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This is the second excerpt from Writing Biography & Autobiography by
Brian D Osborne.
We shall be running three excerpts from this title from the A & C Black
Writing Handbooks series, by kind permission of the publisher.
Sometimes, they find you
Subjects come to the notice of the biographer in a variety of
ways, and the more you write in the biographical field the more potential
subjects will attract your attention. Sometimes something that you read will
suggest a subject – a passing reference, an intriguing quote, a general sense
that there is an interesting character out there waiting to be explored.
Sometimes the idea for a biography can be sparked off by something quite
non-literary: an artefact, a building, a monument.
I wrote an article about George Buchanan, a 16th century
Scottish scholar and reformer, simply because I was struck by the size of the
monument to him which had been erected at Killearn in Stirlingshire. The
monument, an obelisk 103 feet high, towers over the little village. My reaction
to it was that it was exactly the sort of thing that might be expected to mark
the site of a great battle or the birthplace of a national hero, not the
birthplace of a rather obscure scholar. Buchanan’s life, which I would certainly
not feel competent to deal with at length, sold as a 2500-word article and
demonstrates that one can deal with a subject adequately, at a certain level,
even if one lacks the skills and background to do a more comprehensive and
original piece of work. Buchanan, for example, wrote mostly in Latin and lived
for a long time in France – so it would be very difficult to write an original
and serious extended biography of him without considerable skills in Latin and
French. However, for the purposes of an article designed for a popular
magazine, secondary sources and the ability to put the subject into context and
to interpret other people’s research for a general audience are often all that
is required.
Subjects come up in other ways too. Sometimes friends and
relatives, knowing the sort of thing that you write, will suggest subjects to
you. Once book and magazine publishers are aware of your skills or interests,
they will sometimes suggest subjects that they would like to see covered.
This is very encouraging and enormously good for one’s self-esteem, and there is
a huge advantage in having a commission and not having to worry about
cold-selling the finished work to a publisher. However, the prospect of a
secure commission should not blind you to the other considerations that need to
be taken into account when selecting a subject:
• Have you the skills to do justice to the topic? Do
you need to be able to read Latin, decipher 15th century handwriting or
understand nuclear fission?
• Does the subject interest you? A biography takes a long time to write;
if the subject bores you it will seem to take a great deal longer and your lack
of enjoyment may become all too apparent in your writing.
• Would you rather be doing something else? Even if the subject seems
interesting you might feel that your priorities lie elsewhere.
• How will this project fit into the overall pattern of your writing career? If
you feel that you want to specialise in writing the lives of members of the
women’s suffrage movement, would taking a year or two out to write the life of a
Boer War general be a good idea?
• Can you cope with the subject in practical terms? Are the papers you
would need to use in an archive in Aberdeen while you live in Bristol? Are there
essential official documents that you will not be able to access for your
research because they are unavailable until a certain date?
All of these points are things that you should take into
consideration in choosing any subject, but they perhaps need a second or a third
thought before you are seduced by the prospect of a commission. It is all too
easy to go along with an idea when it is pitched to you by a publisher or
editor, and then to find out, when you are launched on the project, that it
involves significant problems. If you have evolved your project yourself, you
are more likely to have had a chance to feel your way into the subject and into
its associated challenges and opportunities.
Basic planning and preparation
However the idea for your biography comes about, before you
commit yourself to any work on it you need to do some serious thinking, planning
and preparation. Some of the issues that need to be determined at this planning
stage include:
The extent of the work. Is this a magazine article or a
book? A long book or a short book? How long are you going to have to commit to
the project to do it successfully, and is this economically viable?
• The scope of the work. Are you going to write about the entire life of your
subject, or just one chronological period – or just one aspect of it?
• The level of the work. Is this for a general or a specialist audience,
for adults or teenagers or children?
• The skills you need to acquire to do justice to the subject. Do you
need to learn how to read early handwriting, become familiar with the
organisation of the Royal Navy in the 18th century, or know the working of an
early 20th century repertory theatre?
• Your sources. Are the sources that you can conveniently access
sufficient for the work you are planning? While for a popular magazine article
you can usually safely rely on secondary sources, a more scholarly book will
require the use of original materials; these may simply not be available, or may
be available but located somewhere inconvenient. There is nothing more annoying
than spending valuable time on a project only to find, part-way through, that
there are simply not the sources available to you to allow you to do justice to
it.
• Financial considerations. How are you going to finance the project?
What will the costs be? Think of things like photocopying, travel and
subsistence, the acquisition of illustrations. Is there an advance from your
publisher? What are you going to live on while you are writing the book?
• Further opportunities. What opportunities are there for a multiple
exploitation of the project? If you are writing a full-length biography, can
you promote the book and earn some additional fees by writing articles based on
it, developing radio or television spin-offs, or lecturing about it? Are there
‘detachable’ parts of the project which can be developed? This may be something
that you will only discover as you go along – but it is well worth keeping in
mind throughout the entire process. There may very well be an aspect of your
subject’s life that merits treatment at greater length than you can afford
within the confines of your book or article. There may be a subsidiary character
who comes into your biography but cannot be properly dealt with there. Such
subsidiary themes can be usefully developed and marketed as stand-alone articles
and often require very little extra work to complete. All these additional ways
of exploiting your subject may make the difference between an economically
unviable project and one that may be worth pursuing.
This said, I must admit that none of my three biographies
has, as yet, been economically viable if all the costs – of time, travel,
research expenses such as photocopying, stationery, book purchases and so on –
are costed in. Despite this, I do not regret having taken any of them on!

The next excerpt from Writing Biography and
Autobiography will be published in the June Magazine. It is published
by A & C Black at £12.99
First excerpt
To buy the book
©
2004 Brian D Osborne
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