That Splinter of Ice in the Heart of Every Writer -Andrew Crofts
Living, as I do, in one of the
safest and most prosperous islands in the world, and being part of a
comfortable and loving family, it is easy to forget or to remain ignorant of
the depths of hellishness that man is capable of inflicting on his fellow man,
and frequently does. The collapse of the communist Eastern Bloc at the end of
the eighties released a hurricane of shocking and fascinating human interest
stories, carried back to the West by people who needed the help of ghostwriters
to tell them.
When Romanian President, Nicolae
Ceausescu, was toppled from power and executed in 1989 his country was released
from a quarter of a century of oppression. What horrified the outside world the
most, however, was what was discovered inside the walls of the “orphanages for
the irrecuperable” which littered the country. Thousands of children who had
been deemed to be of no use to Romania, or who had been “inconvenient” births, were
found locked up in these asylums, tied up in cots, starved, abused, driven
insane and beaten until they eventually gave up living. This was what medieval
Bedlams must have looked like. Western cameras went in and recorded scenes the
like of which we had not seen in Europe since the liberation of the
concentration camps after the Second World War.
After the collapse of Yugoslavia
stories of war crimes and ethnic cleansing emerged daily as different factions
and nationalities struggled to fill the power vacuum, using any atrocities they
deemed necessary. Soldiers, doctors, diplomats and charity workers all came out
of the area with tales of unbelievable barbarity and many of them also needed
ghostwriters to help them put into words horrors that had left them speechless.
The symbolic fall of the Berlin
Wall seemed like a new beginning. Although the stories that had been hiding
behind it were more prosaic than we had been led to believe by the propaganda
of the Cold War, at a personal level they were both shocking and awe-inspiring.
Individual stories of endless, grinding poverty, cruelty and darkness emerged into
the light. Each story that was brought to me seemed more gruelling and shocking
than the one before.
Out of that darkness, however, it
was possible to make out glimmers of hope as good people made huge sacrifices
and put their own lives on hold in order to help. A variety of ghost-written
books followed. There were tales of hopelessly crippled and apparently mad
orphans being saved by western surgeons and by the love of patient foster
families. Bombed orphanages were rebuilt by soldiers, charities were set up and
families who had been separated for a generation were reunited. There was so
much to do but no shortage of people who wanted to help, and who then wanted to
tell the stories of the horrors and the miracles they had witnessed.
For a writer it was a Pandora’s box;
scenes of unspeakable evil and personal struggles, often leading to happy
endings. I wrote the story of a small boy who had been tied up and imprisoned
in an orphanage cot for the first four years of his life, condemned by the
authorities as sub-human because he was believed to be both physically and
mentally handicapped, who was saved by a volunteer and given a full life in the
West. I did one for a soldier who rebuilt a bombed orphanage for a local town
in his own time and went on to create a full scale charity and another for an
English woman who had been trapped in Eastern Europe as a teenager when the
Iron Curtain was erected, not escaping back to her family in the West until the
curtain finally fell nearly half a century later. I also helped tell tales for
some of the pioneering business pirates and ex-politicians who built fast
fortunes as communism crumbled and a new frontier-land of opportunities opened
up for those bold and ruthless enough to grab them.
These stories were the absolute
stuff of life, horrifying and inspiring, sickening and uplifting, frightening
and dramatic. I seldom cried while I was actually there in the orphanages, or
actually listening to the stories, (was it Graham Greene who said “There is a
splinter of ice in the heart of a writer”?), but I confess that when I came to write
the stories the ice would inevitably melt into tears. The goal then was to
ensure that the readers would be equally moved to tears at the same time as
being unable to stop turning the pages.
That “splinter of ice in the heart
of a writer” that Greene talked about helps a great deal when listening to
stories that have the potential to break your heart. Ghosts, like other
authors, need to be able to remain objective, slightly distant, hovering above
the emotion, watching and noting what it looks and sounds like. But at the same
time we need to understand what it feels like in order to convey it to the
reader.
If the person who is telling you
the story is crying, then you need to be able to make the reader cry too when
you reproduce the story on the page, but you won’t be able to do that if you get too close. You need to be
interested in the story, amazed by it, moved by it, but you cannot let it cloud
the clarity of your own thoughts while you are interviewing.
Sometimes I have sat with people
who are in floods of tears when they tell their stories. More often they
struggle to hold in those tears, their chins trembling, their eyes and noses
running involuntarily, their voices cracking as they battle bravely on with the
memories that cause them so much pain and which they want so much to exorcise.
It is a cliché that many of the soldiers who had the most traumatic times in
the trenches of the First World War never wanted to speak about their
experiences once they got home. The same rule has applied to others who have
suffered since in different ways but times have changed. The medical profession
came to understand about post-traumatic stress and people are now encouraged to
talk about their traumas in order to learn how to cope with them. It is still
never an easy thing for most damaged people to do.
My role is to sit and wait, quiet
and encouraging; never criticising them, never comforting them, never rushing them,
just passing the tissues, assuring them there is no problem and waiting for
them to feel able to continue.
Readers want to be moved to tears
by stories, just as they want to be moved to laughter or to shrieks of fear.
They want to “feel something”. A ghostwriter must catch the elements that
produce that effect and reproduce them later on the page, not during the
interview.
I guess therapists and analysts
must work in the same way because often when I get to the end of the
interviewing process the subject will say they feel like they have just been
through a course of therapy. They are nearly always grateful to have been able
to unburden themselves but still the fact remains that there was a splinter of
ice required in order to achieve it – and that troubles me a little.
It isn’t only once work is under
way that a ghost has to remain detached. Often the people who make initial enquiries
about hiring a ghostwriter have heartbreaking tales to tell. To have to warn
them that the fact that they have lost a child in appalling circumstances or
been tortured for months by an oppressive regime, does not necessarily mean
that they will get a publishing deal, can seem unbearably cruel – but to give
them false hope would be far crueler.
I suppose it’s the same in many other
professions. A pediatrician must spend a large proportion of his or her time
having to give heart-breaking news to parents. A press photographer sent to a
war or disaster zone, a policeman dealing with the victims of a terrible crime
or having to break the news of a death to a family. All these people can only
function effectively in their jobs if they become detached in some way,
deliberately inserting Greene’s cold, hard, necessary splinter of ice.
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