I always find it interesting to check the publication date in the front of a book – that’s an academic quirk as you have to cite it in references – but it can be quite illuminating, particularly if the book is a re-issue from an author’s back list. Habits – in life and in writing – change. In many books that are twenty years old and more it is commonplace for all the characters to smoke – and they can light up in public places too. And, of course, the most glaring detail is technology – books without mobile phones and computers rapidly give the game away. It is not just the habits though. I find that heroes in older books can appear overbearing and domineering, which was the convention at the time to illustrate the protective alpha male. The world turns and things change. Now the hero has to be strong and sensitive.
I find it interesting to read older stories and reflect on changes. Often a plot that is perfectly plausible would collapse with a single call from a mobile phone. Age doesn’t change the calibre of the story, but it can change how you react to it. The overbearing hero or delicate stay-at-home heroine would not have raised any eyebrows at the time, but can now make you feel a little uncomfortable. And it can be quite a shock if you do not realise that what you are reading is not a recent release.
It pays to look at the date.