Arvon and the things we forget: N M Browne
I have just returned from an
inspirational Arvon residential course at Tottleigh Barton. At least I found it
inspirational, I cannot necessarily make the claim for the sixteen eleven year
olds from Newham I was tutoring.
These days I generally work
with adults, tutoring and supervising MA students and much as I enjoy that,
there is nothing like the mind of a child.
Years ago, when I first started writing for
young people, I was often asked if I wrote for my own young children. My answer
was always ‘No.’ I would fix my
interlocutor with a beady eye and firmly state that I wrote for the child I had
been and to some extent remained. It is true that I have always written the
kind of story that would have excited me as a child. I’ve got a little wiser
and a great deal greyer but haven’t changed that much in any essential way: I
still love strange tales of magic and transformation, other worlds and secret
powers. I have added to the repertoire of stories I love, but subtracted nothing.
Now my children are more or
less grown up and I do fewer schools visits, it is still true that I write for
myself and yet….
This week I was obliged to remember what I had
not noticed I had forgotten: a children’s writer needs to hear children’s
voices. I was surprised to realise how much I’ve missed them: their energy,
their enthusiasms their unexpected naivete and occasionally startling
sophistication. The particular group I was working with were great: polite,
engaged, funny, responsive, talented and unspoiled. They were at that golden age where they could
understand complex ideas, experience and express deep emotion but had not yet
learned to be embarrassed or afraid of honesty, of self exposure: most of all
they still believed in stories. What I mean is that they gave themselves up to
a story in a way that fewer older children can and, although they did not
believe in magic, the distant possibility of its existence had not quite been
erased from their world.
I hope I gave them something this week in
fair exchange for what they gave back to me: the subliminal hum of childhood singing in my ear.
Comments