So Bad it was Good!
SO BAD IT WAS GOOD! Researching for an historical novel can be frustrating. People edit their diaries. Historians and biographers settle on an approach and omit other interesting areas of their subject’s life. They are also territorial, unwilling to share their insights and impressions with a mere novelist. After all, novelists apply their imaginations to what they are writing, while historians and biographers are like the detective Joe Friday in Dragnet; “They just want the facts, Ma’am.” Not long ago I got hold of a transcribed interview from some fifty years ago that was unhelpful and disappointing in some ways, but informative and hilarious in others. A researcher was interviewing a married couple who were part of a progressive, political, arty circle in the 1930s and ‘40s. The researcher was particularly interested in the wife’s career, but the husband joined in halfway through, because he’d been part of the same scene as she had. She was in her ...