Call Jean Fullerton!

jean1 web pictureBorn into a large East End family, Jean was brought up in the overcrowded streets clustered around the Tower of London. Her Victorian stories shining with authenticity have delighted both readers and critics. Jean’s fifth book, Call Nurse Millie, set in 1940s London, draws on her own experience as a district nurse in East London. But things have changed a tad since the 1940s…

Over to Jean!

Ten things that have changed since Nurse Millie Sullivan’s day
Now the reason I’m so into history is because I love to discover little details and marvel at the difference between the life I live and times past. Usually these are quite marked changes such as in clothing or innovative technology but for me some of the most interesting aspects of change are the little things that almost go unnoticed.

My new book Call Nurse Millie isn’t set that long ago, relatively speaking, just as WW2 ended and it would be easy to highlight any number of things that have changed radically since that time – fashion, communication, transport and medicine – but I’d like to concentrate on some little everyday things that seem to have changed unnoticed.

London SmogSmog
London used to be notorious for it smogs and even gave the capital its nickname of The Smoke. It had been a problem since Victorian times and Londoners were used to dealing with it but the Great Smog of 1952 was a catalyst for politicians and health official to do something.  A combination of weather conditions and an increase in coal consumption caused the densest and one of the longest fogs recorded.  It caused havoc to the capital’s public transport and seeped in to houses and public places causing cinemas and theatres to close. But the most serious effect was on the health of the population. It claimed the lives of over 6000 Londoners and impacted on the health of another 25,000 although modern researchers put the death rate from the 1952 smog nearer 12,000. It ultimately led to the 1956 Clean Air Act which finally consigned the London Smog to history.

Children in Callipers
I can clearly remember school friends whose legs were encased in metal callipers because they had contracted polio. Polio was the scourge of the summer months and struck at random mainly at children between the ages of 4-9. Nearly all would recover speedily and suffer no long term effects from the disease but for the unlucky few it would lead to breathing problems requiring weeks in an early form of ventilator called an iron lung. Others would be left with withered limbs requiring callipers to assist mobility. However, with the development of a vaccine in the early 1950s and the mass inoculations of the late 50s early 60s the sight of children with thin, malformed legs are now a thing of the past.

Babies in pramsBabies left outside shops in prams
The very thought of leaving your child unattended for a nano second let along while you get a week’s worth of shopping sends shivers of anxiety through modern parents. However, it was quite commonplace to see row upon row of prams all with a little occupant sitting up in them outside shops. Arguably, it was more dangerous in those days because many unmarried mothers were coerced to give up with babies so not a week went by without a baby being snatched from its pram by some poor woman suffering from post-natal depression.

Vegetables in season or with insects in them
With the supermarket shelves loaded down with exotic fruit and veg from all four corners of the world we never actually have to wonder what’s in season. But in Millie’s day strawberries, cherries, lettuce and tomatoes were in the shops for a very short period in early summer and then that was the last you saw of them until the following year.  Also today as most fruit and vegetables are grown in almost sterile conditions no one now finds a maggot in their apple or a creepy-crawly in the lettuce.

Women collecting their meat each day from the butchers
Only the wealthiest 10% of households owned refrigerators in post-war Britain so most woman bought their meat on Friday or Saturday from the butcher and collected it on a daily basis. Even by 1960 the number of domestic fridges had only risen to 33% so I have Millie constantly worrying if she will be off work in time to pick up the meat from the butchers.

People who only washed their hair once a week
Odd to think when most of us shower each day and sometimes twice a day that most people in Millie’s world would only have a bath and wash their hair once a week.  Without proper bathrooms and limited facilities for heating quantities of water people contented themselves with a daily strip-wash at the kitchen sink. The war-time hairstyles of tight perms and pinned curls meant that most women visited the hairdresser once a week usually on Saturdays, to get their hair set. This would remain as a fixed hairstyle until the following week when the process was gone through again. If you wanted to wash your hair mid-week it was an all-night process of washing, rolling and drying so when a woman in an old film says they are staying in to wash their hair they weren’t kidding.

Packs of dogs let out for the day
Unlike dog-owners of today who often employ mid-day dog walkers or sitters if they are at work almost everyone who owned a dog in the 1940s got around this problem by just letting their dog out to roam the streets all day. As late as the 1960s it was commonplace to see dogs either singularly or more often gathered together sniffing around and scrapping with each other while their owners were at work.

Women with darned stockings
This might sound bizarre to a generation that doesn’t understand the term ‘darning’ let alone how to do it, that women would repair their stockings. Even after the clothes rationing finished luxuries such as stockings remained in short supply and very expensive. To go out bare-legged was considered to be very brazen so a respectable woman wouldn’t have left the house without wearing a pair of stockings even if that meant they had stitching running up their legs.  I remember as a child my mother darning her nylons to make them last another few days.

1950s knitwearHome-made clothes and knitwear
Making your own clothes today is regarded as a craft hobby but in Millie’s times women made much of what they wore. It was essential to make the clothing coupons and family budget stretch that little bit further. There had been a government campaign encouraging women to make over old clothing with Mrs Sew & Sew and Make do & Mend. Women would also knit their own jumpers and unravel old ones to reuse the wool.

People wearing a black armband
It was something that was always done when a close family member died as a sign of respect. I remember both my mum and dad wearing one when my grandmother and uncle passed away but that was in the early 1960s. The last time I can recall anyone wearing a black arm band was my dad when my mum died in 1973. It is a tradition that seems to have disappeared completely.
I could have added milkmen to the list although I have seen the odd one or two about but I’m pretty sure they will go the way of the Victorian milkmaid leading a cow from door to door before too long.

Call Nurse Millie final cover.It’s little details like the one described above that I like to slip into my novels because to my mind it is the small things, not the great events that highlight the way society has changed.

Fascinating! A true glimpse of the past – thank you so much, Jean.

Call Nurse Millie is available in hardback, paperback and ebook

Visit Jean’s fascinating website brimming with East London history at http://www.jeanfullerton.com/

Take all the free help you can find

help pointMonday mornings I spend a little time catching up on my favourite blogs. Even if I spend an hour of writing time, I always pick up at least three new tips.

Today, from Your Writer Platform I found out about the marvellous editorial calendar for WordPress which I promptly installed. On the Smashwords blog, I learned about a new survey called Money, Money, Money — Facts & Figures for Financial Payoff.  And Joanna Penn gave us her thoughts on what we can learn from Dan Brown’s Inferno.

But how to draw the best from other blogs? I’ve sifted the thousands down to a few ones that give me specific help.
Yes, you have to kiss a lot of frogs before you find the prince/princess of blogs. Some tips on the way:

1. Check recommendations from people you trust, whether it’s from Twitter, Facebook, email ot the back of an ebook.

2. Read the blog for a few days and see if their links to other sites are helpful

3. Recognise your own information-gathering style – quick burst/analytical

4. Read long, informational blogs/book reviews at the end of the day

5.  Bookmark really useful blogs or you will forget what they’re called (guaranteed)

6. Interact, even if it’s only to say thank you

7.  DO NOT GET DISTRACTED

Do you do a blogwatch? Which are the ones you find most useful?

 

Alison Morton is the author of Roma Nova thrillers, INCEPTIO, and PERFIDITAS. Third in series, SUCCESSIO, is now out.

Find out about Roma Nova news, writing tips and info by signing up for my free monthly email newsletter.

What does reading do for you?

reading_grassPeople nowadays have to work more and get less time to think. Thinking and learning is an important aspect of self development, it is also essential for professional success. Reading is a vital basic skill for life. Poor reading skills tend to go hand in hand with social exclusion (Guardian,  2007, Does Reading Matter?).

That’s the application across the board, and reading is thus deemed to be A Good Thing. But what does reading do for you personally?

1. It keeps you sharp. Obvious, but reading promotes thinking as well as enhancing your general knowledge.

2. Reading reduces stress.  It gives you a quiet switch-off time from real life. Fiction especially enables you to escape into somebody else’s world. Sitting  or lying still absorbed in a book is very soothing for both body and mind…

3. As well as improving your written and spoken vocabulary, it trains the brain to remember things better.

4. For writers, not just those who make their living from writing, but for anybody who has to tap out some words in their job, it improves writing skills.

5. Reading gives you something interesting to say and helps make connections with other people.

QED (As the Romans used to say.)

Carol McGrath and The Handfasted Wife

C McGrath 033Today, I’m welcoming a special guest to my blog. Carol McGrath writes historical fiction and has recently achieved her MPhil in Creative Writing from  the Royal Holloway University, London. Hearty congratulations!  A member of the Romantic Novelists’ Association New Writers’ Scheme with me, Carol has graduated to full membership on the publication of her debut novel The Handfasted Wife. I can’t wait to read it!

Welcome, Carol. So tell us, how did you get started ?
As a child I made little books, mostly Famous Five stories which I exchanged with a friend by post during the long summer holidays. They were my favourite adventure stories. Later, I was the teenager who had to stand up and read out extracts from her stories when inspectors visited my girls’ school in Northern Ireland. It was many years later when I was a mother of a young family and teaching part-time that I went on an Oxford Continuing Education weekly course in Creative Writing. I was off.

Even though I was teaching full time I took the Oxford Diploma in creative writing, a two year course that was assessed and covered prose, poetry and playwriting. After that it was the MA at Queen’s University Belfast (QUB), The Seamus Heaney Centre, followed by an MPhil in Creative Writing at The Royal Holloway University of London. There are many routes into writing. Courses are about writing, not being published. They can help you structure and fine tune writing although you must choose them with caution. For me, they provided discipline, confidence and a variety of writing experiences which helped me to develop my voice and edit my work.

What drew you to your genre ?
As a teenager I loved historical novels and often read factual books also. My first serious factual historical book was C.V. Wedgwood’s The Trial of Charles I which my father gave me when I was fourteen. I studied history on my first degree at QUB, specialising in the medieval period. Later, I taught history at high school level, even for a time running a history department. I was always drawn to the fact that women have been marginalised in history. It is interesting and important to unearth their stories. However, in time I may write a contemporary novel, probably a woman’s novel.

What inspired you to write Edith Swan-Neck’s story?
I first encountered this story on a visit to see The Bayeux Tapestry in Bayeux in Normandy when I was chairlady of our French Twinning Society. The video supporting the exhibition suggested that Edith Swan-Neck identified her husband’s body on the battlefield near Hastings by marks only known to her. The vignette of the burning house on the tapestry fascinated me. Later, I found that tapestry historians such as Andrew Bridgeford have suggested that this vignette may depict Elditha fleeing from the ‘house that burned’ with her young son Ulf. A little more research in Oxford’s Bodleian Library and I discovered that Ulf had been taken as a hostage into Normandy after 1066. I was hooked. These three historical facts along with the recorded fact that Harold’s mother Gytha was besieged in Exeter by William in 1068 made me even more curious about these women. How did these three royal women of Hastings survive 1066? What happened next? What might their personalities, their character have been? I wrote the story from Edith Swan-Neck’s point of view and it became her story.

HFW coverWhat are the sources for Edith’s life? And how have you used them?
The sources for Edith Swan-Neck, Elditha’s life, are sparse. Women, even royal women, are marginalised in historical accounts. It is written in The Anglo-Saxon Chronicles that Harold married the sister of the Northern Earls in 1066. This meant he had set aside his common-law, handfasted wife to do so. Elditha as Edith Swan-Neck, appears in The Waltham Chronicle written in the early 12th century which records that she recognised her husband’s body on the battlefield. Frank Barlow’s The Godwins was a valuable source of information as he consolidated extensive research and wrote about Elditha’s children with Harold. Henrietta Leyser’s highly respected book, Medieval Women, was an invaluable secondary source.

I read primary sources extensively, importantly the Carmen de Proelio de Hastingae and William of Poitiers’ biography of King William. Both are 11th century sources written within a decade of the battle. The first refers to Harold’s mother Gytha and the second to his sister Edith, the wife of Edward the Confessor. The Siege of Exeter is recorded in Oderic Vitalis’s writings of the early 12th century. Edith Swan-Neck is generally considered to be Edith the Fair and Edith the Rich mentioned in the Domesday Book as a landowner in 1066. May of her lands became the property of Count Alan of Brittany by 1086.

The Bayeux Tapestry is an invaluable resource so I studied it, embroidery in general and daily life in the eleventh century in depth. Now I own an extensive library of fabulous books concerning this period! However, whilst trying to remain faithful to fact where it exists and to the mores of the times I nonetheless speculated to fill in the spaces history has provided by its absence, the lack of facts. Important to this story’s narrative, it is known that William married heiresses to his knights. These were women dispossessed, widows and daughters who had lost husbands and fathers. He liked to establish the cloak of legitimacy around his land grab. I integrated this into the novel.  I do not claim everything I wrote to be true. I am writing fiction, not biography, and these women lived a very long time ago. Yet, I do speculate with authority.

Are you a planner or plotter?
I’m a planner. Often I get a sense of my historical character by writing snippets using dialogue and first person.  Then I write a little way into the book. I stop after the first few sections, maybe thirty to fifty pages, plan it and I am flexible as I write, too. The plan did change as I wrote this novel but I was really glad to have an idea of events, the narrative order and where it ended. The knowing where a story finishes, is, I believe, very important for its overall structure.

What is the hardest part of the writing process for you?
The most difficult part of writing is distancing oneself enough to see how a reader might see the novel. The drafts that follow the first write can be demanding. ‘Destroy the babies if it helps the narrative!’ True. ‘Make her or him suffer!’ True. A book is a character’s journey and a reader’s adventure.

Which authors have influenced you?
I loved Anna Seton’s Katherine and it is a big influence on my historical fiction. I recently read Sir Walter Scott who is fabulous on developing characters. I love Hilary Mantel and Tracy Chevalier. Recently I discovered Vanora Bennet. I do enjoy her novels.

How do you relax? What interests do you have other than writing?
To relax I spend time with my family, garden and read. I am an obsessive reader and I travel the world too.

Are you into social networking, and in what way do you feel it helps your career?
It is a valuable way to reach out to others and share information with other writers in your genre. It is quid pro quo but very valuable and rewarding.

Can you tell us something of your work in progress?
This is about King Harold’s daughter Gunnhild who features in The Handfasted Wife. She eloped from Wilton Abbey circa 1076 with a Norman knight although some sources take the date as being 1090. I have chosen the earlier date.

And finally, what advice would you give a new writer?
Persevere, enjoy writing, forget about trends, write from the heart and learn from others. Join the RNA New Writers’ Scheme if your work contains an element of romance. Otherwise, look at getting critique from a company that does this well.  Academic courses may have helped me hone my writing but the RNA critiques and another from the commercial world helped me to rework my manuscript into a novel worth reading.

Thank you, Carol, for taking the time to give us a fascinating insight to the enigmatic Edith Swan-Neck.

The Handfasted Wife is available for all e-readers and from Accent Press and Amazon Books as a paperback.

Carol’s links:
Twitter: @carolmcgrath
Blog: Scribbling in the Margins

 

Over at Victoria Lamb's blog today

Victoria Lamb Photo by Anna Rybacka

Victoria Lamb
Photo by Anna Rybacka

Victoria Lamb is a very well-known, if not downright famous, writer of historical fiction. Fellow Romantic Novelist Association member and Latin-lover (no, not that sort!), she’s been one of my staunchest supporters on my writing journey. She even offered me a fantastic endorsement to go in the front of INCEPTIO which I grabbed before she even had time to leave the room!

Tense, fast-paced and deliciously inventive, Alison Morton’s INCEPTIO soon had me turning the pages. Very Dashiell Hammett.
Mmmm!

Today, I’m visiting Victoria’s blog with my thoughts about writing history “alternately”.

Enjoy!