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Monday, May 9, 2011

Guest Post: Anne Whitfield Discusses The HF Writing Process & Her New Book


For any historical author, and most contemporary set writers, too, researching has to be done to make the book read as authentic as possible. The smallest item can seem suddenly very interesting, and also extremely difficult to find the history about! Hours can be spent pouring over library books and the Internet searching for the right answer. We tear our hair out wondering if a certain item was invented and widely used in our period, etc. It can be terribly frightening, but also very rewarding when we do find the correct answer. I think it is very important for historical authors to get the period they write – right! However, that said, we are only human and we make mistakes no matter how hard we try not to. We can’t know everything (although we like to think we do) and that’s where different types of researching comes into it.
Sometimes, if we are lucky, we can travel to the places we set our books. Visiting castles, manor houses, streets and landscapes all help us to ‘see’ the place as our characters do. Of course over the years places and buildings change, but we have imaginations, good ones as writers do, and we can see how it would look through our characters’ eyes. Taking numerous photos of one building, hill, village or street becomes common place for a writer.

Aside from traveling to a place, we can use our TVs and watch documentaries and movies to help set the mood. One of the best DVDs I have for my research is a walking guide to places around the Calder valley and Hebden Bridge area of West Yorkshire. Thankfully, I have been to that area myself, but if I hadn't just by watching the dvd I could see the steepness of the walks, the hills, etc, and that information would help write the book.

 
Research books are one of my favourite expenses. There is nothing like buying a large research book filled with interesting information and beautiful pictures to capture my imagination. I can never have enough of them. I sigh over them like some women sigh over a gorgeous pair of Jimmy Choo shoes or a Gucci handbag. Tragic, I know. But I don't want the cure.


June 9th is the date of my next historical novel release. The House of Women is set in the Victorian era.
 
Blurb
Leeds. 1870. Lonely and brokenhearted, Grace Woodruff fights for her sisters’ rights to happiness while sacrificing any chance for her own.

 The eldest of seven daughters, Grace is the core of strength around which the unhappy members of the Woodruff family revolve. As her disenchanted mother withdraws to her rooms, Grace must act as a buffer between her violent, ambitious father and the sisters who depend upon her. Rejected by her first love and facing a spinster’s future, she struggles to hold the broken family together through her father’s infidelity, one sister’s alcoholism, and another’s out-of-wedlock pregnancy by an unsuitable match.

 Caring for an illegitimate half-brother affords Grace an escape, though short-lived. Forced home by illness and burdened with dwindling finances, Grace faces fresh anguish –and murder– when her first love returns to wreck havoc in her life.  All is not lost, however. In the midst of tragedy, the fires of her heart are rekindled by another. Will the possibility of true love lead Grace to relinquish her responsibilities in the house of women and embrace her own right to happiness?

The House of Women is available at Amazon, Barnes & Noble and all good bookstores.
For more information, please visit my website: http://www.annewhitfield.com








6 comments:

  1. Thanks for having me as a guest, Taylor!

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  2. I am the Midas of research sources, I always want more! Looking forward to the release of your novel.

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  3. My problem with research is that its just so much fun I end up following rabbit trails everywhere and spending far too long researching rather than writing!

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  4. Thanks for a great blog Anne. I agree with you about the need to research the era you set your story in. Avid fans of the genre often know more about the period than newer authors and find it annoying when mistakes appear.
    Your house of women series sounds wonderful and I looking forward to reading Grace's story.

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  5. Thanks so much, Kat, Kez and Vicki Lee!

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  6. Thanks Anne for guest posting and stopping by!

    Taylor~

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