Most writing historical fiction related news are at:
Learning from the Pros 20 Aug 2013 | 04:00 pm
by Tracy Barrett (W&M contributor) A few weeks ago I attended the 42nd annual Summer Conference of the Society of Children’s Book Writers and Illustrators. The keynote speakers were stars—writers, il...
The very individual journey of novelists 16 Aug 2013 | 10:10 pm
by Stephanie Cowell It strikes me what great individual journeys each and every novelist has had…different joys, different frustrations. As a writer you start off wanting to tell stories; somewhere a...
More writing historical fiction related news:
Kemaleddin Reis annmariebanks.wordpress.com 21 Jan 2012 | 02:27 am
Not Kemaleddin, but his nephew, Piri As happens when one writes historical fiction, sometimes the lines blur. I am in a blurry area now in The Necromancer’s Grimoire, the sequel to The Hermetica of ...
A Delay kellyoconnormcnees.com 4 Feb 2013 | 08:24 am
Dear Readers, One thing I love about writing historical fiction is the power it has to transport me to a different world. I might be typing away at my desk in the little alcove off our bedroom where ...
Announcements mlouisalocke.com 19 Aug 2013 | 06:18 pm
Over on my “home away from home,” the website, Historical Fiction eBooks, I have posted an article today, entitled: “The story in History is important: Why I write historical fiction.” Do check it out...
The story in History is important: Why I write historical fiction by M. Louisa Locke historicalfictionauthors.net 19 Aug 2013 | 06:05 pm
I am a trained professional historian. I received a doctorate in history from the University of California, San Diego, in 1982. I then spent nearly thirty years teaching full time at the college level...
Historical Fiction: Altamont Augie, by Richard Barager soapboxinmymind.blogspot.com 13 Aug 2011 | 10:38 am
Altamont Augie, by Richard Barager is a story that takes place in the 1960's, during civil unrest and cultural change. A young man falls into the California Aqueduct and drowns during a Rolling St...
Interview with Marva Dale sinistreproseonline.biz 17 May 2012 | 02:30 pm
What separates author Marva Dale's Death by the Decade book series apart from the rest? I conducted an interview with the historical fiction novelist to find out. Read on to become enlightened!
What the “Writer’s Digest” judge said about My Splendid Concubine lflwriter.wordpress.com 7 Dec 2008 | 12:34 pm
My Splendid Concubine, historical fiction by Lloyd Lofthouse “I was struck by the beauty of the cover, and I certainly was not disappointed by the book’s contents. A fascinating illumination of ninet...
George Conroy reviews Temujin's Bow jameshalbert.blogspot.com 18 Jun 2011 | 04:51 am
Temujin’s Bow By James H. Albert (Review by George I. Conroy, Editor, Memphis Jewish Journal) Temujin’s Bow is a well-crafted yarn that’s not easy to pigeon-hole. It’s historical fiction but beyond...
William Hertling's Thoughtstream: Scaling A Web App 1,000x in 3 Days fotis.posterous.com 13 Feb 2012 | 11:56 am
When I'm not writing science fiction novels, I work on web apps for a largish company*. This week was pretty darn exciting: we learned on Monday afternoon that we needed to scale up to a peak volume o...
WOLF HALL (Winner of the 2009 Man Booker Prize) bookhaven-bookhaven.blogspot.com 25 Feb 2011 | 07:00 pm
Title: Wolf Hall (Winner of the 2009 Man Booker Prize) Author: Hilary Mantel Genre: Historical Fiction, Fiction Type: Paperback (652 pages) Price: RM25.00 (priced at Times Bookstore at RM37.90) C...