Friday, October 22, 2010

Burying a Long-dead Corpse

He's a mystery man, a rogue sheriff who took the law in his hands and twisted it into what he wanted it to be.

"Could he be just a legend?" someone asked.

No. Reliable researchers swear there are newspapers on file that tell of his shenanigans. Another expert on local history told me how to get to his family burial site where his stone stands, proclaiming the reality of his existance. Yet, the large wall poster listing sheriffs of the county all the way back to 1815 makes no mention of the elusive man. But Ancestry.com lists a younger man--perhaps a son or, more likely, a grandson--bearing the same name.

The newspaper journalist in me wants to check further into the story or Robert Right Rae Sr., but since time is short, having promised an agent that I'd complete this manuscript in five months, I've had to find another solution. After all, historians have been on his trail for years and discovered what I've shared here.

Several of you gentle readers shared your wisdom, and this is my solution.

History is a precious thing. It has suffered great harm at the hands of revisionists recently. I do not want to do further damage to the truth. Therefore, I have fictionalized the locations and the characters. In that way, I can base my scoundrel of a slave-hunting sheriff "loosely" on the man himself. I've renamed the towns and counties. To protect the guilty? No. To protect history.

4 comments:

  1. Sharon, I think this is a good solution. BTW, my comment on your earlier post did not mean to suggest that you should pass off fictionalized facts as historical ones. But when writing fiction, the story comes first, and facts that don't move it along should be either left out or changed.

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  2. Thank you, Kathryn.

    :-)

    I knew what you meant, BTW.

    Write on!
    Because of Christ,
    Sharon

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  3. Think you handled this well. You can even add something in the beginning about being loosely based on the life of...that is what was done
    in the seventies with the story of Bufford Pusser, the sheriff in TN??who carried the big stick in WALKING TALL.

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  4. Thank you, Linda. It's amazing how freeing it is to have made that decision!

    Write on!

    Because of Christ,
    Sharon Kirk Clifton

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