©Kuba Kolinski
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Today’s guest blog is by author Lucy Ribchester who
is a dance and fiction writer based in Edinburgh. Her debut novel The
Hourglass Factory is set around the suffragette movement.
It’s often hard to remember what sets you off on a
particular story. For me it’s usually the setting that comes first, not necessarily
time-period specific but more of a general atmosphere or impression. In the
case of The Hourglass Factory it was music halls and suffragettes that hooked
me in – a hazy image of ballsy, brassy women getting their bloomers out on
trapezes and vandalising the Houses of Parliament. Once I’d established this was
the Edwardian era (Edwardian in historical terms commonly goes up until the
start of World War I) I had to pick a year. 1912, for reasons apparent in the
prologue, was the obvious choice. And once you’ve made the decision to write a
crime novel, that’s when the brain has to kick into action and get you thinking
about who the most important person skulking around this world will be; your fictional
detective.
Detective might be a bit of a misnomer. As Agatha
Christie knew, sometimes the greatest criminal-pinching minds are found in the
most unexpected places (imagine having Miss Marple as your next door neighbour,
you’d never even dare nick a biscuit from the village hall coffee morning). It’s
true that the most common fictional detectives are usually members of the
police or some form of law-keeper (CJ Samson uses a lawyer, SJ Parris a spy), but
sometimes this just isn’t possible. If you want your detective to be a woman
and you’re a historical fiction writer aiming to keep some semblance of reality
to the period, your professional options are somewhat limited. Victorian writer
Andrew Forrester got round this by making his Lady Detective a private
investigator working to select commissions. Ann Granger in her Lizzie Martin
series cleverly uses a woman in a relationship with (and later married to) a
police officer, who shares the brain work in her other half’s investigations.
But when searching for a professional woman with access to - and an interest in
- crime scenes, the obvious choice to me seemed to be a journalist.
Frankie George, Hourglass
Factory protagonist, came kicking and stomping out of my head after I’d
read about male impersonators, latch-key girls and those bastions of the sexist
establishment, the Ladies’ Pages of Edwardian newspapers. I don’t feel, looking
back on it, as if I made many conscious decisions about her character, but I
did need to decide how it was that she would have the resources and the reasons
to investigate a crime. Putting her into the most frustrating position
imaginable for a woman who wants to be taken seriously was the starting point,
thus Frankie writes for the London Evening Gazette’s Ladies Page and is only
given more serious journalistic fodder when a suffragette the men have never
heard of comes to their attention – in other words, she is never allowed to
forget that she is not just a journalist but a female journalist. This gave her
a reason to want to get stuck into something juicier off her own bat, and the
desire to keep at it come what may.
I’d come across the rise of the so-called
“latch-key girls” in a couple of history books, but the best summary of their
effect on society was in Vita Sackville-West’s The Edwardians. “Eadred
Templecombe says England is going to the dogs”, says Lucy, Duchess of
Chevron at one point. “It really looks
like it, when girls like Viola can defy their own mothers and go off to live by
themselves in London.” This showed me that there were young women making
their own way, causing tension amongst traditionalists, and made it possible for
me to create a self-reliant character who would feasibly generate her own
income.
Frankie’s clothing I took liberties with – I never
came across a woman who dressed in male
clothing when not on stage, apart from
suffragette chauffer Vera Holme, who wore a man’s-style uniform. But I liked
her as a style counterpart to orientalist Milly and corset-wearing Ebony so the
trousers stuck.
When it comes to resources, Frankie doesn’t really
have any, except her own tenacity, and here was where research into journalism
came in handy. Elizabeth Banks’s 1902 Autobiography of a Newspaper Girl sees
her running all over London in search of stories, going undercover in laundry
houses and answering adverts for a parlour maid, all with the hope of flogging
her scoops on spec to Fleet Street editors. Life was hard for freelancers of
both genders but possible with a hand-to-mouth and a devil-may-care attitude. It
was this that made me think that even if Frankie’s paper abandoned her – as
happens in the book - she would be able to make her own inroads into a criminal
investigation. In other words, she would be the detective up to the task of
taking down the most dastardly of villains.
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