***I have a number of writing
deadlines coming up over the next couple of months so I have decided
instead of stepping away from my blog completely to concentrate solely
on my writing, I will bring back an encore performance of my WRITERLY
WISDOM series from three years ago. WW is 52 glorious posts by authors,
agents, and editors from around the country providing writerly wisdom in
categories from why even become a writer all the way to how to publish
and market your books.
There
will be two posts loaded per week...Mondays & Wednesdays...so be
sure to stop by and check out all the encouraging information given by
my lovely writerly friends! I hope you enjoy the encore presentation of
my WRITERLY WISDOM series and I will return with shiny, new posts in the
fall!***
How to Start Your Non-Fiction Research
By Deborah Amadei
Are you a writer doing
historical research for the first time? How should you start? Let’s say your
topic is George Washington. You can get a general idea by reading an
encyclopedia article but only as a jumping off point.
In this hypothetical
case, I want to write something about George Washington’s contributions towards
United States government.
My
first step would be to visit my local library and check out books on George
Washington and the era in which he lived.
Here’s a couple of books
I would check out: Washington: the Indispensable Man by James Thomas Flexner
because I know he is well regarded as an historian. Another title I would
choose is: George Washington, the Writer, a Treasury of Letters, Diaries and
Public Documents, compiled by Carolyn Yoder.
But I would need to use primary sources:
documents written by him and his contemporaries. It could be newspaper articles
and government documents. The writer needs to search primary sources for
details that help the reader connect with the subject.
One source I recommend
is the American Memory Collection from the Library of Congress http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/browse/
This
link will take you to a page where you can select Presidents only and then to
the collection for George Washington’s papers. Diaries give the reader a window
into their subject’s thoughts and George Washington was a dedicated diarist.
I went to this link: http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/gwhtml/gwhome.html
I chose to browse the
collection and typed this phrase in the dialogue box: “exercised with Mrs.
Washington in the post chaise.”
I selected this item and
bookmarked it in Google chrome: http://memory.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/P?mgw:1:./temp/~ammem_qGzu::
What’s
interesting about this? I learned how George Washington exercised.
He and Martha rode in a
post chaise, which according to Bing dictionary is: “A horse-drawn carriage: a closed horse-drawn carriage with four
wheels that was used in the 18th and 19th centuries as a fast means of
transporting mail and passengers.”
Other forms of exercise for him were
horseback riding and walking around the Battery (At the time, his official
residence was in New York City.
And
if I wanted to get a photocopy of a printed edition of a diary I could. The
Diaries of George Washington (in six volumes) are available at some public
libraries.
Deborah Amadei's
research experience comes from her 25 years as a librarian. She
writers picture books (both fiction and non fiction) and is currently
working on a middle grade novel. Visit her at www.deborahamadei.com
This is such valuable information! Thank you so much for sharing!
ReplyDeleteThis is such valuable information! Thank you so much for sharing!
ReplyDeleteGood to know! Non-fiction kid lit is is a great genre for kids and for authors looking for readers
ReplyDelete