Nick Green: A great philosopher once wrote...
"Naughty, naughty, very naughty!"
MWA HA HA HAAAAAAAA! |
There’s something about the shamans of Susan Price that I
find eerily familiar. Something about the way they see things that others
don’t. The way their spirits can travel to many different worlds. The way they
weave magic by using words, and can hold people spellbound with just a story.
Also the way that shamans must be trained in their art, but also must be born
to it – you need years of hard work to become one, but even that’s no good if
you’re not a shaman in your soul. What’s more, this cuts both ways: if you’re
born to be a shaman, then you’ll never be fulfilled until you become one. And
even then, maybe not…
Soon the similarities become too clear to ignore. The
conjuring with words, the intensive training, the working in isolation, the
living in a house on hen's legs, the professional jealousies – the list goes
on and on. Being a shaman is like being a writer.
(It's in the Beak District.)
In the third book, Ghost Dance, there’s a pivotal exchange
(don’t worry, this post is spoiler-free; would I do that to you?) – in which
the tremendous heroine, Shingebiss, pleads with her shaman mentor to help some
people in need. Or else, the apprentice demands, what’s the point of having
these powers? What’s the point of being a shaman at all?
It’s a very good question. Of all the shamans we meet in the
trilogy, few have obvious motives for what they do. Even the nicest ones seem
largely wrapped up in themselves, helping others only when responsibility tugs
at them – while the nastiest are driven more by spite than any grand plans of
world domination. If shamans have a common purpose at all, then it would seem
to be just that: being a shaman. The study of their magic is an end in itself.
Picture me slowly sitting up straighter as I realised this.
Like (I imagine) a great many writers, when the rejections come back or the tax
return is due, or the school visit goes badly or the Editor isn’t returning my
emails, or simply when I’m stuck halfway through a paragraph that’s the most
boring that I’ve ever committed, I am prone to ask myself ‘Why do I do this?’
But we're so cuuuuute!
It’s not that you should be careful what you wish for – but
do measure it first to see if it’s a good fit. The reality is, if someone asks
me about my books I usually change the subject, and my biggest extravagance is
high-quality cat food (you need the kind that’s good for their teeth). No, if
I’d wanted money I’ve have become a banker, like most of the scumbags I went to
school with, and if I wanted attention I’d play electric guitar and drums like
my extravert younger brother.
So, it’s not fame, acclaim or money. Eventually I worked it
out. I write because I want to. Because I have to. Because, like the
spirit-plagued Ambrosi in Ghost Song, I’d be haunted every moment of the day
and night by the thing I wasn’t doing. Or because I’d have ended up living a
life that wasn’t really mine, as Chingis would have done if her real mother had
kept her.
What writers or shamans do with their powers is up to them.
But in the end, they do it simply because they can. Because they must.
That’s my reason for writing. What’s yours?
I tweet at @nickgreen90125
Comments
Why are you posting anonymously? Of course, this does avoid embarrassment.
(And any typos of my own are due to the fact that I can hardly read numbers and letters at the moment. It's called a macular hole.)
Lee - good luck for the operation, and may it be successful!
And Nick, I'm very interested to know why you don't recommend gerbils as pets? We had gerbils. They ate each other. That would be my reason. I wonder if yours is the same or if there's some other horror the critters get up to. I recommend Guinea pigs every time.
Keeping a spelling troll as a pet, now that would be even worse than Gerbils right?