How I Became An E-Book Writer - Part II: Winning Smarties Gold With 'Midnight Blue', by Pauline Fisk
Then suddenly I
found myself heading for my forties, the mother of five children under the age
of eleven, including a new baby. And despite all my busyness, an overwhelming
sense of emptiness settled like fog upon my life. Who was I really?
Was I the person I seemed to be, or someone else? Where was I
going? Where was the person I used
to be? That little girl once called Pauline Fisk who had so longed to be a
writer when she grew up – where was she?
For more than a decade, Dave and I had lived in a cottage in a village on the Shropshire flank of the Long Mountain. Our house overlooked the Norman tower of its parish church. We had a huge, rambling and often unkempt garden and good sized rooms, but there weren’t many of them, our windows were tiny, our ceilings low and it was easy to feel cramped. Bringing up three children in that cottage felt like a crush. Four and I was panicking. Five, and we had children sleeping on window-sills. I kid you not. When you’re married to an architect, you have to prepare yourself for lateral thinking. Architects don’t solve problems the same way as anybody else.
At the front of
our house was a tiny study with a huge open fireplace, which we’d pile into on
winter nights because it was so warm.
Dave came up with the idea of a swing-bed on the wall, which we could
sleep in, freeing up a bedroom for a couple of the kids. He built it out of a
massive old door, with a mattress tucked behind it, hinged up against the wall
by daytime and pulled down by night.
It didn’t look particularly inviting, and was hard to climb up into, but
it turned out to be a bit of a nest.
In fact I learned to love that bed. The only time I didn’t use it was
when Idris was born.
Even so, he was
born in that room – the fourth of my children and the first to come into the
world by acupuncture home delivery. And my fifth child, Grace, was in that room
as well, sleeping in a moses basket when it suddenly hit me that I had to start
writing again.
This is one of
the strangest episodes in my life. I was seated in my favourite armchair by the
fire, with an empty armchair opposite me and Baby Grace in the moses basket on
the floor. Suddenly a strange man appeared before my eyes. He literally came into existence in the
armchair opposite me. I can’t remember his face, but I remember that he wore a
white shirt, and that blood was pouring down it from a gaping wound. Before I could say or do anything, he
fell out of the chair, collapsing onto the floor - and died. Before giving up the ghost, his last
words were, ‘If you don’t write my story, nobody will ever know who killed
me, or why.’
As anyone who
knows me will tell you, I have an imagination. Sometimes that imagination is a problem, sometimes
it’s my friend. On this occasion
it was my conscience, pricking me to life. Ever since my first book of short stories had been published,
I’d been burying myself in other things.
Something had been wrong with that book, but I’d been too young and
inexperienced to know what it was. The result of this was that a crushing fear
of failure stood in the way of my writing any more. For one glorious moment I’d
been on the verge of a literary career, but then I’d got cold feet. It was so
much easier to say you know I could have been a writer if I wanted than to take the plunge and really go for it, only to find that I
didn’t have what it took.
What was wrong
with that first book, I now realize, was its lofty, highly-unnatural tone,
pitched half way between Tolkien and the King James Bible - this being what I
reckoned a book had to sound like if its author was to be accepted as a ‘proper
writer’. I had yet to learn to trust in me, in my own voice. The most important lesson an author can
learn. And yet even all these years later, when I did start writing again,
shocked into action by the man with the bloody shirt, I still wasn’t using my own voice.
For the next few
years, I wrote articles, radio plays, short stories and poems, all in the house
style of who ever I was trying to pitch to. That, I was told, was the way to make money as a writer. And sometimes I did, but more often
than not I didn’t. And then, in a
sudden, completely unexpected ‘what the hell’ moment, I gave up on trying to do
it that way, and started doing it my own.
I made a conscious decision to write in my own voice, and only write
what I wanted, never mind the money, or the pitching or anything else. I didn’t have to sound like Tolkien to
be a proper writer, or Ray Bradbury or Raymond Chandler or anybody else whose
books I liked. I had – note that
word had - to sound like me.
Finally I had
got it. The penny had dropped. Why then I’ve no idea, but life’s like
that sometimes. Things just come.
And that’s when I started writing ‘Midnight Blue’. What did I want to write above everything else? Novels for children and young adults
[though they weren’t called young adults back then]. What did I want to write about? Magic hot air balloons.
Years before,
back in the Brick Barns days, which I wrote about last month, I’d written a
story, ‘Ben the Balloon Man’, about a magic hot air balloon piloted by a sky
gypsy. Now I read a book called ‘The Flight of Condor I’, by adventurer Jim
Woodman , who along with the English balloonist Julian Nott, had attempted to
prove, out in the deserts of Nazca, that the Inca had the technology and skill
to fly balloons a thousand years ago.
Jim Woodman is
now dead, but Julian Nott has gone on to greater things. He’s the balloonist who’s broken all
the records and been the one to do new things first. Nowadays he’s to be found
working for NASA, putting balloons around Saturn. However, he says the Condor I
flight was the stand-out ballooning event in his life. I’m proud to say that he
has the artwork for the new ebook version of ‘Midnight Blue hanging in his
office in California. If you visit
his website, you can find the Nazca link, and see that ‘Midnight Blue’ gets a
mention.
But having ideas
is one thing, executing them another – especially if you have five
children. With a toddler still not
old enough for school, and four other fairly young children in a variety of
different schools, it was a hard time to start on a novel. Every day I’d get up
at 5.00am and write for two hours before the children awoke. This has since become a life’s habit
[I’m writing this at a quarter to five]. I’ve talked about this before, I know,
but there’s something special about that first hour between sleep and
wakefulness. The writing I do then
is like the cream on top of the milk. There may not be much of it, but little
and often is still how I like to work.
That way the writing never goes cold on me. The ideas keep coming and I keep getting them down.
‘Midnight Blue’
was a huge success. Nothing
prepared me for this. After the
book was published, I went down to London for some reception – I can’t remember
what. Everybody at my publishers seemed to think my being invited was a big
deal, but a big deal for me was the fact that I had a novel in print. When I arrived at the reception, I was
completely unprepared for what happened next. People kept coming up and wanting to meet me, and
congratulating me. I didn’t know that I was on the Whitbread Children’s
shortlist, because it had only just come out. Then it turned out I was on the Smarties shortlist too.
Nobody had ever heard of me, and I was up against big names for these prizes,
and everybody wanted to give this unknown author from nowhere a bit of a
once-over.
The award
ceremony for the Smarties was at the Barbican in London. I took Dave and two of my daughters
along for moral support. Nobody
else had children with them - though, as this was a children’s award, I
couldn’t see why not. The place
was packed with publishing people who obviously all knew each other [everybody
seemed to know everybody else, except me]. The big names stood in the midst of their entourages. Roald Dahl wasn’t there because he was
in hospital, but I remember Andrew Davies of Pride and Prejudice fame, and his
shock of white hair, and Gene Kemp was there, and lots of other authors too
but, looking back, they’re all become a bit of a blur.
I do remember
Susan Hill though, who as head of the judges came to tell me how much she loved
my book. Someone else said it was
the book that everyone was talking about. Someone else mentioned the words
annus mirabilis. Even so, it
seemed to me that my chances of winning were fairly remote. As an unknown author from a fairly
unknown publishing house, I hadn’t even given an acceptance speech a moment’s
thought. I was just happy to be included in the event.
When ‘Midnight
Blue’ was called out, the words seemed to come from a million miles away. I remember stepping forward to receive
congratulations for winning my category award and it being a struggle to get my
head round beating Roald Dahl. But then, after all the other congratulations
for other categories, the name ‘Midnight Blue’ was called again. There were
gasps all round the Barbican. I stood there feeling sick. I had won the Smarties Gold Award.
I don’t remember
what I said, except that it ended with a Bob Dylan quote and somewhere in the
middle of it all I said something about my children and Dave never having
matching socks. Afterwards I was interviewed, filmed and photographed. Then there was lunch with my agent and
publishers, my daughters going on about the cost of it all and who was going to
pay [a common theme in our
house]. Then it was off to Liberty’s - a triumphal trip that saw me sitting atop
a pile of Persian rugs in my posh [charity shop] frock, pulling them back one
by one deciding which to spend my prize money on.
It was a big
cash prize. I have that Persian
carpet to this day. I also have
the Parker Centennial fountain pen, all £250 pounds worth of it, that I bought
the following day. I remember reading somewhere about JK Rowling’s first
indulgent purchase being an aquamarine ring. Well, my indulgence was a fountain pen. For years I’d been
eyeing it - and now it was mine. And I’m telling you, writing with it feels as
good now as it ever did.
.
So there you
have it, Part II of how I became an e-book writer - Me and ‘Midnight
Blue’. This photo was taken in the basement cafe at Liberty's, me the cat with the cream savouring my win. I don't think I ever felt happier than I did at that moment. The birth of my children were the highlights of my life, but they came with pain. And there was no pain here. Believe me.
I didn’t win the Whitbread, but it was still an amazing year. Jenny Nimmo, who lived nearby, said from her experience of winning Smarties Gold too, that nothing in my life would ever be the same. And she was right.
I didn’t win the Whitbread, but it was still an amazing year. Jenny Nimmo, who lived nearby, said from her experience of winning Smarties Gold too, that nothing in my life would ever be the same. And she was right.
So what did I do
next? By this time, ‘Midnight
Blue’ was being translated and read around the world. My publishers thought a
sequel would be a great idea, but I had ideas of my own. So many authors who
succeed with a first book discover they have nothing else in them. I was determined to prove that I wasn’t
one of those. I knew I was still
an apprentice writer and had a long way to go. And I wasn’t going to learn
anything, I reckoned, by regurgitating ‘Midnight Blue’.
In one month’s
time, I’ll tell you about the long apprenticeship that has been my writing life
since, and that lasts to this day. Part III of my writing life – What Else I
Wrote and How I Ended Up in E-publishing. In the meantime, in celebration of
the 21st anniversary of its Smarties win, ‘Midnight Blue’ has been
published for Kindle. If you’d
like to read it, the link is below.
PS. I still don't know who killed that man, or why.
PS. I still don't know who killed that man, or why.
.
Comments
Dennis, I was at the Book Trust the following year. It really didn't feel the same,j but I was relieved to see the Smarties Award being handed on in one piece as my cats had broken it, and it had needed to be repaired.
All of that feels so long ago - as indeed it was. And I learnt a lot from it, but that'S for next month.