footsteps in biography
'How much do I want this adventure?'
'Perhaps I need different shoes.'
It is an extraordinary experience for a biographer to walk physically in the footsteps of someone who made that journey many years before. Why am I doing this? What do I hope to find? On one level, perhaps I will merely verify all those facts that I have painstakingly accumulated. Maybe that's enough.
But what I am really hoping for is an empathetic experience with the very person about whom I am writing. Perhaps by making the physical journey, I will more easily connect with their world – and even their thoughts.
After my first visit to Frankfurt to discover the world of Herbert Sulzbach, I made other journeys – to Berlin, London, the Isle of Man, southern England, northern France, Scotland and Northumberland. What was the use?
I can only say that on one particular day, I walked through the streets of Berlin holding a sheaf of papers that had been written by Herbert Sulzbach. Written in the late 1940s, these directed me through the bombed devastation that he had witnessed at that time. The city had been his home ten years before that. These were streets that he had known and loved in better – and saner – times. Despite the transformed Berlin that I actually walked through, and whether or not I managed to empathise enough, or to stand adequately in his shoes, it was an extremely powerful experience.
If you care for the person about whom you write, nothing beats standing where they have stood, seeing what they would have seen, and struggling to hear and to think what they might have heard and thought.









