In the month of February, TeachingAuthors are giving a nod
to Valentines Day with posts about something we love about writing.
April Halprin Wayland wrote about how her
“writerly peeps” keep her going with their support.
Bobbi Miller wrote about the humanity of
villains and the critical role they play in fiction.
JoAnn Early Macken wrote about creative
thoughts that circle around in an authors mind and find their way onto the
page.
I exclusively write nonfiction books, so what I love about
writing is the research. I love finding
details about my topic in countless places.
Recently I explained it like this:
I’m looking for a single needle in each haystack,
and there are thousands
of haystacks to look through.
I love the
challenge of figuring out how to weave random facts into a book form and
knowing that it is original and unique.
One example of a research moment that will live on in my
memory happened about a week ago. I just
returned from a long research trip to Mount Vernon, George Washington’s
historic home. I’m working on an
upcoming book titled BURIED LIVES (Holiday House) about Washington’s
slaves. At the amazing Fred W. Smith Library
for the Study of George Washington, at Mount Vernon, I was allowed to see rare
collections that are not digitized. I
needed to see material relating to what happened to the slaves after the deaths
of George and Martha Washington.
I saw many incredible documents during my research, but the
one that meant the most to me was the actual handwritten document that listed
where the enslaved people who belonged to Martha’s estate went after her
death. I’ve already done a lot of
research into the lives of individuals.
So when I saw this document, it brought tears to my eyes. Among many other names, I saw the names of
Caroline (Martha’s housemaid) and her children, as well as Christopher Sheels
(George’s valet). Both Caroline and
Christopher were in the room as George Washington lay dying. After Martha’s death, they were given as
inherited property to Martha’s grandson George Washington Parke Custis-who
built Arlington House (now part of Arlington National Cemetery). Beside
their names on that list was their monetary value.
For every nonfiction book I write, I must emotionally bond
with the people I write about. And I
have surely bonded with Caroline and Christopher and Billy Lee and Frank Lee,
and Lucy, and Oney and Hercules and many, many others. No longer are their names just an interesting
fact to me. Now I know their families,
and what sort of work they did, and who was eventually freed and who was never
free.
Now that they are real to me, I want them to come
to life through the pages of my book.
To make that happen,
I’ve got to search through a lot of
haystacks.
|
I was snuggled in at Mount Vernon through BLIZZARD 2016! |
Carla Killough McClafferty
7 comments:
I always enjoy learning about what goes on in an author's mind. Thanks for sharing.
Thanks, Eileen. Often times the backstory of a book is just as interesting as the book itself.
Best,
Carla
Carla, I love research, too, even for fiction. Thanks for this peek into your process.
Oh, thanks for sharing these photos and the experience, Carla.
How cool to see you "on the job."
I too love research. I spent 3 years researching a novel. It was as much as fun as the writing.
Loved the story and the pictures. Sounds like an extremely interesting book. I look forward to it.
Thanks, Carmela, Esther and Kay. I do love the research-which sometimes makes it hard to STOP researching! As with any topic, you could study something without end.
Thanks for inspiring me to do more primary research.
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