I think everyone has raised some really interesting points in this thread. I studied history at Uni and I work in Museums, so I'm fascinated.
phil_t said:
I have to say that in most cases authors can be as unreliable as they like, as long as they tell a good story. Also, it oftens seems that as most 'historians' cant decide on how things were between them that certain inaccuracies are guaranteed in every story, no matter how detailed the research undertaken.
This is what I think is the key. Are you reading purely for enjoyment? In this case 'a good story' is all that's required. Bugger the facts.
Halcyon said:
Do you, experienced reader, find reading historical fiction an accurate, at least contextually, method for obtaining knowledge?
Or are you reading to find out information? In which case fiction is a perfectly legitimate place to start, and it's an enjoyable way to go about it, but I don't think anyone who's contributed to this discussion would take it as gospel and stop there. You'd always want to refer to a non-fiction text if you really wanted to know whether what you'd read about in fiction was 'true'.
phil_t said:
I think it depends very much on how much you trust the author to have done in-depth research into a subject.
First rule for historians (or anyone really) never completely trust an author. Always question their sources, their bias, and their purpose. And this goes for non-fiction authors as much as it does for fiction authors. They are people too, they get things wrong, they have political agendas, and they see things from their own point of view and interpret 'the facts' accordingly.
An historian (whose name I can't remember right now, see how unreliable we historians are) once said something along the lines of 'History is a whole heap of things that never happened written down by people who were never there'. An extreme view, but it makes a valuable point.
I like to think about history as one big argument. Most of the time it's a friendly argument and we're all enjoying it immensely, but it's still an argument. There are very few things that we can take as 'fact' when it comes to the crunch.