The Great Way Round by Dennis Hamley
The Great Way Round was the name cynics gave to the old Great
Western Railway. Despite his engineering genius, Brunel didn't seem to
have an outstanding sense of direction. I wanted to show a map of the early GWR so you could see what I meant. But I couldn't find a good one and besides most of the kinks have been straightened out or closed by Dr Beeching.
It's also a good way of describing the next episode in my life. On December 9th we depart for New Zealand because it's Kay's turn for Christmas (anyone for a barbecue on Christmas Day?) and getting there, I can assure you, really is a Great Way Round. We won't be back until January 20th and so I'm writing three blogs now and hoping I get the scheduling right so 2 and 3 really will appear early on the 14th of January and February.
So that was it. I left walking on air. I was on the
way. What could stop me? Awards, medals, prizes, riches - I was
destined to get the lot. Well, anyway.... What did come out of that
unpromising start was a long relationship with someone who I regard as one of
the GREAT children's book editors, Pamela Royds.
It's also a good way of describing the next episode in my life. On December 9th we depart for New Zealand because it's Kay's turn for Christmas (anyone for a barbecue on Christmas Day?) and getting there, I can assure you, really is a Great Way Round. We won't be back until January 20th and so I'm writing three blogs now and hoping I get the scheduling right so 2 and 3 really will appear early on the 14th of January and February.
There's a third Great Way Round to consider. When I joined
Authors Electric, Sue Price suggested to me that, as I had been in the
publishing business for so long - I suspect longest of all Electric Authors -
readers might like my tales of the dear, dead old days in the trade. Good
idea, I thought. When I look back I can hardly believe the difference
between what it was then and what it is now. Was it better or worse?
I really don't know. Perhaps my story, unique to me but
recognisable to many others, may help me to decide. But whichever it is,
nothing can ever replace the mixture of expectation, fear, disappointment,
heady relief and release and sheer delight which those early days possessed.
Did I always want to be a writer? Well, yes. The
idealistic half of me certainly did. But the half of me conscious of its
working-class background in which the most common cry in my childhood was 'But
we can't afford it, Dennis,' (and I'm none the worse for it, having kept my
World War 2 mentality of ludicrous economy, even filching my wheelbarrow, a
child's bike and a radiogram in perfectly good order from the local refuse tip)
said that I had to earn my living and get a steady wage. So that came
first.
I did start a correspondence course on the short story. But
I soon decided it was rubbish and quietly dropped out. RAF and university
kept me busy enough. When I got to university, I found that Cambridge was full of
writers. Though I envied them, they seemed to me not only a bit scary but a
right poncey lot and I didn't write a single word while I was there except for
essays and occasional film reviews for Broadsheet. I've already
mentioned my love for the Middle Ages. I didn't suspect it
would lead to the eventual fulfilment of at least some my ambitions.
In those days, the mid-50s, you could teach with no qualifications
whatever. One vacation, when my usual sources of vacation jobs - building
sites, farms, even a soup factory - seemed to have dried up, someone
suggested I should cycle over to the Divisional Education Office and see if there was
anything going there. So I went and, almost before I had introduced myself, was asked to get on my bike and go to Newport Pagnell Secondary School,
where there was a big problem to which I would be the ideal solution. So
I did and two hours later found myself in front of forty rebellious 14
year-olds 'teaching' Art. God help us.
Actually, I thought it was great. I was there for a month.
I was appalled at how badly stocked the school was. Par for the
course in those days, I fear. Not that much better now. I wanted to do some drama with the kids.
In those days, that only meant playscripts. But there were none in
the stock cupboard. However, it so happened that one of the set texts
that year for part 1 of the English tripos was The Wakefield Play of Noah and
his Sons and I needed to turn it into modern English. Why not, I
reasoned, turn it into an acting version, complete with the distinctive Wakefield
stanza, a complicated-seeming form but actually beautifully fitted to the human
voice? So I did - looking back on it now, incredibly quickly - with a
stylus on Gestetner sheets (anyone remember them?) which next day I
messily rolled off on the school duplicator.
The Gestetner duplicator. Prehistoric photocopier and source of inky fingers and bad language.
The kids really liked the plays and I felt vindicated because the
rest of the staff had been gloomily forecasting riots and failure. When
term ended I took the copies away with me in case I ever needed them again (the
school certainly didn't) and got on with my life. Much later, I was on
teaching practice in Bristol. I didn't do the play there but one evening,
at a loose end, I realised there was a copy of the Wakefield First Shepherd's
Play in the Pelican Guide to Medieval Literature and. almost without realising what I
was doing, found myself translating that too. I showed the results to Dorothy
Atkinson, English lecturer in the Bristol University Education Department (not
the children's author of the same name) and she suggested I send them to Heinemann
Educational Books. So I did, with a third play, Cain and Abel, which I
translated while still in the mood. And, to my complete dumbfoundedness,
they accepted them.
First book. 1962. I was 26. Not spectacularly
young, like Sue Price with the Carnegie medal first go. But young enough
to be elated. My first book. I was on the way.
I did some more plays, but production was costed at 10 shillings
each and that, Heinemann decided, was way too expensive. So I got on with
changing jobs, getting married and having children. I had tried starting
an adult novel - very Angry Young Man (think John Braine and Kingsley Amis).
I bought a portable typewriter especially to do it. I wrote the
first chapter, thought it was ok and them wondered what happened next. I
had no idea, so I used the typewriter to type examination papers, as God
intended.
Then I moved to a College of Education. In the library I
found a new world. Children's Literature really seemed to be becoming an
accepted art form in its own right, worthy of critical study and appearing in
University English degrees. Alan Garner, Philippa Pearce, Bernard Ashley,
Rosemary Sutcliffe, Robert Leeson, Susan Cooper, Leon Garfield. Writers
of extraordinary talent and power. Then I read CS Lewis's essay 'On
Three Ways of Writing for Children.' It was, to me, mind-blowing.
'I could to this,' I thought. 'And I shall.'
The Middle Ages and the Wakefield Master came to my aid again.
I wrote my first novel, Pageants
of Despair, at least partly to see if I had the stamina to write
60,000 consecutive words. Well, it seemed I had, so I sent it off to my
old editor at Heinemann Educational Books asking him to deliver it to the
children's book department.
Then I waited. And waited. A year went past. I met
an author who told me not to worry: the longer a publisher kept a book the more
likely they were to take it. So I went on waiting, full of a confidence very soon
to be knocked out of me. On Christmas Eve, 1972, the front doorbell rang.
There was the postman with a parcel. I opened it and found my
novel inside... WITH NO LETTER, NOT EVEN A POSTCARD.
I was beside myself with fury. I wasn't much fun that
Christmas. But as soon as 1973 started I plotted a revenge. I
divided the book into nine sections of two chapters each, sent each section to
one of the nine publishers who seemed to me to be the best and enclosed a
letter saying that if they wanted any more I'd send them the rest. Three
weeks later a letter came from Pamela Royds of Andre Deutsch asking to see the
rest. Next day a letter came from the Bodley Head. Then Methuen.
Just savour all those great names from the past.
And then Pam wrote another letter, couched very circumspectly.
'I think I like this enough to make it worthwhile to meet. Could you
come to lunch on...?' Slightly worried by 'think', I arrived in Great
Russell Street far too early and spent half an hour walking up and down between
Tottenham Court Road and the British Museum feeling more and more scared until
it was time to enter the rickety Victorian house, home of Andre Deutsch, the small but influential literary publisher. I met Pam, we shook hands and then she
said 'Come and have some lunch.'
Publishing was different in those days. Andre Deutsch had a
small dining room on the top floor run by a French chef. The first thing
I saw was a table loaded with every alcoholic drink known to humanity.
'What will you have?' asked Pam. I didn't answer. I just
stared at it, realising what they meant about publishing being a career fit for
gentlemen.
'Have a whisky,' she said. 'You're going to need it.'
As she poured it I wondered why. Then she led me to a table,
produced my novel and said, very severely, 'What do you think you've been
doing? We editors stick together. We could have put your novel together
without you bothering to send the rest. We don't like it. We're
busy people and you've wasted our time. Don't ever do it again.'
I was quite cross and told her that I'd had my time wasted by them, over a year in fact, and at that rate I'd have my telegram from the Queen long
before anyone published Pageants. Anyway,
with any luck the day's outcome would mean that I wouldn't need to.
'Besides,' she said. 'The first three chapters are awful.'
Before I could say, 'Thanks very much. I'll fetch my coat now,' she
added, 'Get rid of them and I'll publish it because apart from them it's good.'
The first edition of Pageants of Despair published in 1974
The second US edition published in 2006 by Paul Dry Books
The first was published by SG Phillips in 1975. The firm folded six months afterwards. Think what you like!
To be continued in our next.
PS. Sorry. I meant December 14th and January 14th. We'll have been back three weeks before February 14th dawns. Do keep up, Hamley..
PS. Sorry. I meant December 14th and January 14th. We'll have been back three weeks before February 14th dawns. Do keep up, Hamley..
Comments
So glad Pam did take you on, otherwise we'd never have met, and I wouldn't have had the privilege of editing you too.
Have a great trip to NZ. Look forward to reading parts 2 &3
xxxxJuliaxxxx
Longing for the next parts of your story now. A different but not always so different world.
Have a wonderful time with Kay in NZ.
I hope you have a great time in New Zealand.
Jane, or may I call you Julia? I didn't know who was commenting at first. Yes, we had good days at Scholastic, Pam, you and me. Listen up, folks, this is the wonderful lady who edited the first three Joslins and helped me see not only the way which they should go but got me into writing Point Crimes in the first place, thus turning my writing career around when I was thinking it might be running into the sand. She'll be appearing in Part 2, whether she likes it or not.
Cally, I'm so glad S of the P passes muster. And I've made my peace with Kay.
Penny, you're in part 2 as well.
'I've got a novel for you, Mrs Royds, I said
To Pam, the boss of this ere publishers...'
Something like that, anyway. I never met Andre Deutsch, the actual boss, in all my years of cruising in and out, but the phone rang in the publicity office one afternoon while Sheila Murphy (forgive me if i'm wrong) slipped out for another bottle.
'Who are you?' he said.
'Jan Needle. One of your children's authors.'
'Ah', he said. 'Pleased to meet you. Make sure you keep warm, won't you?'
And that was that.
Ah, how things change. Last night I ended up slipping into a Manchester dive in what they now call, oddly, The Northern Quarter. There to listen to Dan Holloway blasting out some terrific poetry, while the wall behind him scrolled the names and comments of other poets, and friends, from all ower t'world, lad. What would Andre have said to that, I wonder?
Keep warm, probably!
Love to Kay, and hurry back from God's Own.
I also copied your post-script to the end of your blog, and deleted your later one, so it didn't appear as a confusing mini-blog all by itself.
The blog-brownie will happily accept all offering of bread milk, but would prefer cake and cream.
Sue, you are a star. I've made a habit of doing extra blogs because I've forgotten something. Perhaps now I too can make them postscripts. And you SHOULD have won the Carnegie at 16 - and 32 as well And the Sterkarms, even (or especially) if the third has to be indie, should have a specially minted Trilogy Medal, together with a rather large cheque.
Still plugging away at Echo Hall - and this encourages me to keep plugging!
Enjoy NZ and say hi to Kay.
And yes, Susan should undoubtedly have won the Carnegie for the Sterkarms, but really glad she won the Guardian. My proudest ever moment as an editor.
Oh and if this isn't incestuous enough, Virginia Moffatt above is my twin sister, and Dennis taught her creative writing...
Julia, I didn't know it was you who edited the magnificent Sterkarm Handshake. Brilliant. I always though it was David.
I'm waiting for Part II with bated breath. In the meantime, have a good Christmas in New Zealand.