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Living History Through
Fiction
By Gillian Pollack
Bringing history to life is one of the most exciting activities you can
think of. And one of the easiest ways to access that exciting past is through
historical fiction. Authors such as Elizabeth Chadwick, Sharon Kay Penman,
Sharan Newman, Wendy J. Dunn and Brian Wainwright interpret their particular
views of history into tales of derring-do, politics, love or war.
Wendy J.
Dunn's fascination with Anne Boleyn and her use of Wyatt's poetry acts as a
bridge to the Tudor court for modern readers. In Dear Heart, How Like You
This, she uses the language of Tudor poetry and the fascination of some
quite extraordinary people as a bridge to tell her story. She focuses on the
personal and the individual and brings a fresh approach to the very difficult
tale that is Anne's life.
Brian Wainwright's new book Within the Fetterlock uses
the political and a careful build up of what life felt like during the period to
tell personal, private stories. It is a very different approach to Dunn, but
equally effective. Both bring history home to the reader, and bring history to
life in a vivid way. In Wainwright's book the build up of events is compelling.
You can see how the early part of the Wars of the Roses hurt people and tore
families apart when you read the sad saga. He focuses on Constance of York and
the difficulty of her path through the mire. Constance's life and her family and
her troubles are riveting and exciting.
Each book is extraordinarily different -
and each book is attracting devoted followers. Both use one character as the
major bridge between the readers and the period about which they write: in
Dunn's novel it is Thomas Wyatt, loyal and loving but powerless, and in
Wainwright's it is Constance of York, from a great family but caught up in
decisions made for her by her menfolk and by political circumstance. It is this
knife-edge between power and helplessness that catches the reader and draws the
mind's eye into the past, because it is something that we all experience in our
lives. They explore matters that are very foreign to us through using the bridge
of the personal and of universal feelings.
Both
Dunn and Wainwright have investigated the past and made one segment of it their
own - this segment is what they have transformed into a novel and given to us,
as readers. History on a platter. Not one history - but many. Each history
according to the writer- not only the views the writer takes, but the language
the writer uses and the focus the writer prefers. These differences add up.
Fictionalized history can be extraordinarily varied, with quite different views
being equally valid. This is because there is no one true path to the past -
these authors lead us into their views of English history with rare passion and
devotion.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Exquisite Photography, Kingston
Dr. Gillian Polack has a background in writing and Medieval Studies. Her
writing covers a wide range, from academic to popular, non-fiction to fiction.
Her first novel, Illuminations,
was published by Trivium
Publishing in December 2002 and her second novel (The Art of Effective Dreaming)
will be released 2004. She has had over twenty short pieces published (including
a story for which she won an Australia Day Award), and has completed several
major works, including one play and a cookbook. Her booklet on cooking for the
Jewish New Year in the Middle Ages was published by the Kosher Consumers
Association. In addition to her writing, Gillian currently teaches at the Centre
for Continuing Education, Australian National University and for the ACT Jewish
Community. She is on the editorial board of H-France and is a member of the ACT
Ministerial Advisory Council on Women.
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