Basement and underground station deep actually! Did you know that under The Strand Arcade was the Ambassador’s Cafe? It was opened in late 1923 and the cafe was in the newspapers off and on throughout 1924 because of the illegal sale of liquor. You can imagine me jumping for joy when I discovered this. In point of fact this last week I’ve been seriously thinking of changing the opening chapter to January 1924 instead of October. Maybe even have my main character Sarah visiting the cafe on that fateful night in February. Just a thought…
At the moment I’ve written only four and half pages. This is the first novel that I have actually started without doing at least several months research beforehand, which is why I’m in a bit of a pickle. Very early on I was planning a garden party to be hosted at Sarah’s house in October with her controlling mother in her element and Sarah dodging as many eligible and boring bachelors as she can. But I’m guessing that not many garden parties in the twenties would have been hosted in the middle of summer. If I go ahead with the change in timeframe to accommodate all those lovely police raids I will have to forfeit the garden party.
I am now stuck wondering what social event the mother could organise in January – if any at all! You see this is just one of the many challenges historical writers face when they are recreating the past as accurately as they can. Challenges surface, more research is needed and then you stumble on an interesting fact that can trigger a scene, an event, even a very important location in the storyline.
I stumbled on the Scottish Women’s Hospitals in 2010 and what those women achieved during WWI ended up being a major theme in The Grey Silk Purse. In Paris Next Week, my new manuscript, my theme is the lost generation of the twenties – the frenetic surface glitter of their lives which I believe was a actually a psychological recreation to the great losses of WWI. How I can depict that aspect of history and still create an enjoyable novel is the task I’ve set myself, as well of course as getting to know Sydney in 1924.
It’s early days yet but I already know that Hyde Park was a mess from construction of St James Station so I can’t have Sarah and her beau conducting a romantic walk there. The very famous Australian restauranteur Azzalin Orlando Romano worked at the Ambassador’s cafe before opening his own restaurant. There was a police raid on Maxine’s – a dance hall in 1924 (another scene in Paris Next Week very possibly) and according to Jack Lindsay there was at least one coffee shop called Mockbells but more details are proving elusive. Something called The Blues was the new dance craze and there was a Hungarian cafe in Castlereagh Street. Heady stuff! This is where I long for the Tardis to just nip back to 1924. Oh to scout around and be a fly on the wall! I can only hope to do Sydney in 1924 justice.
Stay tuned.
It’s going to be an interesting journey – there’s so much just in the photo you’ve shown here – fascinating
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It’s from wikimedia commons. Unfortunately not 1924 (1927) but a good indication of the times I’m researching.
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I’m reading Mrs Dalloway at the moment- set in 1923?
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Yes, I believe it is. It’s a wonderful novel. Quiet but interesting. I should revisit it.
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Lots of excitement very evident in this post, Debbie. I completely understand it. I have just had a beakthrough in my current work that’s set in 1960-61. Keep at it and keep enjoying!
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You too! Just wondered if you had sent Ben to an agent for YA fiction.
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No I haven’t. I wouldn’t know where, and agents are as difficult to get as publishers. I don’t think they would be interested in this kind of fiction – not bloodthirsty or vampirish or fantasy enough for today’s publishers.
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I disagree! Have you been through the Australian Writers Marketplace for the agents who are looking for YA fiction? I think it would be at least worth your while to look at some webpages.
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What a find! I didn’t know about the cafe under the Strand. Exciting when research turns up these gems.
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I know. I can’t wait to see if the steps down are still there. I’m guessing though that nothing is underneath anymore. Will report back, lol.
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It must be enthralling, finding out such interesting facts. Enjoy the journey. 🙂
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That’s what I love about writing historical fiction and what I discover – the little known, interesting facts fuel my writing!
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It make the book so real, doesn’t it?
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It certainly does! I think time and place are so important.
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