The Recycled Sparrow
by Bill Kirton
(I know I used this book cover on last month's blog but it's relevant this time, too. Anyway, I've also messed around with the image and added the official accolades it's gathered - spoiling Sessha Batto's lovely cover design in the process. Sorry Sessha. It's another of my feeble attempts at marketing.)
Sometimes, in workshops or talks to writing groups, I remind people
that you don’t ‘write a novel’, you write some words, then some more words,
then some more – and eventually there’s a substantial pile of paper on the desk
and you realise you actually have written something that’s a lot longer than a
short story. I then add that, although that makes it sound easy and
unstructured, it’s not, and I have great respect for the form and conventions
of novel-writing. But it was a realisation that dawned on me as I was writing
my first novel, which, after several years and many rewrites, became The Sparrow Conundrum. It’s also a
reminder of the different people we have to be when we’re writing novels of any
sort.
Before starting the book, I’d written lots of stage and radio plays
which were produced and broadcast and a few short stories, but it never
occurred to me that I might be a novelist until I read about a competition and
decided to enter. I should point out that it now feels as if that happened
around the time of the dissolution of the monasteries – no blogs, no Twitter or
Facebook – just a biro, a notebook, an old portable Remington, lots of Tippex
and that horrible carbon paper. I didn’t win the competition but I sent it to
an agent and he took me on.
In the end, he didn’t manage to sell it, but the important thing was
that it had shown me I could sustain and control an extended narrative, so I
started writing the next one, which was an early version of The Darkness and which led me
to another agent and my first published novel, Material
Evidence.
Needless to say, The Sparrow Conundrum, while essentially
the same story, has evolved through rewrites, changes of setting and personnel,
updating and other processes. But mostly, the experience of eventually seeing
it in print and ebook form confirmed what I’d always believed – that ideas, words, even apparently unwanted stories can be
successfully recycled. The Darkness is
another example. As I said, it was the second novel I wrote but, after many,
many rewrites and changes of title, personnel, themes and a final significant
shift in its moral stance, it eventually seemed ready for publication. And both
have been well reviewed and won awards.
‘Recycling’ doesn’t just mean doggedly sending a book off to agents
and/or publishers until one of them surrenders; it suggests a deliberate
separation of the creative functions of writer, editor and critic. And that separation is even more critical now that it's become so much easier to publish our books. We all know
that a good editor can bring to a book insights that never occurred to the
writer but, with the power and influence of those excellent people waning
significantly nowadays (at least in the publishing houses), we need to make sure that we don’t lose the qualities
they helped to nurture. By all means write the first draft in a flurry of
creativity and carelessness, but then step back, assess it critically and be
your own worst enemy in judging pace, characterisation and the rest.
The Sparrow Conundrum started as a
spoof spy story, Glasnost forced a rethink on its market potential, so it moved
to a spoof crime story with North Sea oil at
its centre. Then North Sea exploration
techniques changed so more adjustments were needed. And so it went on, changing
location several times and titles even more. The interesting thing, though, was
that the absurdities of which the central characters were capable remained
relatively constant. So whether your ideas file is full of notes on the
adventures of Zarg the Enforcer in the Epsilon Galaxy, Vampiric recipe books, or
Miss Marple’s great granddaughter’s detective agency in downtown Auchterarder
(OK, she was a spinster but you never know),
don’t throw them away. Some judicious critical appraisal and subsequent
editing could make them intensely topical.
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