WARS OF THE FICTIONAL ROSES
There’s a plethora of fiction set at the time of the Wars of the Roses, and an increasing number of authors writing about Richard III, often featuring him in a positive light. One would imagine that, in the creative pursuits, people could put aside their differences in belief and just pass on the book if it does not appeal to their own tastes. After all, it is fiction, and tastes in fiction vary greatly.
Apparently, this is not the case.
Gone, it seems, are the days when historical authors gathered around their keyboards and politely discussed critiques with fellow writers, offering constructive criticism even though they couldn’t personally abide a man in a white wig or had an aversion to cowboys or Vikings.
It sometimes seems that the Wars of the Roses are being fought again on paper…and in the reviews on platforms like Amazon and Goodreads. Certain groups have bombarded pro-Ricardian authors ( in particular) , with what are essentially trolling reviews, a general problem on these sites which has recently hit the headlines and been condemned by such authors as Anne Rice. (I have not seen any similarly vitriolic reviews about Henry Tudor novels, although in fairness I imagine there might be some, somewhere.)
Basically these ‘reviewers’ write virtual essays on why the author was wrong in characterisation, motivation and history, using as much sarcasm and condescension as they can muster—a personal attack, not a true critique at all. Wait minute, guys. This is fiction and it is up to the author on how the history is interpreted. It is not a text book, nor is it meant to be. To be perfectly frank, the author could write that Richard III came from Planet Zog to save the world from a Steampunk Tudor if he/she so chose.
Worse, is when some of these reviewers are known ‘wannabes’ themselves, giving their actions a certain taint of jealousy. It is rather despicable to undermine a writer and try to ruin their reputation (and potential income) just because you don’t approve of the historical figure they write about. I have even heard that several authors have ceased to write in this genre because of the persistent attacks from this ‘band,’ a small but vocal group of individuals. The perpetrators even had a facebook page which was ostensibly about historical fiction but descended into Richard-slagging off and jeering at other authors.
At the end of the day, we are all entitled to write about who we want, in the way we want, and our works should stand on the merit of the writing, not our positions on people who lived half a millennium ago. (If you have ingrained negative opinions on RIII, you know you won’t enjoy the book—so move on!) What are these false ‘reviewers’ so afraid of anyway? If Ricardian authors are writing nothing but romanticised guff, as some of them would have it, surely the discerning reader would soon realise that fact and it would be no threat to any of the ‘learned ones.’
Perhaps they are afraid that within the medium of literature, one can sometimes pass on a few grains of a truth they just cannot accept?
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