History and Writing: A Match Made in Heaven!

I have had an eclectic collection of jobs over the years. I cleaned gym equipment at a YMCA, I handed out flyers at South Station on Boston, I even ran my own consulting firm for small museums. Though varied, I always have a had a great passion for history. I have a Bachelors in general history, and a Masters in Heritage Studies. Heritage Studies? what is that? well I think it is best described as ethnohistory, or not quite anthropology but more field work than history. I studied culture and how cultures help shape history. I loved learning about how the things we put meaning to shape our histories. I learned field work, oral history interviews, and research. I focused on how technology changes our culture, and have found great joy in finding connections between our past and how it changed our future. I taught for years as I mentioned last time, I always felt a sense of accomplishment when students would make the connections and see how all of history connects together.

Now that I have switched to writing, I find my life as a historian peeks through in many different ways. Like this week I am working on typing up my next novel, and needed to add a lullaby to the story. I found myself relying on my old skills and research and found that the oldest lullaby is from Babylon and titled 'Little Baby in the Dark House." I try to never get rid of old research and use it to inspire me in my work writing novels. I sit looking at my notebooks, binders and books as I type I can look up and see which book I may need to look into, be it to remind myself how long a train ride between Boston and Providence was in 1890 or some old research on the diaspora of Punk Rock.

Melding history and writing has been a great adventure. I love learning and mixing the things I have learned over my many years studying. The biggest part though I love is giving voices to the people I have studied. For years I would read about culture and always visualized things as if I was observing a friend in the situation. With writing these stories can come to life and others can experience a time and culture of the past and see connections to our own present. My first novel takes place in Nantucket, I was able to take research, my own trips to the island and combine it with my research into how women of the age were expected to live. I wanted to give a voice to the women who stepped outside the box and hope that others will find themselves in the story that they too can break free!

Want to hear more on culture and writing? I am doing a session at this years Rocky Mountain Fiction Writers Conference in September. For more information check out:RMFW 2025 Colorado Gold Conference