"Karelia: a region of NE Europe, formerly Finland but annexed in several stages by the former Soviet Union."
Picture from Paradox |
What has Karelia got to do with writing?
For a writer, historically dramatic events and regions are important, and you ignore them at your peril. Even if your book is set in modern times, there are always characters whose lives, or whose relatives' lives, have been affected by a historical event. This is true especially for Finland, whose short history has seen many wars and tragedies.
In my latest spy novel, The Red King of Helsinki, the main protagonist's Karelian family lost their home in the Winter War. This tragedy has repercussions when Pia's mother Maija decides to study the Russian language in the 1950's.
Maija’s degree in Russian
language had always been a problem. First her mother was against it. Maija’s
grandfather fought the Reds in the Civil War in 1917, and her father the Russians
twenty-five years later in the Winter War. His family were from Karelia.
Maija’s aunt talked often about
the two evacuations from Karelia, where 400,000 had to leave their homes and
livelihoods. Her home as well as the childhood home was near Viipuri, now
beyond the border in the Soviet Union. Auntie Eija's husband had died in the war; how, Maija wasn’t ever quite sure. She
had visions of Uncle Kaarlo in a fist fight with a tall Russian while their
large farmhouse with beautifully carved porches was in flames in the
background. Aunt Eija carried pictures of the farmhouse they had lost as well
as a black-and-white portrait of her dead husband in her purse. She never passed an opportunity to take the pictures out and decry the Soviet state.
‘We lost our homeland, but
Finland kept her independence, unlike those poor Baltic states.’
Even though I don't have any close family connections with Karelia, I've always been fascinated by the Karelian people and its history, which has so coloured Finnish life. I guess that's why Karelian characters often seep into my fiction.
The Red King of Helsinki came out 30 March is now available on Kindle as well as iBooks and other e-reading devices.
2 comments:
Hi Helena .. that was interesting and an area I knew nothing about .. nor the various annexations.
Having just had a quick squizz over at Wiki - I can see a little more - understand the geography a little ..
I am sure if you're writing about your part of the world at any given time .. it must be near accurate ... very interesting - thanks for posting .. cheers Hilary
Thank you for sharing, I too knew nothing about this area.
I think if something fascinates us we are more interested in writing about it.
Good post.
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