I’ve been
invited by my dear friend and fellow writer Virginia Moffatt to contribute to
this blog tour and she has very kindly agreed to host me on her site. I have to admit, though, I feel a bit of a
fraud. At the moment I’m not doing much
writing. As with many writers, my need
to earn a living means I talk about writing an awful lot, as a creative writing
lecturer at the University of Winchester and director of the Winchester
Writers’ Festival www.writersfestival.co.uk.
So here are
my answers to the four questions I’ve been asked. I’m going to have to dig deep!
What am I working on?
That kind of
depends on timeframe. I write lots of
nonfiction for children and this year is no exception with two series to
complete before September. I am
absolutely committed to excellence in nonfiction for young audiences and I’ve
written nearly 50 books now but that’s not what I’m going to talk about here
because usually I write nonfiction to a very tight brief from the publisher.
A while ago
I finished a children’s novel called Ruthie Bow and the Lady Spirit Detective
about which I care passionately but it has not yet found a publishing home.
Then there
are the pieces of short fiction I write whenever I’m pushed to do a reading at
the University or with the Hyde Writers – a group of wonderful novelists, poets
and critics who support each other locally.
My last two pieces were called ‘Mole’ and ‘Snegurochka’ and I had some
fun with them.
Yet what
really fills my head and my heart at the moment is a novel for adults that is starting
to take shape in frustratingly short fragments on the page. The novel is set in Kiev in 1993. Current events in Independence Square have
gripped me and horrified me over the past few weeks, but I’ve been trying to find
a way to write fictionally about Kiev for the past decade and I’m reaching back
to a time shortly after that initial declaration of independence from the
Soviet Union in 1991, when journalists held their breath but for ordinary Ukrainians,
so little had changed. The novel is told
from the point of view of an English woman who goes there with her baby and the
woman is like me, up to a point, as I lived there with my journalist husband and
our baby son from 1993-94. It is a
story, imagined, about the interrelatedness of people I glimpsed but rarely
spoke to, lived next door to but never shared a meal with. The boy who spends his days rollerblading
across the floor of the apartment above.
The caretaker who sniffs an empty box of imported After Eights she’s
retrieved from the bottom of the dump bin.
The white goods importer with the Astrakhan hat who wants to give this
nervous young mother a washing machine.
I want to write about moral ambiguity, about history never being
finished, about the ownership of apples and a desperate obsession with the
novel Jurassic Park.
How does my work differ from
others in the genre?
Genre is an
interesting question when it comes to my Kiev novel. I think I absorb a great deal from the
fiction I read, in terms of structure, brevity, dialogue, what isn’t said and
so forth. I suppose where I hope it
might differ is that while it is about motherhood (many kinds) it isn’t merely
‘domestic’ in that unfortunately pejorative sense. Domestic can be, and often is, universal.
Why do I write what I do?
I write
about what interests me. That’s about
it!
How does my writing process work?
I wish I
could say something sensible here. Zadie
Smith, in her brilliantly titled book of essays Changing My Mind, divides writers up into two kinds: micro managers
and macro planners. I always thought I
was a micro manager. I’d start with very
little idea of where I was going, discovering the story as I went along but
never able to progress until I felt that the last sentence I’d written was as
good as I could make it. Now I’m not so
sure. The switch to writing a novel for
adults means I’m starting all over again and I find it quite terrifying! Nevertheless, with this novel I do have an
ending. The final pages are already real
for me, so instead I find myself writing out of sequence, creating small scenes
as key moments form during that marvellous thought factory, the daily dog
walk. I’ve not settled on tense, or
voice, or even point of view yet, and this is quite a different way of working and one that I wouldn’t, on the whole,
recommend to my own students but then I’ve never been much of a believer in
writing ‘rules’. That’s why we have
drafts.
I like to
think I’d be more productive if I had a weekly word count to hit. I’d love a magical shed like Joanne Harris,
or a deadline to hurtle towards. Instead
I write fitfully, slowly, over months and years. It’s not good, but I tell myself this is
infinitely better than never writing at all.
Oh, and
oddly, I type straight onto my laptop.
I’m left-handed and never really learned to hold a pen comfortably!
Next week
I’m passing the blog tour mantle to Claire Fuller, novelist, sculptor and
long-time friend whose debut novel, Our Endless Numbered Days, publishes next
year under Penguin imprint Fig Tree and around the world. I feel privileged to have read the manuscript
– taut and subtly terrifying. Also quite
beautiful. The novel to read in
2015.
http://worksbyclaire.wordpress.com/
3 comments:
I know this book will be brilliant. You can really write - I thick it will be WONDERFUL. It already intrigues..
Can't believe I wrote I thick rather than I think. I was so keen to get this comment down. Never mind - I KNOW it will be wonderful.
Judy, the novel sounds great. And I write in such a similar way (and people will see tomorrow in my writing process contribution!) Eventually those bits accumulate, like snow, and the landscape has changed.
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