Inventing buildings, by Elizabeth Kay
These days, most people are
familiar with Hogwarts, Harry Potter’s
boarding school. The building itself is a castle, and seems to resemble an
Oxbridge College or public school more than anything, if its dining hall and common
rooms are anything to go by. Of course, there are magical additions which make
it all the more appealing, such as staircases that change position, and
invisible rooms. We can’t invent something from nothing, so we have to have a
starting point. Castles are particular favourites in fantasy land, and C.S Lewis
used them a lot. Cair Paravel is all that is good about a building like this, colourful
and full of feasting and tapestries and golden goblets. The domain of the White
Witch, with its stone statues in the courtyard created from living beings and a
gateway guarded by wolves, is cold and grey and all that is bad. Harfang,
inhabited by giants in The Silver Chair,
gives a child’s view of a medieval castle, seen from the perspective of someone
very small. The house in The Voyage of
the Dawn Treader is a day out at a National Trust property, with its lawns
and ivy-covered stone walls, and Mr Beaver’s house in The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe is every child’s dream den in
the woods. But they all had to begin somewhere.
In The Divide, my children’s fantasy set in
a parallel dimension,
the Library in Andria is extremely important as it houses
vital spell books as well as histories and maps. I used a unique café in
Bristol as my template, and built on it from there, using sweets to describe
the colours and give it a friendly feel. Felix and Betony are flying over it on
the back of a griffin, looking for somewhere to land.
They flew over another building.
They were lower now, and Felix could see it more clearly. This one was made of
wood, with asymmetrical window-frames and doorways. Pear-shaped windows,
kidney-shaped windows, twisted beams, sloping walls, an undulating roof. It was
almost as though the place had grown there, like a tree. The wood went from
cream to chocolate, with every shade of coffee and caramel and butterscotch
between. Each piece of timber was as smooth as a polished pebble, though
whether it had become like that through craftsmanship or
weathering was
difficult to say. The structure was very big, although it was only one storey
tall.
I became very fond of the
library. Betony, an elf, lives in a tree house. When The Divide was published in Japan it was re-illustrated, and the
artist, Miho Satake, drew something that was faithful in every single detail,
as well as being a really beautiful picture. When I wrote to her to say how
much I appreciated her work, she sent me the original. This was the description
from which she worked:
Felix had never been to Betony’s
home…The ladder led up to a platform, which went all the way round the tree
trunk. There were three rooms on the first floor; a living room, a storeroom,
and a dispensary for preparing potions. Sawn-off branches made a spiral
staircase to the next floor, which had two tiny bedrooms and a bathroom. A
barrel stored rainwater for showers, and drained onto the garden below. Above
that there was another floor, with two more bedrooms. The kitchen was in a
covered area on the ground, where the stove was. The living room was the only
room that had been properly finished; the floor was sanded and varnished, and
there were colourful cushions scattered around to sit on. Candles stood in lots
of little niches and the door was a curtain, made of some thick blue material.
There was a painting of some toadstools on one of the walls, and a weird and
wonderful plant was growing in a blue ceramic pot on the window ledge. It
looked like a succulent of some sort – a desert plant, anyway. Its stem was
thick, bulbous, swelling out like a beer belly beneath rolls of pale green
flesh. If it had possessed a head instead of a coronet of spiky leaves it would
have looked like a football-sized statue of a sumo wrestler, or a jade Buddha.
In the middle of the coronet sat one bright red flower.
“Hello
Socrates,” said Betony to the plant. “I haven’t seen you for ages.”
“Socrates?”
queried Felix.
“What’s wrong
with Socrates?” demanded the plant. “Good old-fashioned mythical name. Betony,
I’m as dry as a fire-breather’s backside. Tansy’s awfully forgetful.”
Felix’s mouth
dropped open.
Betony watered
the plant, and then she went around lighting candles with a wave of her hand,
muttering the incantation.
And this is
the drawing…
In Beware of Men with Moustaches, which was
shortlisted for the Dundee International Book Prize in 2013, I once again used
a castle, only this time it was based on one that I’d seen in Prague. A small
group of English poets are on a cultural exchange to the fictional ex-soviet state
of Karetsefia.
They tied up
at a small quay, and scrambled out onto the towpath. There was a flight of
steps leading upwards. And upwards. And upwards. By the time they reached the
courtyard Steve was lagging some way behind, so they waited for him beneath an
enormous ornate clock that didn’t look quite right.
“This is
famous astronomical clock,” explained Svetlana. “It was made by Kazimir the
Killjoy…”
“Killjoy?”
queried Ferris.
“I think this
is right word. Peasants believe that this clock will tell them day of their
death – see how hour is struck by skeleton with hammer?”
Steve mounted
the final step, and paused for breath.
“You OK?”
asked Ferris.
“Fine,” said
Steve. “It’s on occasions like this that I start to feel my age. I am after
all, the most senior member of our little band.”
“No you’re
not,” said Sybil. “I am.”
“Shall we go
inside?” suggested Igor. “No more steps. Now there is ramp.”
It was a long
ramp, too. When they reached the top they found themselves in an enormous hall,
which ran the whole length of the castle. The wooden floor was uneven and worn
very smooth, and it looked extremely old.
“This is very
famous room,” said Svetlana. “When Mongol Hordes bring Black Death to
Karetsefia, king and his family leave city and seek refuge here. Then they
catch the plague anyway. Mongol Hordes take over castle, but they do everything
on horseback, so they build audience hall for men on horses.”
“You mean they
rode right into the castle?” said Julie.
“Yes. When
Mongol Hordes leave, new king turns it into room for dancing. There is painting
of him on wall at end. There are many paintings here, including very famous one
of poet being shot by firing squad.”
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