This is an adaptation of a talk I gave at the Birmingham Midlands Institute,in April 2015,
for the Royal Literary Fund's programme of talks open to the public. I was one of three writers - the others were Jane Bingham and Mike Harris.
I have heard other writers talk of hours in the archives, or interviewing experts — not for me. Mostly I make it up.
Take my Sterkarms books —
These are sci-fi/fantasy/historicals… Part of them is set in the 21st Century, most of them in the early 16th, on the Scots Borders.
I did research them, but not in the 'hours in the library' sense.
More in the ‘getting sodden and cold on Scottish hillsides’ sense.
But does this count as
research? I would have read these books anyway, from general interest. The fact
that I used them, later, as reference was just – lucky.
When I have what I feel is a good idea for a book, I’m usually too impatient to begin writing to waste time researching. After all, I write fiction. I make it up. When I wrote the 16th Century sections of the Sterkarm books I relied on what I remembered from the books I'd read on the rievers, what I knew from general reading about the period, and a lot of educated guessing.
My approach has always been, 'If I was on the Borders in 1520 and had only the materials available that they had, and I wanted to do X, Y, Z — how would I solve that problem? And, I figure, if I could think of that solution, they did too.
For
instance, one of my characters, a bit of
a witch, makes a painkiller by mixing wolfsbane with fat — not baby’s
fat, just
dripping. How would she store this lethal stuff? (Wolfsbane, AKA
monkshood or aconite, is extremely poisonous in its every part - root,
leaf, stem and flower. It's said that even the scent of its flowers in a
room can make people ill.) My witch doesn’t have any
Tupperware, she lives in the middle of nowhere, and I imagine even the
crudest
pots are an expense she'd find it hard to meet.
In thinking about what she’d have available, I thought of mouse-nibbled hazel-nuts. I said she scraped her ointment into the hollow nuts and sealed them with wax.
Prove me wrong. Prove that no woman anywhere, anywhen, ever did that. You can't, can yer?
Making up my own answers, like this, means I can leave research until later while I go on sorting out my plot. In my experience, a new finding from research rarely ruins your plot — at most, it will need a few tweaks.
But endless, perfectionist research will prevent you from ever writing your book.
In any case, a lot of what I want to know can’t be found in books or archives.
What is it like to use a longbow? — Again, I owned a longbow long before I came to describe its use, because I'd always wanted to use a longbow.
What is it like to ride a horse? — I took a week-long riding course in Northumbria, where I learned how to fall off a horse.
What is like to sleep in one of those little cupboard beds, with a hay-filled mattress supported on ropes? — I sneaked into one in an Orkney museum when no one was around and found out.
You can't really find out about any of these things by researching in a library. You can read what others have written about them, but it won't give you the experience of drawing back the weight of a longbow, the personality of a horse, the smell of old grass and wood in the wall-bed.
I've also found that some of the most interesting, useful details are discovered when I'm not researching at all.
For instance, I wondered how my rievers would make fires - especially when they were travelling on raids. How did they light fires at home in the pele tower? I knew they wouldn't have had matches, but doubted that they spent much time rubbing sticks together. I researched in the usual way and the answer, of course, was tinderboxes.
When I used to read Andersen's 'Tinderbox' as
a child, I had a vague idea that it was something like a modern lighter,
that
somehow made a flame by itself. In reality, it was a box where you kept
all
your fire-making equipment together in one place. It 'kept your tinder
dry' and you always knew where to find the things you needed.
There was the firesteel. In the picture below, this is at the bottom. It is shaped to fit round the hand, to make it easier to use.
There was the flint - seen in the top right-hand corner. It might not actually be a flint, but a piece of any hard stone, which would create a spark when struck on the steel.
And then there was the tinder, which you kept dry in the box. This might be pieces of charred cloth, very dry plant material, or 'punk' which was the dry, powdery rotted wood from the centre of a dead tree.
You struck sparks from the steel with the flint, and let them fall on the tinder in the box — and when a spark started to smoulder, you blew on it until you had a flame. You lit one of your spills in the flame and transferred the flame to a candle, or to the kindling for your fire…
Most of the information I could find was of 18th or 19th century tinderboxes, but they were certainly used earlier — because here's Joseph striking a light for the Holy Family…
In this detail (below), you can see that St. Joe has the fingers of his right hand through the steel, and is holding the flint in his left. His tinder box is under the flint, ready to catch the flame. He has spills scattered around, ready to light at the flame when it catches. And under his left hand is an open lantern, holding a somewhat bent candle. He will light the candle from the lit spill.
People used to have small tinder-boxes they could carry with them. So that's what I found out by what you might call 'formal research.' And I'm glad to know it. You never know when information on tinderboxes will come in useful. Which is why I'm keeping it all in my Research File.
However, it never seemed quite right to me for the rievers. I knew that people carried fire with them — I'd heard of fire being carried out to field, or about castles in 'fire-pots.' I know from family gossip that, more recently, one neighbour would help another out by carrying a shovel-full of hot coals from one house to another.
Carrying a fire-pot of hot coals on horseback seemed unlikely, though. Especially if, like the reivers, you never knew when you were going to have to gallop for your life.
Then, I read No Country For Old Men, by Cormac McCarthy. This had nothing to do with any research. I read the book purely because I wanted to.
In the book, the elderly narrator has a dream where he's riding at dusk, and sees his dead father ride past him on horseback and ride on ahead of him into the darkness. The narrator says, ‘and he was carrying fire.’
The phrase
about carrying fire seemed to carry a lot of weight, but I didn't
understand it, or its significance. I puzzled about it quite a lot. Was I
to imagine the father carrying a crown of fire on his head, like
something out of William Blake, or a flaming torch, or what?
Then, on-line, I came across a forum where people were discussing the book and the Coen Brothers film of it. A lot of other people seemed puzzled by 'and he was carrying fire,' too.
The survivalist went on to explain how carrying fire was done. You took a hollow cow’s
horn, and made a lid for it, from metal or leather, or horn. The lid had to
be pierced, to let in the air. The horn also had a strap, so it
could be carried at a belt or saddle.
You then put smouldering embers into the horn, added some punk or other tinder, to keep them smouldering, and insulated them with ash, or dried moss or punk.
The amount of air getting into the horn was crucial. Too much and the embers burst into flame, which is obviously a problem if it’s hung on your belt. Too little air and the embers died. But if you got it right, you had the immediate makings of a fire when you reached your camp place — without having to struggle with other methods when it might be cold, windy or damp. (Which, in Scotland…)
Other survivalists, who’d tried this, added that you should put a slab of wood, or thick leather, between you and the horn as you carried it, because it got very hot.
Now No Country For Old Men is set in Texas, and there are lots of connections between the Border reivers and the American South — many reivers were transported there for their crimes. Which is why some of the most complete Scots ballads and folk-tales were collected in the Carolinas, and not in Scotland.
The reivers of Lowland Scotland and Northern England were herding cattle on horseback for roughly 200 years before Columbus. Many of the Wild West’s cowboys were, in fact, Scots and Geordies. So, I figured, if they carried fire like this in Texas in the early 20th Century, they also did it in the Borders in the 16th. Why wouldn’t they? — They had the cows, and the horns, and the need to carry fire.
Prove that not one of them ever did. You can't, can yer.
I suppose that my point, in all this, is that although research in libraries is enormously important, researching fiction encompasses everything you’re interested in, and anything you observe, all the time. It is sounds, tastes, smells – it’s which muscles and joints take the most pressure during the task you’re describing. It's the feeling of a fire's heat on your skin, and the scent of roses in a warm garden.
It's bringing together things that intuition tells you are true, even if you can't prove it - rather like inventing a story.
For a writer, your sensual memory and imagination are the most important libraries of all.
All images: Wikimedia Commons.
Penny Dolan is away
The Royal Literary Fund |
I have heard other writers talk of hours in the archives, or interviewing experts — not for me. Mostly I make it up.
Take my Sterkarms books —
These are sci-fi/fantasy/historicals… Part of them is set in the 21st Century, most of them in the early 16th, on the Scots Borders.
I did research them, but not in the 'hours in the library' sense.
More in the ‘getting sodden and cold on Scottish hillsides’ sense.
I
first had the idea for the books while on a walking holiday along Hadrian's
Wall, where I kept hearing mention of the Rievers. I then read MacdonaldFraser's Steel Bonnets and Godfrey Watson's Border Rievers, both of which are excellent sources of information about the rievers.
When I have what I feel is a good idea for a book, I’m usually too impatient to begin writing to waste time researching. After all, I write fiction. I make it up. When I wrote the 16th Century sections of the Sterkarm books I relied on what I remembered from the books I'd read on the rievers, what I knew from general reading about the period, and a lot of educated guessing.
My approach has always been, 'If I was on the Borders in 1520 and had only the materials available that they had, and I wanted to do X, Y, Z — how would I solve that problem? And, I figure, if I could think of that solution, they did too.
Wolfsbane: beautiful and lethal |
In thinking about what she’d have available, I thought of mouse-nibbled hazel-nuts. I said she scraped her ointment into the hollow nuts and sealed them with wax.
Prove me wrong. Prove that no woman anywhere, anywhen, ever did that. You can't, can yer?
Making up my own answers, like this, means I can leave research until later while I go on sorting out my plot. In my experience, a new finding from research rarely ruins your plot — at most, it will need a few tweaks.
But endless, perfectionist research will prevent you from ever writing your book.
In any case, a lot of what I want to know can’t be found in books or archives.
What is it like to use a longbow? — Again, I owned a longbow long before I came to describe its use, because I'd always wanted to use a longbow.
What is it like to ride a horse? — I took a week-long riding course in Northumbria, where I learned how to fall off a horse.
What is like to sleep in one of those little cupboard beds, with a hay-filled mattress supported on ropes? — I sneaked into one in an Orkney museum when no one was around and found out.
You can't really find out about any of these things by researching in a library. You can read what others have written about them, but it won't give you the experience of drawing back the weight of a longbow, the personality of a horse, the smell of old grass and wood in the wall-bed.
I've also found that some of the most interesting, useful details are discovered when I'm not researching at all.
For instance, I wondered how my rievers would make fires - especially when they were travelling on raids. How did they light fires at home in the pele tower? I knew they wouldn't have had matches, but doubted that they spent much time rubbing sticks together. I researched in the usual way and the answer, of course, was tinderboxes.
English tinderboxes, 18th-19th century (Wikimedia commons) |
There was the firesteel. In the picture below, this is at the bottom. It is shaped to fit round the hand, to make it easier to use.
There was the flint - seen in the top right-hand corner. It might not actually be a flint, but a piece of any hard stone, which would create a spark when struck on the steel.
And then there was the tinder, which you kept dry in the box. This might be pieces of charred cloth, very dry plant material, or 'punk' which was the dry, powdery rotted wood from the centre of a dead tree.
You struck sparks from the steel with the flint, and let them fall on the tinder in the box — and when a spark started to smoulder, you blew on it until you had a flame. You lit one of your spills in the flame and transferred the flame to a candle, or to the kindling for your fire…
Most of the information I could find was of 18th or 19th century tinderboxes, but they were certainly used earlier — because here's Joseph striking a light for the Holy Family…
In this detail (below), you can see that St. Joe has the fingers of his right hand through the steel, and is holding the flint in his left. His tinder box is under the flint, ready to catch the flame. He has spills scattered around, ready to light at the flame when it catches. And under his left hand is an open lantern, holding a somewhat bent candle. He will light the candle from the lit spill.
People used to have small tinder-boxes they could carry with them. So that's what I found out by what you might call 'formal research.' And I'm glad to know it. You never know when information on tinderboxes will come in useful. Which is why I'm keeping it all in my Research File.
However, it never seemed quite right to me for the rievers. I knew that people carried fire with them — I'd heard of fire being carried out to field, or about castles in 'fire-pots.' I know from family gossip that, more recently, one neighbour would help another out by carrying a shovel-full of hot coals from one house to another.
Carrying a fire-pot of hot coals on horseback seemed unlikely, though. Especially if, like the reivers, you never knew when you were going to have to gallop for your life.
Then, I read No Country For Old Men, by Cormac McCarthy. This had nothing to do with any research. I read the book purely because I wanted to.
In the book, the elderly narrator has a dream where he's riding at dusk, and sees his dead father ride past him on horseback and ride on ahead of him into the darkness. The narrator says, ‘and he was carrying fire.’
'carrying fire' |
Then, on-line, I came across a forum where people were discussing the book and the Coen Brothers film of it. A lot of other people seemed puzzled by 'and he was carrying fire,' too.
Another poster explained it. He introduced himself (I assume it
was 'him') as a survivalist, who had researched the old ways of life,
before the arrival of electricity and the internet. The significance of 'and he was carrying fire' is
that the narrator, an elderly man, dreams of his dead father riding on
ahead of him into the dark. The father is carrying glowing
embers in a cow-horn at his belt, so that he can make camp somewhere up
ahead
and wait for the narrator to join him. This is what used to be done 'on
the trail' - one man would go ahead, with fire, make camp and have a
fire burning ready for when the others joined him.
So the phrase is a rather beautiful dream metaphor for the
elderly narrator facing death. His father, he feels, will be waiting for
him, somewhere up ahead in the dark, sitting beside a campfire.
You then put smouldering embers into the horn, added some punk or other tinder, to keep them smouldering, and insulated them with ash, or dried moss or punk.
The amount of air getting into the horn was crucial. Too much and the embers burst into flame, which is obviously a problem if it’s hung on your belt. Too little air and the embers died. But if you got it right, you had the immediate makings of a fire when you reached your camp place — without having to struggle with other methods when it might be cold, windy or damp. (Which, in Scotland…)
Other survivalists, who’d tried this, added that you should put a slab of wood, or thick leather, between you and the horn as you carried it, because it got very hot.
Now No Country For Old Men is set in Texas, and there are lots of connections between the Border reivers and the American South — many reivers were transported there for their crimes. Which is why some of the most complete Scots ballads and folk-tales were collected in the Carolinas, and not in Scotland.
The reivers of Lowland Scotland and Northern England were herding cattle on horseback for roughly 200 years before Columbus. Many of the Wild West’s cowboys were, in fact, Scots and Geordies. So, I figured, if they carried fire like this in Texas in the early 20th Century, they also did it in the Borders in the 16th. Why wouldn’t they? — They had the cows, and the horns, and the need to carry fire.
Prove that not one of them ever did. You can't, can yer.
I suppose that my point, in all this, is that although research in libraries is enormously important, researching fiction encompasses everything you’re interested in, and anything you observe, all the time. It is sounds, tastes, smells – it’s which muscles and joints take the most pressure during the task you’re describing. It's the feeling of a fire's heat on your skin, and the scent of roses in a warm garden.
It's bringing together things that intuition tells you are true, even if you can't prove it - rather like inventing a story.
For a writer, your sensual memory and imagination are the most important libraries of all.
All images: Wikimedia Commons.
Penny Dolan is away
Fascinating! And that cow's horn - there used to be one like that at home. It didn't have a lid, though. Nobody seemed to know where it had come from or what it was for.
ReplyDeleteWonderful, Susan. An inspirational post Your imaginative leaps and connections, making human sense of the past, is a really exciting way to work and brings the writer far closer to her characters than more conventional research. Although not everyone is gifted with your imagination or has your immense and omnivorous general knowledge, this is how we ought to work,...
ReplyDeleteLoved this glimpse into the logic of your research, and that workings of almost instant fire.
ReplyDeleteTempted to say - in a cheery cockney voice - "Cor, strike a light!" but then I'd need to check when that expression was first used.
That's exactly how I research. I do have a vast research library and research in detail in primary and academic secondary source. But I also re-enact with an early medieval society and use replica artefacts to find out how things work in practice. I use the psychic to get at the past too and that resource has been marvelous and more spot on than some secondary source reference works - and it's another aspect where proof is a very grey area - especially for those who don't see in colour. :-)
ReplyDeleteThank you all for your kind comments.
ReplyDeleteElizabeth, I think it's how most writers of historical fiction research, but many are afraid to admit it because they can't give an academic reference.
I think, so long as you're clear that you're writing fiction - and since my Sterkarm books have a great big time machine at the centre of them, so I think that's pretty clear - it's fine. You're not saying that such-and-such is provenly true, only that it might be possible.
I'm interested in your psychic research, though I don't claim any gift that way myself. But I remember when I was reading about Past Life research, with hypnotism. In one experiment a man experienced life on a man of war: he was a gunner. He told the researchers that he had 'to keep swinging the rope.' Further questioning brought out that he fired the gun by applying a smouldering rope's end to the gunpowder, and between firings, he swung the rope round and round to keep the smouldering end alight.
Researchers at the Naval Museum were struck by this. They'd always wondered how the smouldering rope was kept alight. - This doesn't prove that it was done like that, of course - but it's an interesting possibility.
Just what I needed! I'd heard of tinder boxes, of course, but had never seen a firesteel before ... and now it's slipped into the 1860 story I'm working on at present. Many thanks!
ReplyDeleteI agree - research can only take you so far. In fiction we need to get close to our characters, and I love your account of working it out as you go along. I did the same thing in 'I am the Great Horse' when I wanted a believable reason for Alexander to turn back to help his men rather than pursue the fleeing Persian King Darius. Later, I found a detailed account of the battle that confirmed my 'fiction'... his best friend took a wound.
ReplyDeleteI think when you get deep enough into your character's head, that's a powerfully accurate place to be, and your books always seem so real - which suggests you get it right!
Great post - thanks, Sue!
ReplyDeleteMy principle is to try and find out, but if I can't, then I feel free to posit the most feasible scenario. I so agree about the physicality of research! I am always getting up to reproduce physical activities I describe. Sometimes my husband gets roped in, or my tai chi teacher, if it's fighting. I really loved this blog. It's fascinating to realise how our ancestors did things- and what hard work it was..,
ReplyDeleteWonderful Sue, and yes very affirming and validating for utter un historian. Of course we do our best but I would not now how to do notes. What's lovely is problem solving. Thank you x
ReplyDeleteWith respect, in this particular case, that is NOT what Joseph is doing. In his left hand he holds a piece of flint & tinder material. In his right hand he holds the fire steel. He is striking the flint with the steel so he can catch a spark on the tinder held with the flint.
ReplyDeleteIf he was to use the tinderbox to make fire, he would need to revers the objects in his hands. He would have to strike the steel with the flint so that the sparks down downward into the tinderbox. He has "spunks", sulphur tipped matches which produce instant fire from smouldering tinder.
Regards, Keith.
http://woodsrunnersdiary.blogspot.com.au/search?q=flint+%26+steel+fire+lighting