A quick scan of my virtual Britain - Dennis Hamley
Here's another stage in the Great Virtual British Blog Tour to follow John's and Roz's. I volunteered - nay, asked - to do this, so I've no-one to blame but myself for this attempt to define and account for my Britishness or otherwise.
I've no camera here at the moment, so I can assure you with complete confidence that I am following to the letter John Logan's dress code for going on this tour.
Where were you born and where do you live now?
I was born in Kent in 1935 but my first home was in Oxted, Surrey. Now I live in Oxford. Only as I write this have I
noticed a certain symmetry here.
Such a progress from one Ox to another doesn't suggest much of a
wanderlust and indeed I can't claim long sojourns in Turkestan or Bolivia, as
most people worth their salt seem to be able. No, I was born a soft
Southerner and that's how I shall die - and proud of it. I suppose my
greatest deviations from the norm were the four years I spent in Stockport and
the three in Wakefield. They didn't even send me abroad when I was doing my National Service in the RAF.
Here's the very long link to my Amazon Kindle page which I hope works
http://www.amazon.co.uk/s/ref=nb_sb_ss_c_0_13?url=search-alias%3Ddigital-text&field-keywords=dennis%20hamley&sprefix=Dennis+Hamley%2Cstripbooks%2C157
And here's a shorter link to my website:
www.dennishamley.co.uk
I nominate:
Linda Newbery
Kamal Lathar
Robert Lipscombe
Cherry Mosteshar
I've no camera here at the moment, so I can assure you with complete confidence that I am following to the letter John Logan's dress code for going on this tour.
Where were you born and where do you live now?
I was born in Kent in 1935 but my first home was in Oxted, Surrey. Now I live in Oxford. Only as I write this have I
Dennis Hamley |
Has this made me inward-looking and parochial? I hope not.
I detest the concept of 'the little Englander.' Is there an order
of preference in my catalogue of identifications. Well, I'm English.
I can't help that. And I love England. I love its
countryside, its literature, art and music. I like its relative stability. I
like how, by and large it is (or was) - and I don't want to romanticise it - a
tolerant and welcoming country where a troop of uniformed men
goose-stepping down a street would probably make people laugh. That these
qualities seem to be changing in present-day society gives me much distress.
I'm British. Yes, I do believe in the Union - and I suspect that Scottish independence in the long run won't destroy it completely. The
three most important women in my life have been Welsh, Irish and now Kiwi.
To me, that's three varieties of Britishness, even though they might (no, would) all bridle at the very thought.
It may be dangerous to imply a generalisation from that tiny fact but I'm still
going to do it.
I'm European. I value that very much. Churchill's
dream (yes, he thought of it first) of a United States of Europe might make
many of my countrymen - mainly and ironically those who revere his memory the most - splutter over their brandy and choke on their cigars. I think that's a bit rich coming from a
land which has fought in every major war in Europe (except the Franco-Prussian)
over the last thousand years.
Any other identities? Yes, I think of myself as a citizen of
the English-speaking world. Vague but real. And now the big one.
Am I a 'citizen of the world'? I would love to think so. But I remember, back in the 50s when my
generation was finding out who and what it was, a sort of idealism which told us that the world was perfectable after all and we were the people to make it so. Though I was only ten when it happened, I remember so well the feeling of hope which Ken Loach depicts in his 1945 film, that at last society meant something, could be cohesive and fair after all, that health was now a right and not a privilege, that a working-class lad like me could have a secondary education (the first ever in my family) and go to university - and have a scholarship which meant I could enjoy my time there without going into impossible debt. However, I also realised that this was, unlike the NHS, not a right but a privilege and I had to make the best I could of it. I'm not necessarily making a political point when I say that I bitterly regret that such a spirit has almost disappeared in a sea of cynicism and citizenship of the world is a concept which now only gets hollow laughter.
Everyone else seems to have answered this first question in about
two lines. Sorry about that.
Have you always lived in Britain or are you based elsewhere?
Always in Britain. I didn't have enough experience of other countries to feel confident enough to set stories there, although I have made a few plot-driven fleeting virtual visits to them. But in the last six years I've travelled much more - and indeed have come to see New Zealand as a second home, so this may change.
Have you highlighted or showcased any particular part of Britain in your books? A town or city: a country, a monument, well-known place or event?
Well, sort of, but seldom places as they are
now. When I’ve written books set in the
present day I’ve fought shy of setting them in a real contemporary location. Though I have them in mind, I want to be free
to deviate from actuality (or, some
might say, ‘frightened of getting it wrong’). But I do
love interpreting them as I think they once were. In The
Long Journey of Joslin de Lay, London,
Oxford, Coventry and Hereford are four cities which I tried to recreate as they
were in the middle ages, as I also did with Wakefield (or Dunfield as, after
George Gissing, I renamed it) in my very first novel.
Have you always lived in Britain or are you based elsewhere?
Always in Britain. I didn't have enough experience of other countries to feel confident enough to set stories there, although I have made a few plot-driven fleeting virtual visits to them. But in the last six years I've travelled much more - and indeed have come to see New Zealand as a second home, so this may change.
Have you highlighted or showcased any particular part of Britain in your books? A town or city: a country, a monument, well-known place or event?
There
is an illusion – or myth if you wish – about British people that I would like
you to discuss. Many see the British as ‘stiff
upper lip’. Is that correct?
Actually, I wish I knew what it meant. Have you ever physically tried to hold your
upper lip stiff? To make sure, I’ve just
done it. It’s really quite difficult and
didn’t seem to me to connect with any recognisable emotional state or code of
behaviour. I suppose it means the
British are cold and reserved with their feelings all buttoned up and afraid to
express themselves. A better interpretation may be that they are
stoical. I can’t say I know many British
people falling into either category. The
first interpretation may have been true
once, especially in the days of Empire in which other nations only met Victorian
ex-public schoolboys as colonial
administrators who had ‘played up and played the game’ on the playing fields of
Eton. I hope, and believe, that this is an outdated model. Still, to adapt George Orwell, it's 'stoical' good,‘stiff upper
lip’ bad, I suppose. I hope
I’d be stoical in the face of real adversity
but I reject the upper lip accusation. I find national
stereotypes (as opposed to racial slurs which I abominate) funny and for me they express a sort of affection. But they should have no place in fiction except perhaps in satire. For example,I think 'Irish' jokes are funny (and so did my Irish wife), on a par with the 'stiff upper lip' of the English, but it's not the function of the novel to tell them.
Do
any of the characters in your books carry the ‘stiff upper lip’? Or are they all ‘British Bulldog’ types and
unique in their own way?
First of all, I don’t see how ‘British Bulldog’ types
can be unique. 'Types', by definition, aren't. If I thought any of my characters
needed to embody either quality then I’d try to give it to them. Offhand, I can’t remember any who did. I try to depict characters whose influence on
the story may be benign, may be malign, but that’s only because they are
flawed like the rest of us, without necessarily themselves having benign or
malignant personalities. If in my books
the British come off best, it’s because in a novel about the two world wars it’s a historical necessity. I’ve read several dystopic second world war
novels in which the Nazis win, from Giles Cooper’s The Other Man to Owen Sheers’s Resistance. I thought they were brilliant but disturbing. I admired – even envied – them but I don’t want to tackle the difficult alternative
history genre of ‘what might have been’.
What
are you currently working on?
I have three projects on the go and perhaps this
blog may be the spur to stop faffing around and getting on with them. The first
is to complete something I’ve been working on for some time. I’m writing what's intended to be a trilogy
for 11-14 year-olds set in 1803 in Nelson’s navy. The overall title for the trilogy is Bright Sea, Dark Graves (and
the British win, though that’s not the main point). I was promised a contract for the first with
an option on the others some years ago by a publisher which immediately had some big personnel changes which meant the offer was withdrawn.
That’s yet another reason why I’m on this blog. I’ve taken advice from the seafaring Electric
Authors, Julia Jones and Jan Needle, who’ve kindly pointed out some howlers in
my inadequate understanding of what it’s like actually to sail boats yourself, so I’m rewriting the first, have
a first draft of the second and more or less know what’s going to happen in the
third. The second project is to rewrite
a failed novel which was deservedly rejected a few years ago in which the main
character was the real Samuel Taylor Coleridge.
It needs a complete recasting and I think I’ve now got the central concept. We’re going to Sicily next
week and I’m going to have a good look at Syracuse and try to retrace some of
STC’s footsteps round it, because something happened to him there which is the
mainspring of the whole book. It’s now called
The Second Person From Porlock. And then I must finish the third book in the
Ellen trilogy. Ellen’s People, set in the First World War, and its sequel Divided
Loyalties, set in the Second, were published by Walker in 2006 and 2008 respectively. They work as separate books, though both deliberately end on a hook to start a next – but Walker didn’t seem to like
the idea of a trilogy. The third, without even a
working title, is about one-third of the way through and I will publish it as an Indie
along with reissues of the other two.
How
do you spend your leisure time?
We walk, go to art galleries, concerts and plays,
listen to music and travel, round Europe when we can and to New Zealand every
year for two months or so. I often say I
must go to more football matches but never seem to get round to it. But my beloved Pompey have fallen on hard
times, though I’ve given money towards the supporters’ bid to take the club
over. Somebody's got to clear out the crooks in charge who've ruined a great club. Sadly, Portsmouth is a bit far away for just a Saturday afternoon. Oxford United, I fear, don’t seem to hold the
same attraction.
Do
you write for local audiences or a global audience?
I’ll take my readers from wherever I can find them. But I've been translated into German, Spanish, Catalan, Italian, Norwegian, Danish, Dutch, Thai, Swedish, French and Serbo-Croat, so somebody likes the books.
Here's the very long link to my Amazon Kindle page which I hope works
http://www.amazon.co.uk/s/ref=nb_sb_ss_c_0_13?url=search-alias%3Ddigital-text&field-keywords=dennis%20hamley&sprefix=Dennis+Hamley%2Cstripbooks%2C157
And here's a shorter link to my website:
www.dennishamley.co.uk
I nominate:
Linda Newbery
Kamal Lathar
Robert Lipscombe
Cherry Mosteshar
Comments
If you want to use shorter links, eg to amazon pages, you can go to bitly.com, where you can put in links and they give you shorter versions, you can use them or customise them to make them even easier to recognise. Handy for your email signature etc. (Or just use the links button on blogger to turn the book title into its own link of course.)