Books you read over and over again - Elizabeth Kay
When I was a kid, my mother complained to one of my teachers
that I read the same books over and over again. “Just as long as she’s
reading,” said the teacher, with a smile. There were, of course several reasons
why this happened. Firstly, we didn’t have that many books at home, so the
choice was limited. My father’s books were all in Polish, and as I didn’t speak
the language I didn’t find out until many years later that Sienkiewicz was a
terrific writer. The book most people have heard of is Quo Vadis, which was made into a film. It’s available free on the
Kindle. Secondly, I’d often enjoyed a book so much that I wanted to repeat the
experience, get that same glow of visiting a favourite haunt once more. I think
I practically knew The Chronicles ofNarnia and the Silver Brumby
books
off by heart. And thirdly, by the time I was ten I’d read all the ones that
interested me in the junior library. A couple of years later I managed to
persuade the librarians to let me have a ticket the senior library, but I
hadn’t the faintest idea how to choose a book amongst this wealth of material.
I looked for anything about children and horses. This resulted in reading
harrowing case histories of the NSPCC – I still vividly remember the one about
the small boy kept in a chicken coop who could only cluck. The horse theme was
a bit of a failure, as well. A book called There
Must be a Pony by James Kirkwood sounded promising, but turned out to be
about adult relationships, although they were seen from the perspective of a fifteen-year-old
boy. The title was a reference to the story about a boy who is looking forward
to his birthday, but only gets a heap of horse dung. “With all this shit,” he
says, “there must be a pony.” A story about tigers materialised as something
obscurely far Eastern with strange women doing even stranger things with bars
of soap to a big game hunter.
It was Disraeli who said, “When I
want to read a novel, I write one…” And way back then, it seemed to be a good
solution. However, in the adult world very few writers read their own books for
entertainment, and I’m no exception.
The stories that draw me back
time and time again tend to be the ones that immerse me in their world, and it
needs to be a world that’s very different to the one in which I live. The Mary
Renault books – especially The King Must
Die and The Bull from the Sea –
not only gave me an authentic central character, but opened my eyes to Ancient
Greece in a very immediate and intimate way. You can understand Theseus’s
belief in the supernatural very easily when the natural world behaves in
strange and unpredictable ways, destroying whole cities with its earthquakes,
and devastating farmland with tsunamis. I Claudius
and Claudius the God do
something similar for ancient Rome, and once again the central character is so
well-imagined that you really do see a very alien civilisation through the eyes
of a member of the imperial family. More recently, Hilary Mantel’s novels about
Thomas Cromwell – Wolf Hall and Bring up the Bodies – have had the same
effect on me, and brought to life a period of history with all its intrigue,
posturing, plotting and subsequent paranoia.
The last one in this list, chronologically,
is The Lost World, by Sir Arthur
Conan Doyle (not to be confused with a the book of the same name by Michael Crichton). The moment it became available for the Kindle – and free, to boot
– I downloaded it and re-read it straight away. Okay, it’s the white Victorian
male proclaiming his dominance and superiority over the rest of life-kind, but
it’s the first ever book to bring dinosaurs to life. We know a lot more about
them now, and they’re not depicted all that accurately – but it doesn’t matter.
You have to take it in context. When Conan Doyle wrote it, it was cutting-edge
science. I have to admit that at the time I didn't believe in the unclimbable and unexplored table-top plateau that provides the setting for the book, but since then I've visited Venezuela and seen these tepuis for myself!
Some of the scenes are the most terrifying of anything I’ve ever read;
the creator of Sherlock Holmes really knew how to bump up the tension. His
descriptions are fantastic, and there’s one passage towards the end of the book
that made such an impression on me as a teenager that I’m determined to share
it here.
“…Professor Challenger drew off
the top of the case, which formed a sliding lid. Peering down into the box he
snapped his fingers several times and was heard from the Press seat to say,
“Come, then, pretty, pretty,” in a coaxing voice. An instant later, with a
scratching, rattling sound a most horrible and loathsome creature appeared from
below and perched itself on the side of the case… For a moment there was danger
of a general panic. Professor Challenger threw up his hands to still the
commotion, but the movement alarmed the creature beside him. Its strange shawl
suddenly unfurled, spread and fluttered as a pair of leathery wings. Its owner
grabbed at its legs, but too late to hold it. It had sprung from its perch and
was circling slowly around the Queen’s Hall with a dry, leathery flapping of
ten-foot wings, while a putrid and insidious odour pervaded the room…”
I think one
of the nicest things that can be said to any writer is that a child has read
their book more than once. I was thrilled to bits when a librarian told me that
a boy had taken out The Divide eleven
times! I’ve also had parents telling me the something similar. Although I’ve
written a number of books this is the one that children return to, and I feel
privileged to have created something that has touched other lives in a positive
way.
Comments