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A life of its own

Catch You Later, TraitorHave I lived a life of his­tor­i­cal fiction?

My dic­tio­nary of lit­er­ary terms defines the his­tor­i­cal nov­el as “A nov­el in which the action takes place dur­ing a spe­cif­ic his­tor­i­cal peri­od well before the time of writ­ing (often one or two gen­er­a­tions before and in which some attempt is made to depict accu­rate­ly the cus­toms and men­tal­i­ty of the period).”

As for gen­er­a­tion (switch­ing the dic­tio­nary) “The aver­age time it takes for chil­dren to grow up, become adults, and have chil­dren of their own, gen­er­al­ly con­sid­ered to be about thir­ty years, and used as a rough mea­sure of his­tor­i­cal time.”

Well then, my newest nov­el, Catch you Lat­er, Trai­tor, is set in 1951, which is to say some six­ty-four years ago. That would seem to qual­i­fy it as a work of his­tor­i­cal fic­tion. See above. Except, it is based on things I per­son­al­ly expe­ri­enced, when I was about thir­teen years old.

Is my life his­tor­i­cal fiction?

Not so sim­ple. What hap­pens in the novel—a mys­tery, a spy sto­ry, a fam­i­ly saga, maybe even a love sto­ry, a polit­i­cal dra­ma, a sports book—did not hap­pen. It is fic­tion. That said many parts of it are based on things I do remem­ber. They are fac­tu­al, sort of.

For exam­ple: One of the key char­ac­ters in the book is a blind man, for whom Pete (my hero) works, going to his apart­ment and read­ing him the news­pa­per. The fact: at about this age I had just such a job. Fact: his name was Mr. Smith. Fic­tion: I decid­ed that name was too pro­sa­ic so I changed it to Mr. Ord­son. Fact: While I found Mr. Smith inter­est­ing, he was not very impor­tant in my life. Fic­tion: In the nov­el, Mr. Ord­son plays a key role in my protagonist’s life. Fact: in life, I had an old­er broth­er and a twin sis­ter. Fic­tion, an ear­ly draft of the nov­el had three sib­lings, an old­er broth­er and a sis­ter, plus Pete, my hero. Find­ing that the sis­ter had no par­tic­u­lar role to play, I took her out. [“That wasn’t nice,” said my real sis­ter.] Nev­er­the­less, all the facts about the New York Giants are true, and my reac­tion to the team I just start­ed to root for is also true.

The most impor­tant point is this: it does not mat­ter what parts of the book are true, or fic­tion. What mat­ters is that the book feels true through­out. Nev­er mind my life. Catch you Lat­er, Trai­tor has a life of its own.

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