Interview with author Lars Hedbor
Welcome Readers
to another installment of our author interview series. Today we have the
pleasure of chatting with Lars, author of multiple historical fiction books.
JMR-Welcome
to the Books Delight, Lars. Tell our readers where you live, what you do for
fun and what does the perfect day look like?
LH- I’m a
resident of the Pacific Northwest, which can be an awkward locale for a
novelist of the American Revolution, but there is so much to do here that I
don’t ever see myself returning to New England.
I have entirely
too many interests, spanning the gamut from astronomy to linguistics to gourmet
cooking, but at the moment, I’m taking a great deal of pleasure in restoring
antique clocks.
A perfect day for
me is one spent with my exceptionally patient wife, perhaps on the Oregon coast
for some time on the beach and capped off with a decadent meal.
JMR-What’s
your favorite historical time period? Why?
LH- As I’ve now
written seventeen novels set during the era of the American Revolution, it’s
difficult for me to claim a different historical time period, but the era of
the early space race, culminating in Armstrong’s first step onto the Moon would
have to be a close second.
JMR-Who
is your favorite historical figure? Why? If you could ask them one question,
what would it be?
LH- I find the
tragic early death of Joseph Warren at Bunker Hill both heartbreaking and
incredibly compelling. He was both an
early ideological leader of the independence movement and a fearless military
man. I am convinced that had he lived,
we would refer to him in the same breath as figures such as Washington and
Jefferson, and would marvel at the very thought of the Revolution succeeding
without him.
As for what
question I’d want to ask him, I think that the key one is why he was so
reckless with his life in the Battle of Bunker Hill. He was far more valuable to the cause of the
Revolution as a living participant than he is as a nearly-forgotten martyr.
JMR-
How did you come to be a writer of historical fiction?
LH- I’ve always
learned best from historical fiction, and when a friend kept telling me about
how important the Carolinas were in the Revolution, I asked him to recommend
some good historical fiction of the Revolution set there.
The only book he
was able to find was, frankly, not particularly readable, and when I finally
put it aside, I uttered those famous last words – “I think I can do better
myself.” I sat down and wrote The Declaration, which has been
well-received by readers ever since.
Over 3,500 pages
and seventeen novels later, I’m pretty sure that I have achieved the goal of
improving upon what I had read at my friend’s recommendation.
JMR-
We are all affected by the highs and lows in our lives. How has your lived life
informed your writing?
LH- What a great,
challenging question! My early books
very often featured characters who were struggling with an absent parent –
whether away at war or dead – and I realized a few years ago that this was
likely not just due to the sad frequency with which such things happened in the
Revolutionary era, but also because I was writing them in the wake of my own
father’s passing.
Another
consistent theme in my books is that I write women who are spirited, and
perhaps a tiny bit anachronistically independent-minded. It is no coincidence that I grew up in a
household with three strong-willed sisters, my grandmother, aunt, and
exceptionally independent-minded mother.
I can only write what I know when it comes to the characters of
women. I think that my favorite of these
characters is probably Louise from The
Darkness, whom we meet as she is breaking the jaw of a handsy British soldier.
JMR-
Did you visit anyone of the places in your book? Where did you feel closest to
your characters?
LH- I grew up in
the setting of my novel The Prize,
which is set on the shores of Vermont’s Lake Champlain. Hearing the legends of that conflict’s reach
into that remote corner of the American Colonies deeply informed that book.
However, a later
novel, The Convention, coincidentally
has a scene that takes place on the opposite shore of Lake Champlain, at Fort
Ticonderoga, as the British (through a superhuman effort) managed to place
cannon on a hill overlooking that then-American stronghold. Standing on the site where that cannon
emplacement was located, looking down past the stout walls of that
fortification, I could vividly picture the exultation of the British troops as
they watched the Americans hastily abandon that outpost.
JMR-
Lars, tell us about your series, Tales
From a Revolution.
JG- As I
mentioned, I got started by wanting to explore the Revolution as it unfolded in
the South, and from the very beginning, I had a vision of writing a different
novel for each of the colonies, as well as some of the future states.
I have just one
of the original thirteen colonies that declared independence left to write –
Delaware – and I’ve been able to bring fresh attention to the contributions of
the Spanish, Haudenosaunee (Iroquois), Haitians, French, and even British and
Loyalists to the overall story of our national origins.
My books have
been lauded both for careful attention to historical accuracy and for their
compelling storytelling, and I’m very grateful to the many readers who’ve
reached out to tell me what one or another of the volumes in the series have
meant to them.
With the 250th
anniversary of the Declaration of Independence swiftly approaching in 2026, I
am very excited to be ready with a whole shelf of books for readers to dive
into as their interest in the Revolutionary era is piqued by the associated
celebrations.
JMR-What
projects do you have in the pipeline?
LH- After I get
my Maryland book (The Word, focusing
on the role of evangelical Methodism in the early abolitionist movement) out
later this year, I’ll be turning to Delaware, which will round out the original
thirteen colonies in my collection.
With that done, I
anticipate casting a somewhat wider web to continue the series, continuing
further down the path of writing about places with unexpected connections to
the Revolution. My most recent release, The Powder, was a great example of this
sort of title in my series, set in Bermuda and focused on the 1775 Bermuda
Powder Raid.
However, at some
point, I will run out of locales that demand to have stories of the
Revolutionary era written, and when I get there, I plan to turn to a new series
exploring the early Republic era of American history, from about 1815 to 1850. It was a time when our nation was busily
inventing itself at every turn, and it’s one that has gotten woefully little
attention in historical fiction.
JMR-
Tell our readers how to find you on social media and the web.
LH- I am most
active on Facebook (https://www.facebook.com/Lars.D.H.Hedbor), with daily
postings of events in the Revolution of the date, as well as announcements,
interesting articles, and the like. You
can find my own Web site at https://larsdhhedbor.com, where you can sign up for
a free e-book to try out the series, as well as find book club and educator
resources, buy signed copies, and see how the whole series relates, both in
geography and time.
JMR-
What question were you hoping I’d ask but didn’t?
LH- I love
sharing the most rewarding moments so far of my career as a novelist of the
Revolution. At the top of the list is
seeing my book The Siege adapted as a
stage play, and then further adapted for a virtual performance during the
pandemic.
Watching skilled
actors breathe life into characters that had originated in my imagination was
both awe-inspiring and humbling. They
found so much more in my characters than I had put on the page, and it’s a
memory that I’ll treasure all my life.
Close behind
that, though, was the experience of speaking via a Zoom call with a gymnasium
full of several hundred schoolchildren.
They asked the best questions
of me, and seemed to really enjoy learning a little bit more about the
Revolution than what they might have heard in their classes.
JMR- Thank you,
Lars, for stopping by. Your books look really great! Readers, I’ve included a
link to Lars’s book below. Please be sure to check it out.
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