Historical
fiction continues to be popular with children and teachers alike. It is a
convenient way to bring history to life through narrative. Giving the children
a real sense of what it was like to be alive then as it is a chance to
experience it while walking in someone else’s shoes, as Rowe suggests
‘[f]iction …allows the reader to actually experience the world from another
person’s point of view.’ (2018).
Unlike history where the risk is it
will so often be written from the perspective of the victorious or the most
powerful and educated as they are the ones creating the documents/resources
used. Historical fiction can be told from the viewpoint of those whose voices were
often silenced. The women, the children, the poor, the enslaved, the invaded
and those who would now be considered to be part of the LGBTQ+ community. Fiction
is a chance to investigate themes and ideas that might be ignored or glossed
over in other circumstances. To take a different perspective. It is an
opportunity to examine difficult subjects such as genocide, persecution,
discrimination, displacement, death, poverty and reasons for war. In my own
novels, Flight (2018) and Safe (2022), I explore the hidden
stories of children’s experiences during the Second World War linked with
persecution and displacement. Experiences which can easily be used to reflect
on situations in the contemporary world.
Gaiman
(2016:175), Ali Smith (Higgins, 2018) and Peter Bowker (2014) have all said at various
points that if you want to find the truth look at fiction. Ally Sherrick’s
recent novel Vita (2023) also plays brilliantly with the idea of
truth. It explores the issue of whose truth to believe. As does Candy Gourlay’s
Bone Talk (2018), which tells the story of a young Bontok boy and
the impact the American’s have when they ‘bring war’ and colonization to the
Philippines in the late 19th/Early 20th Century. Both highlight
how every story has different perspectives and that there is no single truth.
Bibliography
Peter Bowker (2014) A Writer’s Journey From There to Here, BBC4 18 May 2014 21.30
Empathy Lab https://www.empathylab.uk/
Neil Gaiman (2016) The View from the Cheap Seats, (London,
Headline Publishing Group)
Candy Gourlay (2018) Bone Talk (London, David Fickling)
Vanessa Harbour (2018) Flight (Cardiff, Firefly)
Vanessa Harbour (2022) Safe (Cardiff, Firefly)
Charlotte Higgins (2018) ‘Fiction not lies is a way of telling the truth
– Ali Smith in Edinburgh’, ‘Culture’ The Guardian, 21 August
2018
Dora Byrd Rowe (2018) ‘The “Novel” Approach: Using Fiction To Increase
Empathy’, Virginia Libraries, Vol 63 No1 www.ejournals.lib.vt/edu/valib/article/view/1474/2159 Accessed March
2019
Ally
Sherrick (2022) Vita (Frome, Chicken House)
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