Historical
Fiction in 2001:
The Report from America
SARAH L.
NESBEITT
In the publishing world
in America today, the tide seems to have finally turned in favor of the
much-maligned historical novel… or has it? On the one hand,
individual works of historical fiction are frequently mentioned (and
highly praised) in review sources such as the New York Times and
Publishers Weekly. The most recent literary awards in American
fiction have all been won by historical novels: these include Susan
Sontag’s In America (National Book Award, 2000) and Michael
Chabon’s The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay (Pulitzer
Prize, 2001). Bestselling thriller authors such as John Grisham,
David Baldacci, and Michael Crichton have written historical novels in the
past year, to rave reviews, and Oprah’s Book Club has brought numerous
well-deserving historicals, including Lalita Tademy’s Cane River,
to a wide audience.
On the other hand, a
number of historical novelists, both published and unpublished, have had
great difficulty persuading agents and publishers to consider their
manuscripts, for the simple reason that “historical fiction doesn’t sell.”
One needs only to join the HNS electronic discussion group to hear their
complaints.
Clearly, there’s
something complex at work here. To investigate this issue further, during
summer 2001 I sent out surveys to all major U.S. publishers who indicated
in Writer’s Market that they publish historical fiction. Over the
next month, I received some helpful responses. I also spoke to a number of
individual editors, authors, and agents in the hopes that they might be
willing to share thoughts on current trends as well as opinions on what it
takes to get a historical novel published in America today. The
results of these discussions form the bulk of this
article.
To get some initial
background, I took a closer look at the historical novels that were given
starred reviews by Publishers Weekly in 2000 – 48 novels in all,
per HNS’ usual definition. These novels encompass a wide range of
publishers, settings, and time periods. Many are also from first time
authors. Interestingly, nearly all fall into the category of
“literary fiction.” The list also excludes novels appearing from the most
prolific publishers of historical fiction (Forge, St. Martin’s Press, and
Five Star), although positive reviews of these publishers’ novels
frequently appear in PW’s pages.
Literary vs.
Traditional Historicals
Is it historical
fiction as a whole that’s popular today, or is it simply literary
historical fiction? Several authors and agents recounted to me the
troubles that they’ve had in selling their novels, all of which are
historical fiction in its traditional sense. Juliet Waldron turned to
e-publishing for her novel Mozart’s Wife after receiving rejections
that her novel was “too historical” and “too sophisticated” (from romance
publishers) or “too light” (from literary publishers). “There’s just
too much competition in ‘history’ these days for the plain vanilla
old-fashioned, researched, women’s historical to easily find a publisher,”
she relates. Mozart’s Wife went on to take the fiction prize at the
First Independent e-Book Awards last year.
Richard Curtis, of the
literary agency Richard Curtis Associates, Inc., has no positive words to
say about the traditional historical. He writes: “I used to dote on it,
but the public no longer seems to, and the publishing industry has
followed suit. The classical historical fiction that combined brilliant
scholarship with brilliant storytelling (The King Must Die) gave
way in the eighties and nineties to historical romances, which are formula
romances using the barest minimum of research.” Paul Clayton, one of
Curtis’ clients, agrees that publishing historical fiction has gotten more
difficult over time. Despite achieving success with his Calling Crow
trilogy of Native American historicals, published by Berkley in the mid
1990s, he has had no luck thus far in finding a publisher for his fourth
historical, White Seed, which dramatizes the story of the abandoned
English colony at Roanoke. As turnover in the publishing business is quite
high, Clayton and his agent are holding onto this novel until the market
is more favorable.
“In the publishing
field, timing is half the battle,” says India Edghill, whose novel
Queenmaker will appear in hardcover from St. Martin’s Press in
January 2002. Despite being taken on as a client several years back
by a noted literary agent, Edghill found that the market was not yet right
for her novel, a retelling of the King David story from the point of view
of his queen, Michal. However, in 1997, Anita Diamant’s The Red
Tent – a biblical novel of Dinah – was published, to great and
continued acclaim, and this paved the way for eventual publication of
Queenmaker. “There are actually lots of historical novels out
there, but they’re not marketed as such,” states Edghill, who noted that
The Red Tent was classified as “women’s fiction” while her own
novel was called “biblical fiction.”
Historical Romance,
Historical Mystery
While traditional
historicals may seem to be suffering, from these authors’ points of view,
they continue to be popular in the library market – and with readers
themselves. Many subgenres of historical fiction, such as historical
mystery, romance, fantasy, and inspirational novels, have seen tremendous
growth over the past few years. In fact, some authors who have
successfully published novels in one subgenre (usually romance) have later
switched their focus to another subgenre (typically mystery or fantasy).
“There is a sag in the market for straight historical novels, although
there have certainly been exceptions,” says Sharan Newman, author of the
Catherine LeVendeur series of medieval mysteries. “Historical
mysteries and fantasy with an historical base seem to be doing well, and
there seems to be a trend to books that have a plot secret that hinges on
something in the past.”
Carola Dunn and Roberta
Gellis are two other novelists whose most recent efforts have been
historical mysteries. “Though I don’t have numbers to prove it, my
impression is that more writers are producing historical mysteries now
than when I started,” says Dunn, a Regency author who also writes the
Daisy Dalrymple mystery series, set in 1920s England. Since mysteries have
a larger readership than do Regencies, adds Dunn, they tend to pay
better. Gellis, a writer whose historical romances have been widely
praised for both their readability and historical accuracy (a rarity in
the field), found that despite her earlier successes in the genre, she was
not immune to the market. As she writes, “I wrote a new historical romance
in my usual style, and no one would publish it… [They] added that it
wasn’t commercially feasible to publish such a book at this time. I took
the hint and moved on to a different genre – medieval mystery.”
Fortunately, her Magdalene la Bâtarde series of medieval mysteries from
Forge, set in 12th century London, has garnered her many new readers;
Gellis also writes fantasy based upon Greek mythology.
If their experiences
are any indication, the historical mystery is still alive and well in the
United States. Simply looking at the sheer numbers of historical mysteries
being published today easily conveys this impression. The principal
publishers and imprints include Berkley Prime Crime and Signet (both
Penguin Putnam), Bantam (Random House), Kensington, and Avon
(HarperCollins), though smaller presses are also strong in this area.
Robert Rosenwald of Poisoned Pen Press reports that his company publishes
12 original and 24 reprint mysteries in an average year, of which over 1/3
are historical. Authors associated with this press include Edward Marston,
Mary Reed and Eric Mayer, and P. F. Chisholm.
Inspirational
Fiction
Although no
publishers of inspirational historicals responded to my survey, and their
books tend not to be found on the same shelves (or even at the same types
of bookstores) as straight historical fiction, their presence in the
market is certainly noteworthy. This is true not only because of the vast
numbers that are published, but also because they prove the point that
many people enjoy reading historical fiction simply for entertainment
value – in other words, because they enjoy a good story. In inspirational
historicals, which tend to have a Christian emphasis (but are not
exclusively so), God is a central character whose presence and guidance is
felt by the main characters as they go about their daily lives. Biblical
settings are common, as are novels set on the American frontier. Notable
publishers and imprints in this genre include Bethany House, Waterbrook
(Random House), Zondervan (HarperCollins), and Tyndale House (all
Christian), Multnomah (evangelical Christian), and Deseret (Mormon). The
mere fact that many major publishing houses now have an inspirational
imprint is a testament to the subgenre’s
popularity.
Crossing Genres:
Historical Fiction and Fantasy
While the popularity of
historical mysteries won’t come as any surprise to Solander
readers, what may be more unexpected, especially to British members of the
HNS, is the strong overlap in both readership and authorship between
historical fiction and historical fantasy. “After an initial shock, [the
heavy infusion of fantasy] has begun to appeal to me, because fantasy –
not elves or vampires, but the supernatural – expands the range of
possibility,” explains Cecelia Holland, whose most recent novel The
Angel and the Sword contains some fantastical elements. “The
irony,” she continues, “is that many fantasy writers are trying to do more
straight historical fiction.” Tor Books is a prime example of a publisher
that handles both, with their dual imprints Tor (sci-fi and fantasy) and
Forge (straight historical fiction, westerns, and mysteries). And indeed
many authors from Tor and Forge cross over to publish in both
genres.
Denise Little,
formerly an editor with Kensington’s historical romance line and now
executive editor at Tekno Books, saw evidence for the overlap between
historical fiction and fantasy firsthand in her years as a bookstore
manager. She comments, “Certainly not every reader of historical fantasy reads historical
fiction, and vice-versa, but I’d say, from my own experiences as a reader
and bookseller, that about half of the audience for historical fantasy
reads historical fiction. Now, the history readers and the historical
fiction readers are a bit more insular – I’d say that the crossover market
is about 20% of those groups.”
Author
Rosemary Edghill, who has written Regency romances and mysteries in
addition to historical fantasy, concurs: “I think a reader whose interest
is historical novels would simply be irritated by the fantasy
elements. I’ve occasionally gotten mail from readers to the effect
that they were enjoying the nice historical novel or mystery I’d written
until I went and messed it up by putting in all that stupid unbelievable
magic.” Her alternate history fantasies, published by Forge, were
originally sold to an editor with a background in fantasy, not history,
which caused some interesting problems. “[My editor] kept trying to
change the accurate ‘real’ history, saying it was too unbelievable, but
never questioned the ‘history’ I’d set up for my alternate universe. So
chalk this up to Truth really being stranger than
Fiction.”
The Publishers
Respond
Now, getting down to
the bottom line: what exactly are publishers looking for in historical
fiction? The results may be surprising. Although there is a general
impression among readers that certain time periods or settings are more
popular than others, no editor I spoke with mentioned a preference for any
particular era or place. “We look for quality and authenticity,”
says Anita Miller of Academy Chicago Publishers, who has published
historical novels such as Hella Haasse’s In a Dark Wood Wandering
(Charles VII’s France) and Vincent Panella’s Cutter’s Island
(Julius Caesar). “We like historical mystery if it’s well done, but
[overall] we publish books that are well-written and well-researched…books
that have narrative flow and hold the reader’s attention.”
These sentiments are
echoed by an editor at Thorndike Press/Five Star, a publisher of
historical romance, mysteries, westerns, and women’s fiction primarily for
the library market. While Thorndike indicated that it does not want to
receive submissions other than the subgenres listed above, no preference
was given for setting. Similarly, Poisoned Pen Press, which by its name
one can infer only publishes mystery fiction, looks for a “strong and
original voice, with period flavor and strong research.”
Despite these claims,
it’s clear from looking at the U.S. section of the Historical Novels
Review over the past year that novels with pre-1800 settings are few
and far between, particularly from the major publishers. Seeing this, I
asked Fred Ramey, a founding editor of BlueHen (a new Penguin Putnam
imprint), about his decision to publish two works of historical fiction,
one of which is set in the Middle Ages. “Although two of our first four
titles could be described as historical novels, it’s not their historicity
that first attracted me to them,” explains Ramey. In the case of Susann
Cokal’s Mirabilis, a novel of a midwife in 13th century France,
Ramey was intrigued by the author’s protagonist, a character from a
distant time who still speaks a modern truth. Masha Hamilton’s
Staircase of a Thousand Steps, set in 1967 Transjordan, succeeds as
a novel “because its emotions [and characters] are real and specific to a
moment in history at a particularly volatile place,” Ramey continues.
Rather than having a preference for specific settings, he concludes that
“more than history alone, we are looking for characters who can move us as
they take us to times and places we cannot visit so well without
them.”
Ann Close, a senior
editor at Alfred A. Knopf, notes that although the First and Second World
War seem to be popular settings these days, she doesn’t feel that any time
periods or places are necessarily more marketable than others. Noting that
Knopf publishes literary historical fiction, Close reports that she’s not
looking for certain time periods so much as characters and themes. Two
novels which she edited, Stephen Harrigan’s The Gates of the Alamo
and James D. Houston’s Snow Mountain Passage, both take well-known
historical events and show them from a new angle. Gates of the
Alamo “incorporated new research on the Alamo to show Santa Ana’s
viewpoint for a change, and gave us wonderful fictional portrayals of the
Mexican people,” detailed Close, while Houston’s book, a retelling of the
Donner Party story, “showed us a good hero, someone very confident but
with an Achilles heel – which created some great scenes.” Disagreeing with
the idea that the historical novel is dead, Close has seen more than a few
modern writers turn to history to find their subjects. “Historical myths
need reinterpretation every so often, and maybe this is the period we’re
in now,” she explains.
Advice for
Authors
According to author
Cecelia Holland, historical fiction is much harder to write than many
other genres, since it’s difficult to find the balance between not enough
research and too much. It doesn’t help, she adds, that the research aspect
of historical fiction can repress an author’s need for spontaneity and
narrative flow. In the end, Holland advises new writers to persevere until
they find an editor who is interested in their manuscript: “If an editor
loves your work, s/he will find a way to publish it; the way to get them
to love your work is to quarry down deep in yourself to find that vein of
understanding unique to you, and express it. That’s the hardest part of
writing, though – none of us wants to go down there where the monsters
are.”
Other, more practical
advice should go without saying: most publishers prefer to be approached
only through agents, and those that indicate otherwise mention that
potential authors should follow their writers’ guidelines to the letter.
Speaking as someone who has sent unsolicited material to the editorial
departments of major publishers, I can testify to the fact that publishers
do mean this; my mailings (containing a survey and sample issue of
Solander) received two rejection slips, in fact! The annual
Writer’s Market and Guide to Literary Agents, which serve as
near-comprehensive guides to publishers and agents, respectively, will
provide suggestions on how authors should approach them. The consensus
based on my survey results indicated that most publishers are interested
in seeing a cover letter, synopsis, and the first three chapters in an
initial query. However, the specifics can vary from publisher to
publisher, so it’s best to check.
Overall, the majority
of publishers and editors I spoke with were optimistic about the future of
historical fiction in American publishing. “It’s growing – the Big
Historical, especially,” predicts Robert Rosenwald of Poisoned Pen Press,
and similar comments were echoed by representatives from Knopf and
Thorndike/Five Star.
Despite the bumps
that some authors have found along the way to success, surely this is good
news for us all.
This article appeared in
Solander: The Magazine of the Historical Novel Society, Fall 2001.
_______________________________________________
Sarah L.
Nesbeitt is Coordinating
Editor (USA) for the Historical Novels Review and Historical
Fiction Editor for NoveList, an electronic readers’ advisory database used
by public libraries in the U.S. In her other life she is an academic
librarian, though without the stereotypical bun, glasses, or sensible
shoes. She would like to extend a heartfelt thanks to the persons named
within this article who responded, frequently at great length, to her
questions on the status and future of historical
fiction.
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