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Historia Magazine

The magazine of the Historical Writers Association

  • Features
  • Interviews
  • Reviews
    • Books
    • TV, Film and Theatre
    • One From The Vaults
  • New books
  • Columns
    • Doctor Darwin’s Writing Tips
    • Watching History
    • Desert Island Books
  • Advertising
  • About
  • Contact
  • Historia in your inbox

Why should I not Tell? Why must I Show?

1 October 2022 By Emma Darwin

Dear Dr Darwin, People in my writing forum keeping telling me “Show, don’t Tell,” but I don’t understand what they mean. How can I not Tell, if I’m telling a story? And while I think I get what Showing means, I get desperately bored putting in all the details – so I’m sure a reader […]

How much should I explain? And how?

3 February 2020 By Emma Darwin

Dear Dr Darwin, As a reader of historical fiction I want to be in a place which may resonate in my world, but is not my world. That’s not only about politics and clothes, and how the people think and feel and believe, but in how they talk and write, and what they talk and […]

My writer’s circle friend keeps getting his facts wrong

15 November 2019 By Emma Darwin

Our resident agony aunt, Dr Darwin, answers a common question: how can we make sure our historical details are accurate – and believable? Dear Dr Darwin, Someone in my writers’ circle keeps getting facts wrong: things like calling a 17th-century character Tiffany, and giving her mother a vote in elections. He makes both of them keen […]

I want to write a parallel narrative novel, but I don’t know how

31 July 2019 By Emma Darwin

Historia’s resident agony aunt, Dr Darwin, answers another question about the craft (and art) of writing. This time: how to write a parallel narrative novel which grabs – and keeps – your reader. Dear Dr Darwin, I have fantastic idea for a novel which is made of two almost entirely separate historical narrative threads plaited […]

How do I convey necessary information without it being clunkingly obvious?

28 April 2019 By Emma Darwin

Woman writing: Pamela

Author Emma Darwin explains how you make sure historical fiction readers get necessary information without it being clunkingly obvious

Finding your historical voice

16 December 2018 By Emma Darwin

Jan Ekels the Younger: A Man Writing at his Desk

Our resident agony aunt, Dr Darwin, answers a common question: How can I find a voice for my historical fiction? Dear Dr Darwin, Writing courses boast they’ll help you to “find your voice”, and “the voice” is the thing that publishers and therefore agents say they are looking for almost above all. But what does […]

What counts as historical fiction?

29 September 2018 By Emma Darwin

Painting by Vermeer of a woman writing

Our resident agony aunt, Dr Darwin, answers a common question: what counts as historical fiction? Dear Dr Darwin, I told my grandmother that I was writing a historical novel set in the Liverpool of the early Beatles, and she laughed so hard she nearly fell off her motorbike. I told my brother the Beatles weren’t […]

How do you research historical fiction?

23 July 2018 By Emma Darwin

Our resident agony aunt, Dr Darwin, answers a common question – how do you research historical fiction? Dear Dr Darwin, Everyone says “research till your eyes bleed” – you did in your post about cultural appropriation – but when I Google, all I can find is the information I know already, repeated in a million […]

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New books by HWA members

The Twelve Days of Christmas by Susan Stokes-Chapman

25 September 2025

Ravenglass by Carolyn Kirby

25 September 2025

Naples 1944 by Keith Lowe

25 September 2025

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Editor’s picks

The magic and science of 18th-century Wales

7 April 2025

The St Giles rookery – poverty, geography and expedience

23 January 2025

The liberation of Naples in 1943 – and its dire consequences

28 September 2024

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The Historical Writers’ Association

Historia Magazine is published by the Historical Writers’ Association. We are authors, publishers and agents of historical writing, both fiction and non-fiction. For information about membership and profiles of our member authors, please visit our website.

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ISSN 2515-2254

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