History is annoying - Eve Edwards

I am annoyed with history this morning.  It doesn't behave.  I plan out a fabulous scene, even begin writing the blighter, and then discover a little later on that it was impossible.  I suppose I could give myself the pass that I'm writing fiction, but this is where the historical novelist who cares about his or her research parts company with fantasy.  In short, my characters may be invented but my historical moment isn't.  If it couldn't plausibly happen to someone, it can't happen to my heroine.

Blast. Back to the drawing board.  Following a trail of googled breadcrumbs, my dead end does a Maria Von Trapp (remember "when God closes a door, somewhere he opens a window"?). Now that's even more interesting than what I thought happened.  A new scene presents itself.  The last fifth of my novel changes direction and a whole cast of minor characters pop up to people it.

This little episode above, just lived out in my study, is probably very familiar to anyone who has tried writing a novel set in the past.  The problems of guessing what might have been where the historians haven't cleared the ground ahead for you is usually where these wrong turns happen.  In my case, it concerned the treatment of enemy aliens in Britain during the First World War.  There are anecdotes of attacks on German families (or even those with vaguely Germanic names) and information about the internment camps for men.  Did you know that the Olympic Stadium is built pretty much on the site of one of them, an old Jute factory?  I don't remember that being featured in the Opening Ceremony.  Alexandra Palace was also used for this purpose.  One of the prisoners was a decent artist and the Imperial War Museum has his pictures online if you'd like to take a look at life inside the wire.  The Isle of Man became home during the war to thousands in several camps, including one near Douglas on the site of Cunningham's holiday camp for Young Men - splendid sounding institution to give young men of modest means a healthy and wholesome holiday!  Obviously, being stuck in a tent for an indefinite period as a guest unable to leave was no picnic but that camp had a better reputation than the large one at Knockaloe.  I imagine it was thought that the island itself provided a second barrier to prevent the German men getting up to no good (though most of them were a rather puzzled set of waiters, barbers and butchers who had lived for many years in the UK before war broke out).

That was all very interesting and relatively straight forward to find out, but what I could not discover was what they did with women.  After researching and reading, I did find the answers but I was left with the impression that there is a gap in the market for a book on the subject if there are any historians reading this.