister or granddaughter can mean hours delving into the past, sometimes long past. I spent hours and hours researching the care of King Edward I of England 's forests. I also found some of the most interest facts about those forests and the kind of trees that grew there.
However, some facts have a nasty habit of alluding an author, no matter how many attempts are made to discover the truth. So, as an author, I get to imagine how it would have been. After all, it’s called fiction for a reason.
Allison
Award winning author, Allison Knight claims she's married to the world's greatest husband because he's her biggest supporter and works with her on all her projects. The mother of four children, Allison retired from teaching to enjoy her six grandkids but now that they've grown, her three cats. She has published seventeen romances, her latest, available November, 2011, is the third in a series of medieval romances about the members of a thirteenth century Welsh family drawn into the turmoil of the times.
Because she can never quite step out of teaching mode, she blogs often sharing the knowledge she gained writing and publishing in the romance genre. She also loves to talk about the growing digital market.
Allison, what a fascinating family history you have. I also love researching the past and it's so easy to lose track of time when discovering strange new facts :-) Congratulations on your new release, I love Wales!
ReplyDeleteWow. History is clearly in your genes. What an interesting family. And great fodder for the imagination, which propels the writing, eh? Congratulations on your new release.
ReplyDeleteThat is so interesting, but also so warm and fuzzy to hear about how your parents and grandfather seeded your love of history with their own family tales. Congrats on WINDSONG...love the title and the cover!
ReplyDeleteSeventeen novels - what an achievement. I always remember history I've read about in novels far more than the dry facts I had to learn at school. Congratulations!
ReplyDeleteHi Allison - no wonder you write great historical fiction! I love that you like a happy ending. And yes, sometimes it's fun to fill in gaps in factual information!
ReplyDeleteI enjoy historical novels, especially ones where the author knows what she's talking about. Susan Johnson and Mary Renault are two of my all time favorites, and they each spent great amounts of time in research. Good article. Thank you!
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