Please read someone and join a lot of exciting adventures. For example, the adventure that one can experience is "swim with a small mermaid in the ocean" (please read with you 1). The author is important as it allows readers to feel / make themselves like characters as descriptive details. Another adventure someone can experience is "to join Cinderella and fantasy balls" (read you 1). When the author shows these small details, it makes the story powerful, different and unique.
Reading a historical novel (as opposed to a pure imaginary novel) is a unique pleasure and the possibility that the reader is the ability to identify the author's source. My friend, Vesnatison, an enthusiast of historical novel told me that this is one of her qualities: unlike history, historical novels are not limited to quoting footnotes in text . Therefore, when the reader finds familiar things, the reader will experience the joy of discovery. However, a novelist borrowing too much from the source material may be accused of being unable to "digest my own material and integrate it into my book" (Hoffman). One of the critics discovered that this is a matter of William of Bidar.
A historical novel places a fictitious person in an actual historical event. In the early history novel "Waverly", a fictitious person of Sir Walter Scott Edward Waverly met with a historical figure, Prince Bonnie, and participated in the battle of Preston Pan. According to some original true stories and reconstructed biographies, some novels have been reconsidered a bit. In many cases, even if the fictional story is based on facts, you can make it more fun by adding it to the actual story or deleting it. An example is Tim O'Brien's "What I've Brought", a series of short stories about the Vietnam War.
It's time. The most serious novel is done in the present or in the past of that writing. Long ago, the story is likely to be integrated into a historical novel type. But some classic realistic children's books seem to be historical novels for modern readers - just remember that they are modern in writing. Let's examine some examples from picture book to YA. At first, Robert hated Little Stevie, a boy the mother saw in a week. However, when Stevie's family ceased to exist, Robert noticed that he missed about "younger brother" is a revolutionary picture book. John Stip's 20-year literary career. Please watch Gordon read aloud from Sesame Street!