Caught up in the machinery - Nick Green
The news of 19-year-old Sandra Isherwood’s half-million
pound deal for her YA debut Bjorkana will
fill many a struggling author with envy. On the surface it looks a neat
premise: young baseball hero Aidan falls in love with a tree spirit, in the
wood where an unsolved murder took place some years before – but you can also
see the buzz around this book as part of a wider trend. Look around, and you
may notice that it’s not the only recently hyped book that features ‘tree
people’ of some sort.
Except…
What’s that? Did you just try clicking on those links I
posted above? Oh sorry, didn’t they work? Maybe I pasted them incorrectly. Or –
maybe – I made them up. Maybe there is no debut called Bjorkana, no half-million pound book deal, no Evergreen Park , and maybe
Dan Williams is someone I went to school with. There’s no red-hot trend for
dryads in young adult fiction. Tree people aren’t the next big thing. Please
say I had you going there for a moment.
There is a point to all this, beyond me not being patient
enough to wait till April the first. This merry jape has invited you to glimpse
the absolute brain-munching absurdity of trends such as these. If I can
convince you in two paragraphs that the whole world suddenly wants to read
about talking logs, then the publishing industry, with all its power and might
and working lunches, can convince you of anything.
Trends may do good. There’s a strong argument that without Harry Potter to pave the way, Philip Pullman’s His Dark Materials would not have got the exposure it received. Also plenty of older classics by Eva Ibbotson and Diana Wynne Jones were ‘rediscovered’ (as if they hadn’t been there all along). But the pursuit of trends can become a race to the bottom, with every wizard/vampire/dystopia story being snapped up, regardless of quality, and thrown to the ravenous gaping beaks of the reading public. And it insults our intelligence. Because it implies: You’re only reading this stuff for the wizards.
I tweet at @nickgreen90125.
Sleeve detail from Bjorkana. |
Across the pond you have Evergreen Park by K. J. Granger, featuring characters who are essentially dryads,
exiled from their cleared forests and now living incognito in suburban Chicago .
And back in the UK, Dan Williams’s debut Oak Heart is
the story of a man whose soul was bound to a tree by dodgy 14th
Century witchcraft, and who as a result cannot die (or at least not easily).
All three are tipped to be bestsellers, and several more new titles spring to
mind that are in a similar vein. Yes, it’s starting to look as if tree people
might be the next big thing for YA fiction, following in the footsteps of
vampires, angels and what have you.
As with previous ‘big things’, the concept itself isn’t new:
there were Tolkien’s Ents, C S Lewis’s dryads and of course the Swamp Thing
comics. But now the idea of sentient trees, or tree spirits, is breaking out
into the mainstream (maybe I should say ‘branching out’?) and publishers are
smelling windfalls of cash.
Sadly for us poorer writers, it’s probably already too late
to jump on this particular bandwagon. But no doubt we can expect, with wearying
predictability, that for the next few years there will be bookshelves crammed
with tree-people, or wood nymphs, or forest daemons, or Spirits of the Wood.
Publishers have twigged (ha ha) what’s going on, and they’re ready to hype any
book with bark.
Trends may do good. There’s a strong argument that without Harry Potter to pave the way, Philip Pullman’s His Dark Materials would not have got the exposure it received. Also plenty of older classics by Eva Ibbotson and Diana Wynne Jones were ‘rediscovered’ (as if they hadn’t been there all along). But the pursuit of trends can become a race to the bottom, with every wizard/vampire/dystopia story being snapped up, regardless of quality, and thrown to the ravenous gaping beaks of the reading public. And it insults our intelligence. Because it implies: You’re only reading this stuff for the wizards.
Wizards, vampires, magic, spaceships, angels, robots – these
are all what’s traditionally called the ‘machinery’ of a story. The machinery
are the vessels that convey the story, and are the scenery amid which the story
takes place – but they are not themselves
the story. A good way to identify whether or not a story is really good is
to take away the machinery, and imagine the players in jeans and t-shirts
interacting on an empty stage. Do you still find it gripping?
Very often, someone will read a book that features vampires
(or whatever) and love it – and then look for other vampire books, in the
mistaken belief that it was the vampires, and not the story, that made it
special for them. When I first read The Lord of the Rings as a teenager, I
spent years trying to ‘get into’ fantasy, because I was sure that was what I
loved. I couldn’t understand why I kept on being vaguely disappointed, till I
realised it wasn’t the fantasy worlds that captivated me, but something about
the way Tolkien wrote. I’ve since discovered other wonderful fantasy writers,
but it’s always the writing that keeps me reading, never the machinery.
So if you happen to be in the publishing business, here’s
some helpful customer feedback. Forget what the book is ‘about’. Ignore the
trappings and surface details. And stop looking for the Next Big Thing. Because
the next big thing is just the old big thing, the only
thing that ever really mattered: good storytelling.
Nick Green.
Comments
And I agree wholeheartedly, Nick: it's the writing that makes the story - or not!
(Of course, I'm bound to say this, since I'm writing a novel about all-too-trendy angels - well, maybe they're angels. You'll have to wait and see, I reckon. Why the tease? Because I myself don't quite know what they are, at least not yet...)
Yes, I believed you Nick, and was already gnashing my teeth about that million-pound deal and at the same time working out how to throw my book on the passing bandwagon...
... oh, has it passed already?