Letting a book settle, by Elizabeth Kay
It’s only since I’ve been regularly reviewing two books a
month for a magazine that I’ve started to think about how I read, as well as
how I write. I have reviewed one AE book – TheSurvival of Thomas Ford by John A. A. Logan. I could fill every slot with books by friends
and associates, but I don’t think that would be terribly ethical! The
children’s review is written by a nine-year-old, so I’m limited to adult books
and I’m meant to select ones that I have enjoyed. Easier said than done.
Although I occasionally choose a classic - Cold Comfort Farm and The Day
of the Triffids, for instance, I’m mainly meant to be looking at work
that’s been published fairly recently, for people who read a lifestyle
magazine. This has meant buying a lot of books for my Kindle, frequently by
authors who are new to me, and it’s pot luck as to whether I’ll end up
reviewing them or not. I find that many of them start off well, and then tail
off, which is always disappointing. What has surprised me are the ones which I
remember – the ones that have had time to “settle”. This has much in common
with writing; leaving something for a while and writing something else means
that you come back to it with fresh eyes, and are far more likely to edit in a
constructive way. What has surprised me, though, is that the books I read are
doing the same thing. There are ones I feel I ought to remember – the author
has a good reputation, or I’ve heard a review on the radio or read one in a
newspaper. So many of them leave less of an impression than a fly’s footprint.
So as I’m sitting here I’ll try and recall those that resonated, those that
caused me to have an emotional response, perhaps, because a physical reaction
to something occurs in a different part of the
brain to a cerebral reaction, and leaves a footprint all its own.
Elephant Moon, by John Sweeney,
was an
unexpected winner. Sweeney is best known for being the journalist who
completely lost it when making a programme about Scientology, and the clip on
YouTube has been viewed over a million times. The book is set in Burma during
the Second World War and describes the journey of a young English teacher and a
group of Anglo-Burmese children who set out for India in a rickety bus, after
the fall of Singapore.
Gone Girl, by Gillan Flynn – no surprise
there, other than the ending!
NothingTo Envy: Real Lives In North Korea by Barbara Demick. The opening picture has real impact; it’s a
satellite image of North and South Korea at night. South Korea is ablaze with light,
and North Korea? A couple of dim little spots, and otherwise – total darkness.
Nothing is True and Everything is Possible by Peter Pomeranstev. It
reads like a piece of fiction, the characters are so extreme and the situations
so bizarre. A perceptive and appalling account of modern Russia by a TV
producer who worked in the country for a number of years. Read it, discover the
media metamorphosis of Putin from a shadowy KGB person to a bare-chested Harley-riding
pin-up, and be very afraid.
Cold Blood by Richard Kerridge. This
book was serialised on Radio 4, but I read it in hardback. It’s a most unusual
combination of acutely observed natural history, focusing on British reptiles
and amphibians, and autobiography. Woven in throughout are retrospective
thoughts about wildlife, and the frequently difficult relationship the author
had with his father. The quality of the writing is superb.
This brings
me back to letting books of my own settle. I have frequently had a long gap and
many re-writes before something has been published. The book that underwent the
greatest number of incarnations was Fury, eventually published by Barrington
Stoke but not available in digital format. It started life as an adult novel of
about 75,000 words, although the main protagonist was a teenager. The Furies of
Ancient Greece find their way into our world through a crack in a Grecian urn,
and all hell breaks loose for the girl who broke the vase and let them through,
Melanie. Several rejections later I realised that perhaps I was aiming it at
the wrong market, and I changed the viewpoint and cut it to 40,000 for a young
adult readership. Still no joy. Shortly after this I acquired an agent, wrote The Divide, and forgot all about the
book. When the suggestion that I wrote something for reluctant readers came up
I suddenly thought that perhaps I could cut this further, so down it went to
11,000 words and bingo – success. Barrington Stoke very kindly gave me back the
digital rights to another book of mine, Hunted, so maybe one day Fury will find its
way into the digital world too. I hope so!
Comments
Yes, it's important to allow a while for things to "settle", as you say, before forming views, I think...
Available in print in Sussex.