Abused Children Find a Voice - Andrew Crofts
At the beginning of the nineties I started
to receive phone calls and letters from people who wanted to write about abuses
they had suffered in their childhoods. These were not people who had had the
misfortune to be born in countries that were enduring brutal dictatorships,
civil wars or ethnic cleansing campaigns, these were people who had been born
and bought up in democratic, peacetime Britain , a country that prided
itself on being civilised, with developed social welfare services.
Their calls seemed to be cries for
help and as I talked to them I became aware of just how much courage it had
taken most of them to pick up the phone in the first place. These were people
whose experiences did not lead them to expect to be listened to or believed but
they had the courage to keep on trying to tell their stories. Many of the things
they told me tore my heart out and I felt sure there would be a readership for
them if I could just get them out into the bookshops.
I wanted to find out more about
their lives and I wanted to help them to tell their stories as movingly and
dramatically as possible. It seemed likely that if these stories were moving me
then they would move other people as well.
When, as a teenager, I read “Down
and Out in Paris and London ”
by George Orwell I had been particularly struck by a scene in Paris where Orwell reports meeting a man
called Charlie, who he describes as “a local curiosity”. Charlie tells of
visiting a girl who is being kept prisoner in a cellar which had been tricked
out as a bordello-style bedroom and was guarded upstairs by an old crone.
Charlie told how he gave the old woman a thousand francs, which he had stolen
from his drunken brother.
“Voila,” the woman said, “go down
into the cellar there and do what you like. I shall see nothing, hear nothing,
know nothing. You are free, you understand – perfectly free.”
Orwell reports Charlie’s
experiences in the cellar as if they make Charlie an interesting and colourful character,
but it struck me that it was the girl whose story was actually the most
mysterious and interesting. How had she got there? Who had betrayed her? What
was the rest of her life like? What was she thinking? What were her dreams?
What became of her? Her story seemed
more intriguing than the story of the narrator, (Orwell himself), an Old
Etonian playing at being a “plongeur” for a while, (a bit like an early version
of the student gap year), before becoming a literary legend.
The stories that I was now hearing
seemed just as fascinating, coming from a dark world that was unknown to me and
that I wanted to understand better. I couldn’t understand how so many people
could be getting away with abusing children and I had difficulty imagining what
it must feel like to be one of those children. It seemed to me that it would be
a good thing to shine some bright lights into these dark corners of the human
experience, so that everyone could understand more. They also seemed to me to be perfect fairy tales;
good versus evil, innocent little heroes and heroines fighting back against
terrible villains.
Filled with optimism I kept
listening to the stories, writing synopses and sample material and trying to
persuade publishers that they should publish them. The reaction was always the
same; “no one” the publishers all informed me, “wants to read such grueling
and depressing stories”. Child abuse, they believed, was all too horrible to
contemplate. Even among the most liberal of them I could detect skepticism;
was it possible that such terrible things could be happening in our own
country? Surely not.
But what, I kept asking, were
pantomimes like Cinderella and Snow White about if it wasn’t child abuse? And
what about Dickens’s tales from the workhouses and back streets of Victorian
England? Do we really believe that the Artful Dodger and his pals were required
to do nothing worse than steal a few pocket handkerchiefs and watches on behalf
of their violent, thieving, drunken masters? Even the orphaned Harry Potter
starts out abused by the aunt and uncle charged with his guardianship.
I truly couldn’t understand how the
same publishers could produce so many books about war, genocide and murder,
creating best sellers by glamorising, stylising and fetishising serial killers
and rapists, mafia bosses and military leaders, and at the same time think that
genuine, original stories by children who had been victimised were somehow too
tasteless to be told.
Then in 1995 Dave Peltzer
self-published his memoir, “A Child Called It” in America, and it became a
word-of-mouth bestseller, filtering up into my consciousness via my children
and their friends, who were passing it around in the school playground, much to
the consternation of some of their parents and teachers.
A few years later I received another
email from a man who wanted to write something similar about his own childhood
with a violent and abusive mother. I warned him that my experience told me I
might not be able to sell the book to publishers. He said that he was willing
to take the risk and wanted to commission me to write the book anyway.
It was a good story. Once it was
completed I sent it to an exceptionally discreet and gentle agent,
who I knew would be sympathetic when it came time to break the bad news to the
author that it was unsaleable. I had reckoned without the “Peltzer-factor”.
Within a week she had three
publishers making offers and the book went for a six figure advance. It then
sat at the top of the bestseller lists for weeks and eventually went on to be
made into a movie. The game had changed entirely. Other publishers saw this
success and remembered that I had been in to see them in the past. They started
ringing to find out if I still had any other stories that could be packaged in
a similar way. On one memorable day editors from three different publishing
houses, all having just come from editorial planning meetings, rang within a
few hours of one another with the same request. I had plenty of stories ready
and waiting, all I had to do was introduce the people with the stories to the
people who now really wanted the stories, and then write them.
The demand seemed insatiable.
Supermarkets started to stock the resulting titles in massive quantities and
kept asking the publishers for more. I was in a publisher’s office introducing one
of these clients when another publisher, who we had been to see earlier in the
day, rang my mobile. I excused myself and slipped out of the room to take the
call.
“If you leave that building now,”
the other publisher said, “I will give you quarter of a million pounds.”
I felt like Tom Cruise in “Jerry
Maguire”. The client and I then spent a surreal afternoon taking calls from the
two publishers, finally clinching the deal before putting her back on her train
home. Three months later exactly the same thing happened with another client’s
story of abuse. (I will be explaining later in the “filthy lucre” chapter how
sums like this will soon be whittled away by reality to become far less dramatic
figures, but these occasional episodes of apparent largess on the part of
publishers do at least provide temporary doses of adrenaline and optimism to
any writer’s life).
Books that I wouldn’t have been
able to interest anyone in a few months before were now the objects of
ferocious bidding wars between the publishers with the biggest cheque books. I ended
up writing about a dozen of them, selling some in conjunction with several agents and some under my own steam. For a while they
virtually all became bestsellers. There was one week when there were actually
three of them in the Sunday Times
charts at the same time. In some cases I was contracted to remain anonymous,
but several of them graciously put my name on the flyleaf, such as “The Little
Prisoner” by Jane Elliott, “Just a Boy” by Richard McCann, “Daddy’s Little
Earner” by Maria Landon, “Cry Silent Tears” by Joe Peters and “Please, Daddy,
No” by Stuart Howarth.
So, who was reading these books
which the publishers had been so sure would be too terrible for anyone to bear?
Initially there was the “tourist trade”; people who, like me, could not imagine
what it must be like to live in such a world and wanted to understand it
better. Then there were the actual citizens of this “hidden” world; the
children who had suffered or witnessed abuse and were wanting the comfort of
knowing that they were not alone. There is no way of ever quantifying how many
people suffer some sort of bullying or abuse in their childhood which leaves
them scarred in some way, but let’s take a guess that it is around ten per cent
of the population. That includes those abused in the home, in care, or by
authority figures like priests or school teachers. That is six million people
in the UK
alone.
Then there are those who simply
want to read scary, tear-jerking tales about little heroes and heroines
overcoming monsters; the same people who want to see Cinderella go to the ball
and Oliver Twist escape from the clutches of Fagin and Bill Sykes.
People who had been keeping their own
stories of abuse secret due to a mixture of fear and shame, suddenly saw that
it was alright to speak out. The stories I was being brought grew more and more
extreme and horrific. No one was going to be able to pretend that child abuse
was not a problem in society any longer. The misery memoir phenomenon became a
bubble, with all the big publishers rushing onto the shelves with look-alike
products. Within a few years the market was saturated and books that would
previously have been given advances of hundreds of thousands of pounds were
having trouble finding publishers once more.
The genie, however, was now out of
the bottle and it wasn’t long before abusers and bullies were being named and
shamed in any number of previously inviolable institutions from schools to
churches, orphanages to mental hospitals and even the BBC, to a point where it
started to look to some like a witch hunt.
Some time later I heard a highly
distinguished publisher on a podium being asked by a member of the audience
what he thought of the “misery memoir” genre. He was not one of those who had
joined in the gold rush and I assumed that he was going to say something
dismissive.
“I think they changed the art of
autobiography forever,” he said. “They forced authors to be much more open and
revelatory. It is no longer good enough to tell anecdotes about the day you “met
Prince Philip” or “danced with Sammy Davis Junior”; if you want to capture the
hearts of readers you have to open up your emotional life as well and talk
honestly and from the heart. I think they did the genre a great service.”
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