This section contains 4,905 words (approx. 17 pages at 300 words per page) |
SOURCE: “Novel History,” in New York Review of Books, June 27, 1991, pp. 12, 14–16.
In the following review of Dead Certainties, Wood provides an overview of Schama's career and offers a positive commentary on his scholarly abilities.
It was bound to happen. Sooner or later a distinguished historian had to cross over, had to mingle the writing of fiction with the writing of history. The circumstances were ripe, the pressures were enormous. Everyone else was doing it. Novelists had long been blending fact with fiction without apology. They not only set their invented characters among real historical figures, but they had these authentic historical figures do and say things they had never done. When E. L. Doctorow was asked whether Emma Goldman and Evelyn Nesbit had ever actually met as they did in his novel Ragtime, he replied. “They have now,” Journalists and TV writers have been doing it, creating hybrids...
This section contains 4,905 words (approx. 17 pages at 300 words per page) |