Showing posts with label Authors. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Authors. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 14, 2017

Australia's Gold Rush and Colonial Architecture by Michael Beashel

Our guest author today is Michael Beashel. Michael is Sydney-born and his Irish forebears immigrated to New South Wales in 1863 and settled in Millers Point. He spent his youth in Bondi, is married with adult children and lives in Sydney’s inner-west.

Michael was head of Asset Development for a global accommodation services company registered on the NYSE and has made his mark in some of Australia’s iconic construction companies. In Sydney, he has restored government buildings such as the Customs House and the Town Hall, and completed commercial buildings in the private sector. In SE Asia, he managed a construction division that built apartments and hotels in Bangkok and Ho Chi Minh City.

This industry—its characters, clients, trades people, designers and bureaucrats—provides rich material for his writing. He has an eye for the emergence of Sydney’s built form, from the early days of the colony to the present, and a love of construction. He says about his writing, ‘It’s a passion. I revel in using the building industry as a tapestry to weave a great tale seasoned with historic facts and memorable characters. Human shelter is an essential need and I suspect people have a fascination for understanding its context and construction within their societies. Australia still is a young country but there are many, many outstanding building stories.’


Michael holds a B. App. Science (Building) from Sydney’s UTS and is a member of the NSW Writers’ Centre. Michael finds his excitement in the design and construction industry, military history and Rugby. He’s sailed in Herons but leaves the racing and honours to other family members!  Unbound Justice is his first novel and the sequels Unshackled and Succession complete the Sandstone Trilogy. You can connect with Michael via Facebookwebsite and blog.

Shelter is the third human need and it’s essential for civilisation to thrive. In genre fiction, the building industry has not been used much as a context although bestsellers like the Pillars of the Earth paint vivid stories and characters against the backdrop of monumental building construction. The intent of my writing is to celebrate the building industry in nineteenth century NSW using where possible historic examples of major works. Architecture of the European period, the Renaissance and early to middle 20th-century America has been given due attention. However the architects of colonial New South Wales, post Greenway, and the contractors who executed their designs are often not given the credence they deserve.  

The time period for The Sandstone Trilogy was chosen because it represented a profound change in New South Wales’s history. The first two books date from 1850 to 1857 and highlight the massive expansion of the colony due to the Gold Rush. Wool was certainly adding to the colony’s income but it was the gold that created the explosion.

Liverpool St facing Hyde Park 1849
According to JM Freeland in his Architecture in Australia, a History, ‘the newly rich men of means wanting large and substantial warehouses and offices; town councils wanting magnificent city halls befitting their new-found place in the sun; the churches with coffers filled by affluent respectability- seeking parishioners wanting larger and proper Gothic edifices; the publicans wanting imposing palaces in which to milk a sybaritic clientele and tens of thousands of people just wanting a home—all this created a splendiferous boom for the building fraternity.’ 

The price of labour and the cost of building materials increased exponentially because of the sheer demand for them. Additionally those tradesmen who were less passionate about their chosen careers were happy to join their fellow gold seekers and try their luck. This sudden ‘vacuuming’ of tradesmen from New South Wales, especially Sydney building sites, created demand for less skilled tradesmen and also promotion for others who would not have normally risen to high ranks at such an early age.
Skinner's Family Hotel, George & Hunter Streets

It cannot be overemphasised how much the gold rush affected New South Wales and Victoria.  JM Freeland says that “Australian architecture left its innocence behind when gold was officially discovered in May 1851. The immediate effect of the turmoil on architecture was negative. Building virtually stopped. It was in these conditions that many of these substantial business firms of today were founded. In the period 1851 to 1860 the population of Australia trebled to 1.2 million people. Victoria from 76,000 to 540,000!”

One of the fascinating sources has been a compilation of drawings done by Joseph Fowles and printed by himself in Harrington Street in 1848. St Patrick’s Church in Charlotte Place (present day Grosvenor Street) was dedicated in March 1844. Between King and Market Streets in Pitt Street stood the Royal Victoria Theatre. “The fronts are bold and lofty faced with fine brick with massive stone dressings and cornices. The spirited proprietor Mr Moffit deserves great credit for the liberality with which he has contributed towards ornamenting the city.”

Markets and Police Court, George St
On the social front, one reference written in the era was Mr James Inglis’s account of Sydney and its people. Mr Inglis was a member of the NSW Legislative Assembly in 1885. He wrote a book called, “Our Australian Cousins.”  It was in effect an early example of a traveller’s blog.

York Street was the place to live, especially between Sydney Town Hall and Wynyard square. The merchants’ palaces were selling for £30,000 to build.

Shop windows were small and mean. The structure of each shop jutted out into Pitt and George streets. Horses were hitched to posts and the horses were called walers.
Customs House

The taxi cabs were elegant, light in draft, roomy and comfortable. They were above the average and the horses sleek and well groomed. The taxi driver charged four shillings per hour, nine pence for a quarter of an hour.

References:
Sydney electoral roll “a narrative on the visit to land colonies 1843.”
Present state of Australia 1851 by Melville Henry.
New South Wales, its past and present, 1849 by John Patterson
British Parliamentary papers “Colonies Australia” 1854 Volumes 12 and 17.
Recollections of Sydney 1850, John Mortimer
Impressions of Australia illustrated, Australian magazine Volume 2 1851
London Journal of immigration illustrated 1848
Sydney takes shape, a collection of contemporary maps from foundation to Federation 1977 Paul Ashton and Duncan Waterson
The origins of the Master builders Association of New South Wales, 1873 to 1889
The Evolution of the Wooden Ship: Basil Greenhill, Sam Manning
The collected evidence from Clive Lucas’s Stapleton and partners.
Sydney’s roads- Rosemary Broomham’s “Vital Connections”
History of Australia by Manning Clark Volumes Three and Four from 1824 to 1888.
Images from State and Mitchell Libraries of NSW




John Leary boards ship in Ireland in 1850, a young carpenter ambitious for a new life in Australia. He sails with revenge in his heart—his beloved sister has been raped by her landlord, William Baxterhouse, who escapes on another ship with even grander plans for success in New South Wales. In Sydney, hard workers like Leary and ruthless newcomers like Baxterhouse find a city fired by the Gold Rush and dedicated to creating the finest buildings in the colony. Leary has a double motive to make his construction company succeed: he has fallen in love with the beautiful Clarissa McGuire, whose family despise him, and Baxterhouse continues to rise in wealth and influence, seemingly untouchable. Meanwhile another woman, Beth O’Hare, is in love with John Leary, and he makes some hard choices—including a climactic showdown with Baxterhouse.

Unbound Justice is the first novel in The Sandstone Trilogy:  a new, magnificent view of nineteenth-century Sydney from the ground up.

Thanks for sharing your insights with us, Michael. Congratulations on the trilogy.

 You can Michael Beashel's books on Amazon and via his website.

Sunday, September 24, 2017

2017 HNSA MELBOURNE CONFERENCE


Join our celebration!

On the weekend of 8th – 10th September 2017, the Historical Novel Society Australasia (HNSA) is holding its Melbourne conference at Swinburne University, Hawthorn, exploring the theme of Identity: Origins and Diaspora. Our full programme can be found at our website. 


Kate Forsyth

Over 60 fabulous speakers

In a celebration of the historical fiction genre, our three day informative and interactive weekend program will showcase over 60 speakers discussing writing craft, research, inspiration, publishing pathways and personal histories. Among these are acclaimed historical novelists such as Kerry Greenwood, Kate Forsyth, Deborah Challinor, Lucy Treloar, Sophie Masson, Sulari Gentill, Robert Gott, Arnold Zable, Gary Crew, Melissa Ashley, Kate Mildenhall, Juliet Marillier, Pamela Hart, Kelly Gardiner and Libby Hathorn.

History with a twist...

Our opening reception will be held on Friday 8th September where attendees will celebrate  Kate Forsyth’s Beauty in Thorns with plenty of prizes. There will also be a lively round table discussion led by Nicolas Brasch in which Arnold Zable, Gary Crew, Hanifa Deen and Ngahuia te Awekotuku will discuss our theme, in particular, the role of the historical novelist in exploring first encounters in Australia and New Zealand’s colonial pasts, the migrant experience underlying those nations’ multicultural identities, and whether an author’s origins are relevant to the story telling. 


Three concurrent streams

The conference program on September will consist of three streams. The first will continue to explore the conference theme and include interviews with a number of talented authors. The second stream will deal with research and writing craft; the third will consist of an academic programme. 

Our guest author is Kerry Greenwood, author of the Phryne Fisher Mysteries, who will provide insights into her novels, her writing processes, the TV adaptation of her series, and other aspects of her stellar career.


Kerry Greenwood

Exploring our Australasian national identity

Other panels exploring our theme in our first stream include 'First Encounters and Our Colonial Past' with Lucy Treloar, Deborah Challinor, Nicole Alexander and Andrew Peters, followed by 'Immigrant Stories and Diaspora: How Pioneers Adapt and Survive in their New Land' with Kim Kelly, Arnold Zable, Maxine Alterio and Vicky Adin. And Natasha Lester, Robyn Cadwallader, Elisabeth Storrs and Kathryn Gauci will explore 'Venturing Forth: Exploring Historical Fiction beyond National Boundaries and Australian History.'

Time travelling, world wars and parallel narratives
Our second stream on Saturday will canvas various aspects of research, sub-genres and the writing craft. Wendy J Dunn, Barbara Gaskell Denvil, Stephanie Smee and Rachel Nightingale will discuss 'How to Transmute Research into Compelling Historical Fiction' while Paddy Richardson, Elise McCune, Justin Sheedy and Julian Leatherdale ponder 'World at War: The Appeal of 20th Century Historical Fiction.' 'The Outlander Effect: Parallel Narratives and Time Travelling' will see Belinda Murrell, Felicity Pulman, Gary Crew and Ella Carey discuss the challenges of weaving tales of two protagonists from different time periods into the plots and themes.

Deborah Challinor

'First pages' pitch contest

Our Saturday programme will end with our very popular First Pages Pitch Contest where an actor will read aloud chosen submissions from aspiring authors to industry experts who will provide a critique. The session will also provide other attendees with a chance to learn what attracts the attention of agents and publishers when seeking new historical fiction. Entrants will remain anonymous other than the winner. Our judges are Alison Green (Pantera Press), Sophie Masson (Eagle Books), Mandy Brett (Text Publishing). Rachel Nightingale will act as narrator. You can enter the Pitch Contest here.

Personal histories 

The first stream on Sunday sees two Personal Histories sessions where Kate Forsyth explains why she delved into adult historical fiction after writing acclaimed fantasy novels for children and young adults while Deborah Challinor reveals where she obtained the inspiration for her three historical series, numerous standalone novels, and non-fiction books?

Award winning author, Sophie Masson, who has more than 50 novels published in Australia and internationally, will be asked what drives her passion for writing and love of history, while Lucy Treloar will explain what she thinks attracts readers and critics to her writing after her debut novel was released to a whirlwind of local and international acclaim.
Lucy Treloar

In 'The Long Haul: Writing Successful Series and Multiple Books', Juliet Marillier,  Libby Hathorn and Anne Gracie will reveal how they maintain momentum. And what keeps the spark of inspiration from being doused.


A much anticipated panel will be exploring the appeal of historical mysteries in which Sulari Gentill, Robert Gott, Meg Keneally and Gary Corby will ponder why readers are attracted to the addition of history to murder and mayhem, and the challenges novelists encounter when creating detectives who lack modern crime kits.

Sulari Gentill

Sub-genres and the writing craft

Our second Sunday stream will continue to highlight issues relating to the writing craft. Alan Tucker, Gabrielle Wang, Wendy Orr and Pamela Rushby will tell us why writing CYA fiction is not an easy option. Isolde Martyn, Lisa Chaplin, Alison Stuart and Anna Campbell will tease out whether there is a difference between historical romance and historical love stories. As a treat, Kate Mildenhall, Melissa Ashley, Greg Pyers and Luke Devenish will discuss the 'Modern Voice in Historical Fiction'. Should an historical novelist cater for the tastes of 21st Century readers by introducing modern expressions and dialogue in their novels? Is it valid to introduce current sensibilities to characters who would otherwise have been constrained by their own societies?
Anne Gracie


Pathways to publication

Our final sessions for Sunday will include 'Pathways to Publication', Lindy Cameron talks to agent Clare Forster and publishers Alison Green and Mandy Brett on the expectations of agents and publishers when looking for the next big thing in historical fiction.

Writing outside your comfort zone - sex and violence

And you will not want to miss out on our concluding panel where Kate Forsyth, Luke Devenish and Anna Campbell will read some of their saucier excerpts as well as provide tips on writing 'Outside the Comfort Zone: Writing Sex and Violence.'

Super sessions

There are ten skills-based workshop super sessions running concurrently with the main conference program on Historical Mysteries, Historical Romance, Children and Young Adult Fiction, Pitching to Publishers, Social Media, Scrivener, Self-Publishing, Family History, Trove, and the Business of Writing. Attendees will gain the benefit of tutors such as Sulari Gentill, Anne Gracie, Isolde Martyn, Elisabeth Storrs, Elizabeth Lhuede, GS Johnston, Kelly Gardiner, Hazel Edwards, Eleanor Limprecht, Rachel Franks and Lisa Chaplin. Purchase of a ticket entitles attendees an entry into a $100 Dymocks Gift Card Giveaway.
Kelly Gardiner

Transforming research and the clash of armour

Dr Gillian Polack is offering two masterclasses focused on how to weave research into convincing and authentic historical fiction. There also will be interactive sessions on armour with Matt Curran (Leif the Viking) and historical costumes with Rachel Nightingale. There is also a chance to have your manuscript assessed  by industry experts, Alison Arnold and Irina DunnBook your appointment here.

Academic programme

HNSA is conducting a third stream which will give academics the chance to answer a call for papers in two topics: 'Bio-fiction: Can you Defame the Dead?' and 'The Lie of History'. Successful applicants will then present their papers. General admission is free to all attendees to enjoy listening to these fascinating discussions but spaces are limited so please reserve a space. More details about the academic sessions are available here.

Inaugural HNSA short story contest

HNSA is excited to announce the establishment of its inaugural short story contest with a prize of $500! Many thanks to Eagle Books for sponsoring the prize and to Sandra Gulland agreeing to act as judge. The winning entry and two other short listed stories will be published in Backstory ezine. The Historical Novel Society is also offering a free membership to the winner. You can enter the contest via this link.

Conference dinner

Robert Gott
Last but not least, don't miss our conference dinner where you can enjoy highlights of the day with your fellow attendees while eating a delicious meal and listening to our dinner speaker Robert Gott.

You can buy tickets to our conference and learn more about our speakers via our website www.hnsa.org.au. Book now to take advantage of early bird registration. 

Let's Make a Noise about Historical Fiction!

Friday, June 30, 2017

Imagining the Past Podcast Series: Sulari Gentill and Robert Gott




HNSA is proud to announce the release of the next podcast in our series 'Imagining the Past'. This week we bring you Sulari Gentill and Robert Gott chatting with our host, Kelly Gardiner about their fictional detectives and the challenges of co-writing an historical mystery play. The podcast is a taste of what you will hear at the 2017 HNSA Conference in Melbourne from 8-10 September at Swinburne University Hawthorn. More information about the programme is available at our website.



 A reformed lawyer, Sulari Gentill is the author of the Rowland Sinclair Mysteries, seven historical crime novels (thus far) chronicling the life and adventures of her 1930s Australian gentleman artist, and the Hero Trilogy, based on the myths and epics of the ancient world. She lives with her husband, Michael, and their boys, Edmund and Atticus, on a small farm in the foothills of the Snowy Mountains, where she grows French Black Truffles and works in her pyjamas.

Sulari has been shortlisted for the Commonwealth Writers’ Prize – Best First Book, won the 2012 Davitt Award for Crime Fiction, been shortlisted in 2013, 2015 and the 2016 Davitt Award, the 2015 Ned Kelly Award, the 2015 and 2016 Australian Book Industry Award for Best Adult Book, the NSW Genre Fiction Award, commended in the FAW Jim Hamilton Award and offered a Varuna Fellowship. In 2014, Sulari collaborated with National Gallery of Victoria to write a short historical fiction which was produced in audio to feature in the Fashion Detective Exhibition, and thereafter published by the NGV. She was an Ambassador of 2015 Emerging Writers’ Festival and the inaugural Eminent Writer in Residence at the Museum of Australian Democracy. She remains in love with art of writing. Find out more about Sulari at Pantera Press and at her website.

Robert Gott was born in the small Queensland town of Maryborough in 1957, and lives in Melbourne. He has published many books for children, and is also the creator of the newspaper cartoon The Adventures of Naked Man. He is also the author of The Holiday Murders and The Port Fairy Murders. This novel is the fourth in the William Power series of crime-caper novels set in 1940s Australia, following Good Murder, A Thing of Blood, and Amongst the Dead. You can find more information about Robert's books at Penguin Books.

Sulari and Robert will be appearing at the HNSA Conference on Sunday 10 September in Session Two at 10 - 11 am in the following panel:

Historical Whodunits: Solving Clues across the Centuries

Historical mysteries are hugely popular. Why are readers attracted to the addition of history to murder and mayhem? What challenges do writers encounter when creating detectives who lack modern crime kits? Kelly Gardiner asks Sulari Gentill, Robert Gott, Meg Keneally and Gary Corby what ingredients they use to keep their readers guessing to the very last page.

Sulari is also conducting a super session 'The Mystery in History:  A Crime Fiction Workshop for Aspiring Authors' in which she'll take you through the basics and nuances of crime-fiction and the art of making history more than just picturesque backdrop. More information on our website.
And we're delighted that Robert will be our guest speaker at the conference dinner on Saturday 9 September at Glenferrie Hotel.

Sulari's new book, Crossing the Lines, is now available for pre-order. For more information, visit Pantera Press, iTunes, Amazon and Kobo.



When Madeleine d'Leon conjures Ned McGinnity as the hero in her latest crime novel, she makes him a serious writer simply because the irony of a protagonist who'd never lower himself to read the story in which he stars amuses her.

When Ned McGinnity creates Madeleine d'Leon, she is his literary device, a writer of detective fiction who is herself a mystery to be unravelled.

As Ned and Madeleine play out their own lives while writing the other's story, they find themselves crossing the lines that divide the real and the imagined.

This is a story about two people trying to hold onto each other beyond reality.

HNSA 2017 Conference

The HNSA 2017 Melbourne Conference is being held on 8-10 September 2017 at Swinburne University. This celebration of the historical fiction genre will showcase over 60 speakers discussing inspiration, writing craft, research, publishing pathways and personal histories in our weekend programme. Among the many acclaimed historical novelists participating are Kerry Greenwood, Kate Forsyth, Deborah Challinor, Libby Hathorn, Lucy Treloar, Sulari Gentill, Robert Gott and Arnold Zable. The HNSA’s speakers’ list is available on the HNSA website.

In addition to the two stream weekend programme, there will be ten craft based super sessions and two research masterclasses. You won’t want to miss our interactive sessions on armour and historical costumes either! Manuscript assessments will be conducted by industry experts, Alison Arnold and Irina Dunn. Our free extended academic programme is open for general admission but bookings are essential.


Our First Pages Pitch Contest offers an opportunity for submissions to be read aloud to a panel of publishers. And we are delighted to announce the introduction of our inaugural HNSA Short Story Contest with a $500 prize!




Our Imagining the Past Host:


Kelly Gardiner’s most recent book is 1917 (published early in 2017), a novel for young readers set during the First World War. Her previous books include Goddess, based on the remarkable life of the seventeenth century French swordswoman and opera singer, Julie d’Aubigny. Kelly’s historical novels for young adults include The Sultan’s Eyes and Act of Faith, set during the time of the English Civil Wars and the Inquisition. Both books were shortlisted for the Ethel Turner Prize in the NSW Premier’s Literary Awards. Her books for younger readers are the ‘Swashbuckler’ adventure trilogy – Ocean Without EndThe Pirate’s Revenge and The Silver Swan – set in Malta during the Napoleonic invasion, and a picture book, Billabong Bill’s Bushfire Christmas. Kelly has worked on newspapers, magazines and websites, and her articles, poems, book reviews and travel writing have appeared in journals, magazines and newspapers as diverse as ‘The New York Times’, ‘Marie Claire’, ‘New Idea’, and ‘Going Down Swinging’. She works at the State Library of Victoria and teaches creative writing at La Trobe University. Kelly is also the co-host of Unladylike, a podcast on women and writing. Learn more about Kelly at her website. https://kellygardiner.com/

Thursday, June 15, 2017

Interview with Paul Hansen and Linda Weste


A treat today for lovers of Ancient Roman and Greek history, myths and legends, as well as politics, murder and intrigue.

Linda Weste is an author, reviewer, editor, and teacher. Her recent historical verse novel set in late Republican Rome, Nothing Sacred, won the 2016 Wesley Michel Wright Prize, and was highly commended in the Fellowship of Australian Writers 2015 Anne Elder Award. Weste reviews for online journals including Mascara Literary Review and Cordite Poetry Review, teaches creative writing, and is Reviews Editor of TEXT. She has a Doctor of Philosophy (Creative Writing) from the University of Melbourne.

Paul Hansen has worked in law enforcement for 23 years and is currently the Director for a criminal investigation unit. One of his most interesting jobs was as head of international family law in the Federal Attorney-General’s Department, where he ran the Australian Central Authority for International Child Abduction and  twice represented Australia as head of delegation in The Hague. Paul also loves writing stories –not just the standard stuff.  he love the small bits that you don’t normally find until you dig deep. For him classical literature, and ancient writers like Herodotus, Hesiod, Homer, and others, are great examples of this. Paul’s‘Last War of Gods and Men’ series – put all the myths and legends into a single tale – a tapestry – that shows how everything was interwoven in a way that is easy for the modern reader to digest, without having to spend years studying the classics in a University. You can connect with Paul via his website, Facebook and Twitter.

What is the inspiration for your current book?


Linda: The historical fault line between the collapse of the Roman Republic and the rise of the Imperium during the first century BCE has long fascinated writers. I became fascinated with this period after discovering a footnote about Clodia Metelli in a book of Catullan poetry. A German scholar had mapped Clodia onto Catullus's 'Lesbia' in 1862. Clodia and her brother Clodius Pulcher were born into the Claudii Pulchri, one of only twenty families who guided senatorial policy, commanded the armies and governed the provinces in late Republican Rome. The impression of Clodia and Clodius as firebrands – determined to live by their own rules – inspired me to imaginatively bring to life the vagaries of the period through their eyes and exploits in my current book, Nothing Sacred.

Paul: Sword of Olympus is the first book in a five book series based on ancient writings and fragments dating back to the 7th Century BCE.  It details the civil war and split between the Gods and Goddesses of Mount Olympus, a split which was reflected in the mortal realm in a war between the many cities and tribes of ancient Greece – and eventually culminated in the war with Troy.  It is the thrill of placing these myths and legends all together into a single coherent tapestry which inspires me – and rediscovering small pieces of information and knowledge that we have lost over time.

Bits like Helen of Troy was actually never at Troy.  The warrior Achilles and the Priam of Troy were not their real names – but derogatory references or nicknames.  How did Agamemnon become king of Mycenae – when his family wasn’t originally in control of the city, and as a child he was a fosterling without a kingdom?  Where was the most important family of ancient times during the war with Troy – the Hellenes, after whom the Greeks (and the modern country of Greece) take their name?


Is there a particular theme you are exploring in this book?


Linda: As a novel in verse, Nothing Sacred offers a fresh way of knowing late Republican Rome through the medium of poetry. It also differentiates its representation of late Republican Rome from other historical novels set in this time, by not being solely about the triumvirate leadership of Crassus, Caesar and Pompey. The theme I'm most interested in is transgression – which is closely linked with desire, hence the book's frequent use of sexual metaphors – metaphors that have been with us since antiquity.

Paul: I wanted to tell the story of the myths and legends of Ancient Greece, but in a way that the ancients themselves would have understood.  To them myth and wasn’t just a bunch of individual stories – it was history!  There was even a profession in the ancient world that set the myths and legends into a historical frame – mythographer.

Which period of history particularly interests you? Why?


Linda: Antiquity – but while I'm interested in what existing representations of history tell me, I'm more interested in what they don't tell me; the facts that aren't readily accessible are what I'm most curious to learn.

This curiosity shapes my view that historical fictions can fill the gap between the pasts we are permitted to know and those we wish to know.

Paul: I am interested in all history – but in particular areas that converge with myth and legend, which after all is only history that we’ve forgotten or remembered slightly differently.

What resources do you use to research your book? 


Linda: For Nothing Sacred I undertook extensive research: Catullan poetry; Latin and Greek etymology; numismatics; naming conventions; architecture and monuments; political speeches; ancient place names and geographical boundaries; agricultural methods and food preparation; festivals and artefacts; gender and sexuality; mythology and religion; slavery; gladiatorial combat; and use of animals for pleasure and show.

The many resources included digital material for the study of girls and women in antiquity, classical libraries, museum archives, a corpus of Latin inscriptions and a topographical dictionary of Ancient Rome.

Paul: I try to track down as many original sources as possible – which with Greek myth is a mix of translated ancient texts, fragments, and archaeology.

What is more important to you: historical authenticity or accuracy?


Linda: I had to decide which approach – historicism or presentism – would be best for my representation of late Republican Rome in Nothing Sacred.  If I chose an historicist approach – to honour historical actuality, authenticity and factuality – I could risk making my representation of the times inflexible, unresponsive to fiction's needs. If I chose a presentist approach – imposing present-day attitudes on the past could stifle the 'otherness' of antiquity.

I faced the decision anew with each poem. In 'Gargantuan' for example, I recount – in the voice of the character, Cicero – the killing of twenty elephants (an actuality). To do so, I had to think about this death as a Roman of the times might (authenticity). But to engage today's readers – who would likely view the killing with revulsion – and draw attention to the significance of the incident for the times, I aestheticised the scene, and made the language as beautiful and beguiling as I could.

Paul: I try for both.  There is usually a way to turn the facts to fit the story you want to tell – but you also have to be willing to let the facts guide the story, and take you in directions you might not have originally anticipated.  For me that is the absolute joy of writing historical fiction.

Which character in your current book is your favourite? Why?


Linda: Definately the siblings Clodius Pulcher and Clodia Metelli – their audacity is fascinating.  

Paul: Dorus – king of the Hellenes.  He is a complex character and one that is almost completely forgotten in the modern myths, but he was the founder of one of the three branches of ancient Hellenism – the Dorians.  He finds himself out of his depth, trying to live up to the memory of his father, the warrior king Hellen (after whom the Hellenes are named) and having to deal with the fact that his nephew Macedon (after whom the Macedonians are named) has turned out to the a son of Zeus.  Writing his internal struggle was enjoyable.

The other character I really like is the Oracle Dodona – she’s a mysterious and unknown factor, and is clearly reading from a different papyrus scroll than everyone else.  What else would you expect from an Oracle?

Are you a ‘plotter’ or a ‘pantser’? How long does it generally take you to write a book?


Linda: I'm a plotter definitely. This book took several years to research and write.

Paul: It generally takes me about a year to write – but a large part of that is research.  My books are also quite large – around 150K words each.

Which authors have influenced you?


Linda: For this work I was probably influenced most by Robert Harris – his first rule of historical fiction is not to use your research, or at any rate to use only a tenth of it.  Harris warns against ‘the temptation to stick in facts just because you’ve discovered them’. In the best historical fiction, the reader can sense the presence of the research that isn’t being used, out there in the shadows… the novelist’s function according to Harris, is to take the research and convey impressions – to go beyond the bare facts.

Paul: Sara Douglass; David Gemmell; Valerio Manfredi; Rick Riordan

What advice would you give an aspiring author?


Linda: Research as much as possible and have a good reason for whatever choices you make.

Paul: Research as much as possible – and map out all your key facts and characters.  Seek input and feedback on your writing – but don’t take no for an answer. 

Tell us about your next book or work in progress


Linda: The next book is an historical novel in verse – set in Melbourne during World War Two. I'm interested in this as a period of complex social change, for the Second World War engaged the entire Australian community in a way that the Great War did not. 

Paul: I’m currently working on book III in the series – The Dragon Throne (yes – they had dragons in ancient Greece.  The Oracle in Delphi is even named after one – the great She-Dragon Delphyne!).  The focus of the book is the brothers Agamemnon and Menelaus – and how they move from being homeless youth to retaking Mycenae from their uncle, and then bringing the rest of the Greek Peninsula to heel.  It wasn’t just armies – there was a lot of political intrigue between the various cities, tribes – and even the Gods themselves.



They may have been born privileged into the Claudii Pulchri family, but siblings Clodius Pulcher and Clodia Metelli are firebrands: kindred spirits; brazen, impetuous, headstrong; determined to live by their own rules.

Together they incite the wrath of Rome’s elite - and in particular, Cicero. But nothing is sacred in late Republican Rome - and rules keep changing when change threatens to rule …
The vagaries of the period are brought to vibrant life through the eyes and exploits of Clodius and Clodia in this historical novel in verse.

Nothing Sacred is available at Readings or Scholarly



In an ancient world of gods and heroes, the threat of war is rising…

From the city of Trachis, near the pass of Thermopylae, three kings set sail for the holy island of Asteria and the gathering of kings called by the twin temples of Apollo and Artemis, intent on foiling the plans of Atreus, king of Mycenae, who seeks dominion over all the cities and kingdoms of the Aegean sea.

To the north, in the shadow of Mount Olympus, the hero Heracles looks to free the besieged city of Elone, joining forces with the Centaurs to wage war against the combined armies of Lapith and Dryopes warriors, who under the command of the Strategos Coronus have been ordered to destroy the city of the Hellenes.

While Hera, the outcast Queen of the Gods, strives to raise a new god to cast aside the old, and will sacrifice the immortals of Pelasgia to achieve her goal. Yet all the while the question remains, where are the other Olympians?

Against a backdrop of war and betrayal, a young man will struggle to understand the power of the gods, and his role in the struggle to come. In an ancient world of gods and heroes, the threat of war is rising… And if they are not careful, the Dark Queen will sacrifice all to chaos.

Sword of Olympus and Rage of a Dark Queen are available via Amazon.


HNSA Meet the Author Satellite Event

Paul Hansen and Linda Weste are appearing in our Melbourne HNSA Meet the Author event on 18 June 2.30-4.30 pm at the Mail Exchange Hotel, 688 Bourke St, Melbourne discussing Ancient and Medieval Historical Fiction with Barbara Gaskell Denvil, Lindy Cameron and Rachel Nightingale. Bookings essential. More details can be found on the HNSA website.

HNSA 2017 Conference

The HNSA 2017 Melbourne Conference is being held on 8-10 September 2017 at Swinburne University.

This celebration of the historical fiction genre will showcase over 60 speakers discussing inspiration, writing craft, research, publishing pathways and personal histories in our weekend programme. Among the many acclaimed historical novelists participating are Kerry Greenwood, Kate Forsyth, Deborah Challinor, Libby Hathorn, Lucy Treloar, Sophie Masson, Sulari Gentill, Robert Gott and Arnold Zable. The HNSA’s speakers’ list is available on the HNSA website.

In addition to the two stream weekend programme, there will be ten craft based super sessions and two research masterclasses. You won’t want to miss our interactive sessions on armour and historical costumes either! Manuscript assessments will be conducted by industry experts, Alison Arnold and Irina Dunn. Our free extended academic programme is open for general admission but bookings are essential.

Our First Pages Pitch Contest offers an opportunity for submissions to be read aloud to a panel of publishers. And we are delighted to announce the introduction of our inaugural HNSA Short Story Contest with a $500 prize!




Let’s make a noise about historical fiction!

Monday, June 12, 2017

Interview with Rachel Nightingale


Our guest today is Rachel Nightingale. Rachel has been writing since the age of 8 (early works are safely hidden away). She holds a Masters degree and PhD in Creative Writing. Winning the Mercury Short Story competition (junior section) at the age of 16 fueled her desire to share her stories with the world. Subsequent short stories have been shortlisted in a number of competitions and a play, No Sequel, won the People's Choice Award and First Prize at the Eltham Little Theatre's 10 Minute Play competition. Another, Crime Fiction, was performed at Short and Sweet Manila and Sydney.

Rachel’s second passion after writing is the theatre, and she has been performing in shows and working backstage for a rather long time. She co-wrote and performed in the 2013-2015 version of the hugely popular Murder on the Puffing Billy Express, a 1920s murder mystery set on the iconic Dandenong Ranges train. The inspiration for the Tarya trilogy, which begins with Harlequin's Riddle, began when she read a quote by Broadway actor Alan Cumming about that in-between moment just before you step onstage, and began to wonder might be found in that place between worlds. You can connect with Rachel via Facebook and Twitter or her blog.


What is the inspiration for your current book?

 Harlequin’s Riddle grew out of an article I read about the Broadway revival of Cabaret. Alan Cumming, who was playing the emcee, spoke of the moment before you step on stage as being a ‘moment between’ where anything was possible, like the Hindu idea of heaven, or Turiya. Hence the idea for Tarya was born, a realm that artists enter when they are in the flow of creating their art. The fun part was working out exactly what becomes possible in this realm.


Is there a particular theme you are exploring in this book?

We’re at a point in time where technology has enabled anyone to produce a professional looking ‘product’, whether that be a film, book or digital art, and many people think that’s a substitute for hard work, original ideas and getting good at your craft. We’re seeing the rise of very formula ‘art’, where people copy what others have done to try to capture their success. This is encouraged by the big entertainment corporations who hold the marketing strings. The fact that the final decision about whether a book will be published is made by the marketing department on the basis of whether it will sell, not by a skilled editor who knows good storytelling, is appalling. So in the Tarya Trilogy artists’ work is proscribed – they are not allowed to do anything that is too original or that might actually move or transport the audience. If they do, they are severely penalised.

Which period of history particularly interests you? Why?

The Tarya trilogy is fantasy, but it is essentially set in the Italian Renaissance. I have only stepped sideways into a fantasy world in order to bring magical experiences into the story. The books centre on the travelling players, the Commedia dell’Arte (Harlequin, Columbine, Pierrot and others), who travelled around Italy in the 1500s. The setting and costumes are all based on that era, and the arc of the story, in terms of the dominance of the Commedia dell’Arte as an artform, follows historical occurrences.

What resources do you use to research your book?

As a historical reenactor, I have researched, made and worn Italian Renaissance dresses, so that very much feeds into what people are wearing in the books. Being in the SCA provides fabulous research opportunities because there is always someone who has done in-depth research on something you want to know about and is happy to share their knowledge, or point you in the right direction. I have also done mask making and have an extensive background in theatre and improv so the performance side of things comes from direct experience. John Rudlin’s book, Commedia dell’Arte, An Actor’s Handbook, was a key resource. I used other resources on the Renaissance for things like the ‘Memento Mori’ skeleton jewellery that appears in the second book. In terms of setting I experienced one of those inexplicable things that sometimes happen to writers – I describe towns and cities with buildings covered in tiles that form pictures. I’ve never been to Europe, but after I’d written these descriptions I found photographs of European towns where these buildings existed!

What is more important to you: historical authenticity or accuracy?

Writing fantasy gives me the room to play with things, so I’d have to say I aimed for an authentic feel as the backdrop to the more magical occurrences rather than trying to get things exactly write, although sometimes I do work from an image (eg a piece of artwork from the time) and try to describe it as accurately as possible. I’m currently writing a play based on a historical figure though, and that is completely different – I am absolutely aiming for accuracy. Her life is pretty dramatic, so I definitely don’t need to make things up to create drama. 

Which character in your current book is your favourite? Why?

Luka, who plays Pierrot onstage, has to be my favourite. You don’t see much of him in the first book, but he becomes increasingly important in the second and third books. He’s quiet and gentle, the antithesis of Hollywood’s definition of a hero, but without him Mina’s story would be very different.

 Are you a ‘plotter’ or a ‘pantser’? How long does it generally take you to write a book?

Definitely a plotter. When you’re writing over three books you have to keep track of plot points closely, and it was important to me to seed events or ideas in the first book that would come to fruition in the final one, so that meant thinking it all through well in advance. I much prefer reading books that do this, so that’s my aim. I’m hoping my writing speed picks up – real life has always got in the way so writing has been a slow, slow process, but I’m making it a priority now. The second book in the Tarya trilogy, which will come out in the middle of next year, is already complete luckily so I have a bit of time to work on the third one!

Which authors have influenced you?

I nearly failed my first year of university because I spent swot vac reading The Mists of Avalon, by Marion Zimmer Bradley. The way in which she takes myth and makes it believably real in a historical context is a huge inspiration for me. I also love Ray Bradbury’s wordsmithing ability – I hope to be half as good as him in a few more decades.

What advice would you give an aspiring author?

Read and write a lot, and if you seriously want to be a writer, take your writing seriously. There is some luck involved, but a lot of it is hard work, professionalism and the willingness to keep developing your craft.

Tell us about your next book or work in progress.

I’m writing a full length play about an intriguing historical figure. It started out as a ten minute play, but she wasn’t happy with having such a short time to tell her story! I’m working out how I can use theatrical techniques to play around with the idea of truth in the story of someone’s life. I’m hoping by interval I can convince the audience of one thing, then show them after interval that this can’t possibly be true!


The Gazini Players are proud to present
For your Edification and Enjoyment
Tales of great Joy, and of great Woe

Ten years ago, Mina’s beloved older brother disappeared with a troupe of Travelling Players, and was never heard from again.

On the eve of Mina’s own departure with a troupe, her father tells her she has a special gift for Storytelling, a gift he silenced years before because he was afraid of her ability to call visions into being with her stories.

Mina soon discovers that the Travelling Players draw their powers from a mysterious place called Tarya, where dreams are transformed into reality.  While trying to solve the mystery of her brother’s disappearance, she discovers a dark cost to the Players’ onstage antics. Torn between saving her brother or exposing the truth about the Players, could her gifts as a storyteller offer a way to solve Harlequin’s riddle?

Thanks Rachel. Good luck with your debut!

Harlequin's Riddle is available via Odyssey  Books.


HNSA 2017 Conference

The HNSA 2017 Melbourne Conference is being held on 8-10 September 2017 at Swinburne University. Rachel Nightingale is a busy girl! She will be appearing in in Session Three on Saturday 9 September at 11.15am-12.15pm.

How to Transmute Research into Compelling Historical Fiction
A passion for research doesn’t always translate into creating compelling fiction. Gillian Polack discusses the challenges of converting historical facts into page turning novels with Wendy J Dunn, Barbara Gaskell Denvil, Stephanie Smee and Rachel Nightingale.

She is also acting as our narrator in our First Pages Pitch Contest on Saturday 9 September and will be conducting a super session on Recreating Historical Costumes on Sunday 10 September.

What is it like to wear a Tudor outfit or dance in a Renaissance dress? How heavy is an ancient Chinese hanfu and how much fabric goes into its creation? These questions and more will be answered by Rachel Nightingale in this workshop, where you will have a chance to get up close and personal with a range of outfits made by historical re-enactors based on research and portraits. You will have the chance to look at a number of costuming books that deconstruct historical costumes, and perhaps even to try on a historical outfit. 

Rachel is also appearing in our Meet the Author satellite event on 18 June at the Mail Exchange Hotel, 688 Bourke St, Melbourne from 2.30-4.30pm discussing Ancient and Medieval Fiction with Lindy Cameron, Barbara Gaskell Denvil, Linda Weste and Paul Hansen. More information and tickets are available from the HNSA website. 

The conference is a celebration of the historical fiction genre which will showcase over 60 speakers discussing inspiration, writing craft, research, publishing pathways and personal histories in our weekend programme. Among the many acclaimed historical novelists participating are Kerry Greenwood, Kate Forsyth, Deborah Challinor, Libby Hathorn, Lucy Treloar, Sophie Masson, Sulari Gentill, Robert Gott and Arnold Zable. The HNSA’s speakers’ list is available on the HNSA website.

In addition to the two stream weekend programme, there will be ten craft based super sessions and two research masterclasses. You won’t want to miss our interactive sessions on armour and historical costumes either! Manuscript assessments will be conducted by industry experts, Alison Arnold and Irina Dunn. Our free extended academic programme is open for general admission but bookings are essential.

Our First Pages Pitch Contest offers an opportunity for submissions to be read aloud to a panel of publishers. And we are delighted to announce the introduction of our inaugural HNSA Short Story Contest with a $500 prize!






Let’s make a noise about historical fiction!