Brianna DuMont is the author of the new kids' book Thrilling Thieves: Liars, Cheats, and Cons Who Changed History. It's the third in a series that also includes Fantastic Fugitives and Famous Phonies. She lives in Chicago.
Q: How did you come up with the idea for your new book, and
for the series?
A: The Changed History series actually stemmed from the
first book I ever tried to write. It was about thieves in mythologies. After
writing out a few short stories of mythological bad guys, I asked the simple
question: What if? What if there were real people who impacted the world by
stealing?
I signed with my agent based off of this idea, but a lot of
editors were asking about series potential. I came up with more what if
questions, including people who never existed who changed history and fugitives
on the run who changed history.
Interestingly enough, Sky Pony, my publisher, loved the
series, but wanted the never existed idea first. That became Famous
Phonies. Then they wanted fugitives, which became Fantastic Fugitives. So
that’s how thieves became my first “sellable” idea, but the third book in the
series.
Q: Some of these people--like Queen Elizabeth I and Thomas
Edison--are not people generally thought of as thieves. How did you choose the
historical figures to include?
A: Choosing people was fairly tricky. They have to check a
lot of boxes to be included: having stolen something and having that theft
impact history.
I also thought it was fun to include people who weren’t
remembered as the “bad guys” and absolutely to include women. A lot of times,
women didn’t have much agency in history, but if you dig, you start to find
they still accomplished things, albeit on a quieter, smaller scale than a
Napoleon level.
In seeing new sides to old faces, readers can begin to
understand how complex history is.
Q: How did you research the book, and did you learn anything
that especially surprised you?
A: I have the great privilege of living near many top-notch
universities in Chicago. When I was writing this book, I lived about a block
away from Loyola and spent most of my afternoons in the stacks with a large cup
of coffee. I recently moved to Hyde Park and now spend my days wandering the
University of Chicago’s library.
My process is pretty simple, however: Go to the experts. I
like to start with a simple Google search to see who’s in the field of study
for the person I’m writing about. I check out all of their articles and books
(this is where the universities come in handy) and spend weeks getting
acquainted with the details and which scholar agrees or disagrees about what
fact.
If I have specific questions, I always reach out to them,
making sure to be friendly and open. I’ve found them all to be extremely
welcoming and excited to talk about their favorite subject!
I was shocked to stumble across Madame Cheng—I’d never heard
of her! While doing some general searches on pirates, I found a Chinese woman
from 1800 who controlled the largest confederacy of pirates in all of history.
To put it in perspective, she commanded 70,000 pirates while
the height of Western piracy in the Caribbean had around 5,600 pirates. She
only quit pirating because the Chinese emperor offered her a great retirement
package.
Q: What do you hope kids take away from the book?
A: History is fun! Don’t worry about the details—names,
dates, battles can all blur together, so focus on the big picture first. The
details will be there when you’re ready.
Also, all of my footnotes for every paragraph of information
is detailed on my website.
Due to an unexpected time crunch (we went from having a month deadline to 24
hours), they didn’t make it in the book, but I felt very passionate about
making sure they were available for students conducting
research.
Q: What are you working on now?
A: I’m mostly working on keeping my sanity with my two
little kids under three at home all day! But that being said, I can’t turn off
the desire to write and create. After two months on “maternity leave” with my
youngest, I started plotting out a MG adventure novel during midnight wake-up
calls, which is what I’m working on currently.
Q: Anything else we should know?
A: I own Harry Potter in five languages, including ancient
Greek! My minor in college was ancient Greek, and we had a professor who taught
a semester of Attic with the new translation (that’s the dialect of Greek used
in Athens during the Classical period 5th-4thcenturies BCE).
As you can tell by my books, my approach to history and
learning is all about making it relevant and humorous. This article by the
translator explains some of the challenges and the fun of bringing magical
words into an ancient Greek lexicon.
--Interview with Deborah Kalb
No comments:
Post a Comment