More historical fiction prize winners – the Langum Prize and the Costa Awards

It’s the season for literary prize announcements.  The shortlist for the 2016 Langum Prize for American Historical Fiction was posted last month, while the winner and finalist were announced this week.

Michele Moore’s debut novel The Cigar Factory (Univ. of South Carolina Press, 2016) is the winner of the 2016 Langum Prize.

Per the organizer’s comments: “This marvelous debut traces the lives of two working class families in Charleston during the years 1917-1946. The families are similar in many ways: devout and practicing Roman Catholics, headed by matriarchs who work in the local cigar factory, both struggling mightily for survival in severely limited circumstances. Yet they are dissimilar in ways crucial for Charleston in these years: one family is black and the other white… The author describes the difficult lives of these two families, both joys and sorrows, with great sensitivity and beauty.”

See also the book’s Facebook page for more details. Of interest to book groups: the author is available for discussions via Skype and can be contacted via the novel’s website.

More details are posted at the Langum Trust.

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Also, the Costa Award, a long-running British literary prize open to UK and Irish authors, announced their 2016 Book of the Year on January 31st. The winner happens to be a historical novel: Sebastian Barry’s Days Without End (published in the US by Viking in January).

Days Without End tells the story of young Irishman Thomas McNulty, who crosses the Atlantic in the 1850s, fights in the Civil War, and has an intimate relationship with a fellow soldier.

For background, read The Guardian‘s interview with the author, in which he reveals how his son “instructed [him] in the magic of gay life.”

Another historical novel on the Costa category winner list was Francis Spufford’s Golden Hill, set in 1740s New York (First Novel Award). Golden Hill will be published in the US by Scribner this June.

Mary Miley’s Renting Silence, a mystery of old Hollywood and vaudeville

Miley’s third Roaring ’20s mystery delivers more zippy entertainment that taps into the spirit of the time when Hollywood’s silent film stars had audiences swooning and vaudeville acts traversed the country via rail.

Fresh from her previous investigation, Jessie Beckett, assistant script girl at Pickford-Fairbanks Studios, gets asked to solve another Hollywood murder. It seems an open-and-shut case: in her dying moments, Lila Walker had pointed twice to her friend, actress Ruby Glynn, who was found clutching a bloody knife.

However, Ruby insists on her innocence. A studio cameraman who sat on the jury that condemned her to death regrets his vote. Observing his tormented conscience, Mary Pickford asks Jessie to look further into Ruby’s situation, because the police won’t. Jessie can’t refuse her longtime idol, so she gathers her street-smarts and ingenuity and delves into Lila’s background.

What she uncovers sends her back to her old haunts, on the vaudeville circuit across the Midwest, where she meets a variety of talented performers, shadows from her own family’s past, and hateful prejudice in the form of the KKK. Jessie also worries that her lover, David Carr, has returned to his old bootlegging habits.

Renting Silence makes good use of historical characters, from Miss Pickford and her debonair husband to the young Leslie Hope, a former amateur boxer turned song-and-dance man who debates changing his name to something more American-sounding, like Bill or Bob. Jessie’s travels bring to life the fascinating, vanished world of vaudeville, and it’s a lot of fun, but the investigation driving Jessie is quite serious and dangerous.

The title refers to blackmail; as one person tells Jessie, “But you don’t buy silence. You only rent it. And the rent kept going up.” The novel makes plain how much people stand to lose if they don’t fit society’s norms.

Renting Silence was published in December by Severn House in the US and UK. This review first appeared in February’s Historical Novels Review.

I really enjoy this series and previously reviewed books 1 and 2, The Impersonator and Silent Murders, which explain more of Jessie’s background.

Downtonesque, but with a difference: Kate Williams’ The Storms of War

During the long, golden summer of 1914, members of a wealthy British family spend their days at leisure on their expansive Hampshire estate. While the eldest daughter, beautiful Emmeline, dreams of her wedding to Sir Hugh Bradshaw, her mother, Verena, directs the servants in planning their annual summer party, to which the village children will be invited. Son Michael, home from Cambridge, has brought his American friend Jonathan to stay for a short visit. The youngest, fifteen-year-old Celia – her father’s favorite – spends time with her beloved horse and with Tom, the family’s groom, a secret friendship her friends and parents would find inappropriate.

Before long, as readers know, war will be declared, the social order will crumble, and life at Stoneythorpe Hall will be forever changed.

So far, so familiar. The basic scenario has played out in numerous historical novels and at least one iconic TV show. However, this outline omits a few important facts that helps Kate Williams’ The Storms of War carve out an original niche in this well-worn turf. The de Witt family patriarch is a tradesman, and he was born in Germany. The middle-aged Sir Hugh, who takes snobbery to rude extremes, looks past his fiancée’s background because he needs her family’s money, which comes from canned meat production.

Furthermore, the de Witts had purchased Stoneythorpe from an elderly aristocratic lady five years earlier, and their new neighbors resent them. To be more specific, the townspeople hate them, a situation that becomes cruelly obvious after war breaks out and anything (and anyone) German is shunned. Despite their loyalty to England, their connections to Germany affects each of them in ways that are sometimes predictable, sometimes the opposite.

The Storms of War, first in a proposed trilogy about the de Witt family, spans the five years of WWI and narrows its focus to the viewpoints of Celia and Michael, mostly the former. We know from the prologue that Michael will find himself at the Somme, forced to lead his men “over the top” despite shell-shock and crippling anxiety. What he endures overseas is as harrowing as expected but isn’t without elements of surprise.

Even more penetrating, though, are Celia’s experiences driving ambulances in France (and yes, she’s underage, so how she achieves this is a story in itself). Basing Celia’s wartime service on primary source accounts, Williams makes readers feel Celia’s utter terror as she drives the unfamiliar vehicle in the pitch dark, exhausted, with wounded soldiers wailing at every bump in the road. How she accomplishes Celia’s transformation from naïve adolescent unable to conceive of a servant-free life to disillusioned, war-weary veteran over the course of 500 pages is masterful and convincing.

As several characters relate on occasion, the British royals are also of German origin, but comparisons to their country’s highest-ranking citizens don’t benefit the de Witts in the least. While these reminders provide additional context for the times the characters are living through, the royal genealogy gets a bit garbled (the Kaiser was Queen Victoria’s grandson, not her nephew). It also feels odd for the de Witt children to refer to their parents by their first names at times. Although their perspectives aren’t shown firsthand, the novel shows how Rudolf, Verena, and Emmeline are changed by the war as well.

This is a hefty, epic read, but the confident storytelling makes it easy to get carried into the de Witts’ world. For those who enjoy it and want more, the sequel, The Edge of the Fall, is already out.

In the UK, The Storms of War is published by Orion.  In the US, the publisher is Pegasus, and HarperCollins published it in the UK.

Amazon Pays Kindle Direct Self-publishing Authors

Self-publishing

Amazon’s revamping of payment to authors now reflects a platform structured on payment based upon the number of pages read.

The changes affect authors enrolled in the Direct Publishing platform. This self-publishing site has been widely popular for indie authors. The straightforward platform allows authors to edit their book, set the list prices, and delegate the rights to their work that is available through Kindle Unlimited and Kindle Owners’ Lending Library programs.

At present, Amazon operates with a payment method where payouts are based on a fund, which is set by the company every month.

Under the new Amazon payment plan, indie authors receive a share of the fund in proportion to the pages read by their customers for the first time.

A statement from Amazon through the KDP page delineates the new approach:

Beginning July 1, 2015, we switched from paying Kindle Unlimited (KU) and Kindle Owners’ Lending Library (KOLL) royalties based on qualified borrows, to paying based on the number of pages read. We made this switch in response to great feedback we received from authors who asked us to better align payout with the length of books and how much customers read. Under the new payment method, you’ll be paid for each page individual customers read of your book, the first time they read it.

Under the new payment method, the amount an author earns will be determined by their share of total pages read instead of their share of total qualified borrows.

Curated from Amazon Kindle Direct Publishing: Get help with self-publishing your book to Amazon’s Kindle Store

 

Amazon Prices

Reuters reported the finalization of the victory by publisher Hachette Book Group over Amazon in its battle for the ability to set its own prices for e-books. However, even as Hachette and Amazon announced a negotiated peace, author James Patterson asserted, “Books and publishing need to be preserved if not protected in this country.” As a best-selling Hachette novelist, Mr. Patterson said that the recent deal helps protect the industry.

The increasingly contentious conflict played out in many forums, casting Amazon as a publication bully and prompting many authors to call for investigation of the company on antitrust grounds.

The battle concluded with the companies reaching an agreement for e-book and print book sales. Though Amazon may have settled for less than the deal than it originally wanted, it still controls nearly half the book trade.

Amazon’s “Pay-per-page” serves as a helpful response to author feedback, stimulated by authors who requested the change. With the launch of Kindle Unlimited, Amazon KDP login tracks how authors are reimbursed for a full “borrow” when the reader perused more than 10% of the “loaned” book. Authors who wrote lengthier novels were being undercut while shorter books received the most benefit and collected a charge each time a reader broke the 10% mark in a book. While technology changes and grows, affecting the publishing world will be a plethora of changes to come.

The art of writing is timeless, and the fuel of the to publish is as strong as ever in the wake of Amazon’s restructuring.