Skip to main content

Blog Tour: Guest Post by Shelley Stratton: Trolley Cars, the Metro, and Bringing Historical Settings to Life

     Shelly Stratton is the author of She Wears the Mask.  This interesting guest post discusses how she incorporates realistic details and facts about streetcars from the early 20th century, which were common long before her birth. Mrs. Stratton describes her love of these older modes of public transportation as well as how she felt a joy and kinship with those who patronized these iconic symbols of urban transportation throughout the industrial age. Thank you, Mrs. Stratton!


Trolley Cars, the Metro, and Bringing Historical Settings to Life
By Shelly Stratton


     Decades ago, whenever I visited my great grandmother and great aunt in NW Washington, D.C., they would always ask me, “Did you drive in or take the trolley car here?” As I removed my coat or stowed away my umbrella, I would politely correct them with “I took the metro.”  But after correcting them so many times and both of them persistently referring to the metropolitan transit train system as the “trolley car,” I gave up.

     I realized that the trolley or streetcars, which had arrived in D.C. as far back as 1862 and weren’t discontinued until the 1960s, had been around much longer than the metro train system I rode every day. Therefore, it occupied a lot more of their collective memories. In my great grandmother’s and great aunt’s minds, the metro hadn’t logged enough years to be worthy of being remembered by its own name yet, I assume.

     Like many other major U.S. cities, streetcars were once plentiful in D.C., with trolley tracks and overhead wires traversing numerous streets and local neighborhoods. People rode the street cars to work, back home at the end of the day, to department stores downtown with the family on weekends and to neighboring counties in Virginia and Maryland. Streetcars were egalitarian in some ways. (Both the poor, middle class, and wealthy could ride them and did so regularly.) And it was not so egalitarian in other ways. (My grandfather told me that when he rode the streetcar in D.C. as a teenager, he could sit wherever he wanted, but as soon as the car passed the state line into Maryland, he had to move to the “Colored” section in the back, freeing his seat for the white patrons who boarded.)

     In D.C. and other cities throughout the country, streetcars were part of the historic fabric of city life and characters onto themselves, bearing witness to many major events and the evolution of the urban landscape. This is why I knew I had to include them in my novel, She Wears the Mask.

     For example, in May 1950, a Chicago Transit Authority streetcar collided with a delivery truck carrying 8,000 gallons of gasoline. The resulting explosion killed 34 people and injured 50 others. It would become known as the Green Hornet Streetcar Disaster and remains one of the deadliest public transit disasters in Chicago history. With a book set partially during this era in Chicago, I couldn’t resist working such a pivotal moment in Chicago past’s into the story to introduce a hint of realism to the text, which I think can be a strength in any historical fiction work. So I decided to have one of the main characters, Angelique, lose her husband in the Green Hornet Streetcar Disaster, forever changing the course of her life and impacting the decisions she makes for decades to come.

     But that realism couldn’t just stop at reciting historical facts. I wanted to show what it was like to be there, to board and ride on those streetcars every day. That’s the level of minutia I look for in a good book. But I was at a disadvantage; born in the 1980s, I grew up in D.C. long after our streetcars had disappeared. I had no idea what it was like to ride one. How did streetcar operators dress? How many seats per car? What did the cars sound like? I couldn’t ask my relatives; they had died many years before.

     So I not only searched old newspapers, but also examined pictures and maps showing streetcar routes in Chicago and other cities. I even watched YouTube videos with patrons describing what it was like to ride these streetcars, recounting everything from how much they paid to board to what the streetcar whistle sounded like. It was the kind of deep dive that some might consider boring, but I found it fascinating. It helped me to understand the time and place of the characters and even if I didn’t provide all these sensory details in the text itself, it helped me to see what was happening. I hope made the novel even more vivid.

About the Author


     Shelly Stratton is the penname of an award-nominated author who has published three books and more than a dozen books under another pseudonym. She is married and lives in Maryland with her husband and their daughter. Her latest book, She Wears the Mask, is a work of historical women’s fiction. Visit her at her web site www.shellystrattonbooks.com to learn more about her work.



She Wears the Mask by Shelly Stratton




Publication Date: August 11, 2020
Paperback & eBook; 262 pages
Genre: Historical/Women's Fiction


Synopsis: No one can ever really know what lies behind the mask . . .

     Gripping and moving, She Wears the Mask is a novel about two women from two very different worlds, both burdened with secrets from their pasts, who form an unexpected bond…

     1950s Chicago: Angelique Bixby could be one of many fresh-faced sales girls working along the Magnificent Mile, but she’s unique. She’s a white woman married to a black man in 1950s Chicago, making her stand out among the tenements on the South Side where she lives. Despite the challenges the couple faces, they find comfort and strength in their love for one another. Angelique is content, as long as she has her Daniel by her side and their baby in her arms, until she loses them both—one to death and the other to dire circumstances.

     1990s Washington, D.C.: Angelique Crofton is a woman of privilege. A rich, aging beauty and mother of a rising political star, she has learned to forget her tragic past. But now that she is facing her own mortality, she is finally ready to find the daughter she left behind, remember the young woman she once was, and unearth the bittersweet memories she had long ago buried.

     Jasmine Stanley is an ambitious lawyer—the only black woman at her firm. She is too busy climbing the corporate ladder to deal with her troublesome family or their unresolved issues. Tasked with Angelique’s case, Jasmine doesn’t know what to make of her new client—an old debutante with seemingly too much time and money on her hands. Jasmine eagerly accepts the challenge though, hoping if she finds Angelique’s long-lost daughter, it will impress the firm’s partners. But she doesn’t count on the search challenging her mentally and emotionally. Nor does she expect to form a friendship with Angelique, who is much more like her than she realizes—because Jasmine is harboring secrets, too.

Blog Tour Schedule


Monday, August 17 
Review at Books, Writings, and More 

Tuesday, August 18 
Feature at I'm All About Books 

Wednesday, August 19 
Interview at Chicks, Rogues, and Scandals 

Thursday, August 20 
Review at 100 Pages a Day 

Friday, August 21 
Review at Gwendalyn's Books 

Monday, August 24 
Review & Excerpt at Robin Loves Reading 

Tuesday, August 25 
Interview at Bookish Rantings 
Excerpt at The Caffeinated Bibliophile 

Wednesday, August 26 
Feature at Reading is My Remedy 

Thursday, August 27 
Review at Passages to the Past 

Friday, August 28 
Guest Post at History from a Woman’s Perspective 

Monday, August 31 
Interview at Jorie Loves a Story

Giveaway

     During the Blog Tour, we are giving away a $50 Amazon Gift Card! To enter, please use the Gleam form below. The giveaway is open to US residents only and ends on August 31st. You must be 18 or older to enter. 

She Wears the Mask 

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Deborah Swift's Book Blast

HF Virtual Book Tours is delighted to introduce you to historical novelist Deborah Swift! Deborah’s acclaimed novels are set in turbulent seventeenth century England and have been described as “brilliant” and “a must for all readers looking for something out of the ordinary but grippingly alive”. Her previous life as a scenographer and costume designer shine through as the settings are beautifully evoked, immersing the reader in the sights and smells of the time. Deborah’s multi-layered and engrossing historical adventures will make perfect picks for reading groups. Reading Group Guides can be conveniently found in the back of each book and on her website. Find more information on Deborah's novels below and enter to win a $25 Amazon Gift Card (£15 UK)! The Lady's Slipper Publication Date: June 3, 2011 Pan MacMillan Formats: Ebook, Paperback England, 1660. The King is back, but memories of the English Civil War still rankle. In rural Westmorland, artist Alice I...

Interview with Paula Margulies

     Today, I have the opportunity to interview Paula Margulies. She has recently wrote a novel about Pocahontas called Favorite Daughter, Part One , which won an Editor’s Choice Award at the 24th Annual San Diego State University Writer’s Conference. The story creates a different perspective to the American heroine. It is told in first person narrative, and it is how Pocahontas at a young age embarks through the many changes of her life. By doing so she transforms into a strong, courageous, wise woman. I am very pleased that she took the time to grant me this interview and to generously donate a copy of her novel to the giveaway. I look forward to reading her books in the future, and check back for my review of Favorite Daughter’s Part One soon. This interview is to give readers insight about her and her novel. Thank you, Mrs. Margulies. 1. Where and when do you write?  In my home office mostly, although I try to sneak away to artist residencies whenever ...

La Belle Creole: The Cuban Countess who Captivated Havana, Madrid and Paris by Alina Garcia-Lapuerta: A Book Review

La Belle Creole: The Cuban Countess who Captivated Havana, Madrid and Paris Author: Alina Garcia-Lapuerta Genre: Nonfiction, Biography, History Publisher: Chicago Review Press Release Date: September 1, 2014 Pages: 320 Source:  Netgalley/publisher in exchange for an honest review. Synopsis: The adventurous woman nicknamed La Belle Creole is brought to life in this book through the full use of her memoirs, contemporary accounts, and her intimate letters. The fascinating Maria de las Mercedes Santa Cruz y Montalvo, also known as Mercedes, and later the Comtesse Merlin, was a Cuban-born aristocrat who was years ahead of her time as a writer, a socialite, a salon host, and a participant in the Cuban slavery debate. Raised in Cuba and shipped off to live with her socialite mother in Spain at the age of 13, Mercedes triumphed over the political chaos that blanketed Europe in the Napoleonic days, by charming aristocrats from all sides with her exotic beauty and singing voice. She m...