Showing posts with label Gore Vidal. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gore Vidal. Show all posts

Thursday, January 8, 2015

"Actually…." Confessions of Ronald J. Granieri, a Historian Who Loves Stories




SUSAN ELIA MACNEAL: Recently, there was a kerfuffle about PBS's Downton Abbey's level of historicity — when a quite present-day water bottle turned up in a publicity still. The cast and crew seems to have taken the resulting outcry in stride, even posing in present-day clothing, all holding water bottles, with an "ooh, you got me!" expression on their faces.

Yes, these goofs happen. It takes a proverbial village to make a television series like Downton Abbey — or write a book, and I'm so very blessed to know historian Ronald J. Granieri, who graciously reads my manuscripts and act as historical editor, mentor, and advisor. (No, I'm not an historian, nor do I play one on TV....) He tells me he even enjoys doing it! 


Professor Granieri's specialty is Germany in the 20th century and German-American relations, with a special interest in World War II and the Cold War, so his area of expertise is right on target for the Maggie Hope books. I'm lucky in that Professor Granieri is so very, very accomplished ("Wicked smaaaart" as we would say back in Boston) — his credentials include degrees from Harvard and University of Chicago, as well as studies in Heidelberg and Cologne in Germany. In addition to his work at the University of Pennsylvania, he has taught at Susquehanna, Furman, Syracuse, and Temple Universities, and is also currently Executive Director of the Center for the Study of America and the West at the Foreign Policy Research Institute, where he hosts the monthly interview show, Geopolitics with Granieri.

And, full disclosure, I'm also very lucky that I can call him friend — we know each other from high school in Buffalo, New York (Go Bills!) and he was at Harvard when I went to Wellesley (so I can call him Ronnie Joe and he can call me Susie). 

A typical day of writing for me includes shooting Ron a Facebook message — something with little to no preamble and along the lines of, "Hey, I know this sounds crazy but..." Various questions have included everything from questions about what house an Irish-American student would live in at Harvard, to Churchill's attitudes towards India compared to his peers, to what would the name of an Austrian butler be.

And he tells me gets a kick out of my profuse thanks at the end of the Maggie Hope books, because his mother and sisters read and enjoy them — and are finally giving his interest in history some respect!

So I'm delighted to introduce Ron, historian extraordinaire — who also happens to love pop culture — on history, factual accuracy, and storytelling. Go Ron!


Jennifer Vance
RONALD J. GRANIERI: We have a running joke in my house: Never go to the movies with a historian. Or watch TV, or discuss books.

It’s an exaggeration, of course, but it does have basis in fact, especially of the historian in question is in some way an expert on the subject of the book or TV show or movie. You may be enjoying yourself, thinking that this or that character or event is fascinating, but then you will look over, catch the eye of the historian next to you, and you will see him (or her, though more likely him) wearing an expression of mixed irritation and superiority. 

Engage the historian in conversation, and you will be in for an eye roll, a sigh, and a comment that will begin with the dreaded word, “Actually.”

“Actually… Helen of Troy was probably not a blonde.”

“Actually…  dinosaurs and humans didn’t live on earth at the same time.”

“Actually…  no one living in Downton Abbey in the 1920s would say, ‘I’m just sayin’…”

It's not always that bad, of course, but I’ve been guilty of it enough in various contexts that every so often I hear my seven-year-old son start his objections to this or that assertion by cocking his head in a disturbingly familiar way and saying, “Actually….”

There are variations on and extrapolations of the Historian’s Law of Movies, such as the Natural Scientist Corollary (“Actually…. there would be no sound from explosions in outer space…”) which leads to the Plot Hole Noticer Codicil (“Actually… if the Millennium Falcon had no functioning hyper drive, it would be pretty much impossible for them to travel all the way to the Bespin system within their lifetimes…”) to the Amazon Commenter Paragraph (“Actually… this book is terrible! The author seems to have no idea of the proper use of the formal mode of address in Urdu, and doesn’t realize that German officers in 1942 carried Walther P38 pistols!”) 

All can be found in the fine print of the Charter For Those Who Probably Need to Calm the Hell Down and Just Enjoy A Nice Story For a Freaking Moment, God. If you feel any need to look them up, that is.

All joking aside, I really do consider the question of factual accuracy in fictional works, especially historical fiction, to be important. I’m a fan of works that get the background right, even if they are not focused on providing a history lesson. Two of the books that led me to be fascinated with Cold War Europe were by a journalist who used his knowledge of the recent past to build fascinating fictions, Frederick Forsyth’s early classics, The Day of the Jackal and The Odessa File. My understanding of American history has been shaped by artful historical novels such as Gore Vidal’s Burr and Michael Shaara’s classic novel of Gettysburg, The Killer Angels, just as my appreciation for he complexities of Allied planning for D-Day was enriched by reading Ken Follett’s The Eye of the Needle. (Follett’s depiction of Winston Churchill pacing his Downing Street office and murmuring to himself a first draft of his description of the scene for his memoirs is an ideal example of an authorial caprice that is funnier the more you know about the actual historical subject.) 

More recently, my appreciation of Tudor England owes a lot to Hilary Mantel, who shows us just how exciting a story can be even if we know how things turn out for the main characters. 
The real question for me, is not whether historical fiction can be both fun and informative (it can), but rather how much readers, especially those with special expertise in the field or era covered in the work, should allow their rage for accuracy to influence their appreciation of the art. A large part of the appeal of historical fiction, after all, is the mixture of authentic period detail with the imaginative elements. An ideal historical fiction should have something to offer both the expert and the novice, accuracy managed and massaged in such a way to highlight the human background to famous periods or events. A serious and successful author seeks to get as many details right as necessary. 

That’s one reason why I am happy to offer what advice I can when my smart famous novelist friend Susan Elia MacNeal asks me to comment on the historical and linguistic details in her Maggie Hope novels. No one wants to make careless errors, or open themselves up to endless concern-trolling corrections from “fans” on the Internet. 

Nevertheless, no reader should expect that a piece of historical fiction can or should provide a completely accurate image of the past. Even if it were possible to offer a perfectly accurate presentation of the historical context, the very idea that one is introducing fictional people and events into the landscape means that there will be some shifting in the reality. The amount of shifting depends upon the ambitions of the creator and the nature of the work. One finds rather more authentic historical research, for example, in Hilary Mantel’s Wolf Hall or Gore Vidal’s Lincoln than in Shakespeare in Love or Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter, even if all of those works offer both pleasure and enlightenment to their enthusiasts. 


This is about more than the difference between highbrow works and popular entertainment, or between fiction and non-fiction. Fiction and non-fiction differ from each other, says this firm believer in objective reality. Even the most scholarly work by the most fair-minded historian imaginable, however, is the product of authorial choice and the unavoidably subjective forces that drive the selection of topics and sources. There is a huge gap between the past (everything that happened) and history (an analysis of a particular slice of the past based on a particular selection of materials that allow the historian to present that particular slice). 

There is a similar chasm between history constructed from the
analysis of primary source 

materials and memory, which 

relies on the subjective 

recollection of individuals. They 

are all related, and can enrich 

each other, but all are different and should not be 

criticized for not being what they are not intended 

to be. If one seeks a complete and accurate 

understanding of any historical period, she should 

not be seeking one balanced book, but should 

instead try to build a well-balanced library.

All of which brings us back to the annoying notional historian we encountered at the start of this essay. It’s certainly true that one can find anachronisms, errors, or even conscious deception in fictional works. It’s also true that too many such blemishes will eventually undermine the pleasure an intelligent reader will derive from the story. Authors who want to enrich their stories or gain additional cachet by placing them in a juicy historical context have a responsibility to try and do justice to that context, even if their ultimate goal is to subvert a familiar narrative. 

Readers, however, also have a responsibility to know what they are reading, and to be smart enough to take the occasional departure from textbook accuracy in stride, especially if it serves the purposes of the narrative. A foolish consistently, after all, is actually the hobgoblin of little minds. 

You can look it up.


SUSAN ELIA MACNEAL: Thank you, Ron, for your insights. Gentle Reds, what do you think? (Rhys, as a fellow historical mystery author, I'd love to hear your thoughts especially.) 

Lovely readers, what's your opinion? Do you need your historical mysteries to be textbook accurate or do you "take the story  in stride"? Please sound off in the comments!


Ronald J. Granieri is a historian and policy analyst in the Philadelphia Area, but is actually a lot of fun at the movies.