Learn History Through Fiction: What’s Playing at the Nickelodeon?

Researching a story about the first U.S. policewoman, who worked on the Los Angeles “purity squad,” I read up on nickelodeons, one of the places she patrolled. The nickelodeon was the first indoor exhibition space dedicated to showing projected motion pictures. The word “Nickelodeon” was concocted from the five-cent coin charged for admission and the ancient Greek word odeion, which was a roofed-over theater. A popular form of entertainment from 1905-1915, as many as 26 million people went every week to watch “the flicks” (so called because the images flickered). Read more about nickelodeons in BEHIND THE STORY.

Learn History Through Fiction: Rum-Running Versus Bootlegging

Researching a novel and several stories with scenes during Prohibition, I wondered: What’s the difference between rum-running and bootlegging? The former is usually applied to illegal shipments of alcohol over water; the latter to transporting booze over land. The term “boot-legging” arose during the Civil War, when soldiers smuggled liquor into camp by concealing pint bottles inside their boots. The word became popular (and lost its hyphen) during Prohibition (1920-1933) when suppliers sold liquor from flasks tucked into their boots. The term “rum-running” most likely originated at the start of Prohibition, when ships from the Caribbean transported rum to Florida speakeasies. Rum’s cheapness made it a low-profit item so smugglers switched to shipping Canadian whisky, French champagne, and English gin to major cities like New York City, Boston, and Chicago, where they could charge more. Ships carried as much as $200,000 in contraband in a single run.

 

“The Five Percent Rule” to be Published by The Artist Unleashed

I’m pleased to announce that my craft essay “The Five Percent Rule” has been accepted by The Artist Unleashed, an online journal that publishes short articles (1,000 words maximum) aimed at inspiring, motivating, and/or advising writers and artists in all media. My piece describes how I narrow down the vast trove of historical research I collect to the small amount that actually makes it into a work of fiction (including how the unused information does not go to waste, but appears in other NOVELS, SHORT STORIES, and/or BEHIND THE STORY). Check back here for the link when the essay goes online November 1st. Meanwhile you can read published pieces at The Artist Unleashed website http://www.theartistunleashed.com/.

Learn History Through Fiction: Who Needs Talkies Anyway?

Thomas Edison intended to marry images to sound as far back as 1885. The problem was he couldn’t get his phonograph and kinetoscope to synchronize. When others inventors finally did, rather than admit defeat, Edison declared in 1926 that Americans would always prefer silent movies over talkies anyway. Hollywood movie-makers felt the same, with the exception of Warner Bros., who in 1925 were eager to make their popular theaters even more popular. Sam Warner suggested to his brothers Harry, Al, and Jack, that they give sound a try. Read more about the era of silent films and the evolution of talking pictures in BEHIND THE STORY.