Weatherhouses and hearthstones by Sandra Horn
What is pc when writing for children? I was struck by the
woman on a recent programme about children’s television who said that the early
programmes were ‘too middle-class.’ They were certainly voiced by people with
impeccable diction and no trace of regional twang. Now, one thing that seems to
unite most TV presenters, whatever they are presenting, is an inability to
pronounce the letter ‘t’. It has become a glottlestop. Oops, I’ve digressed
into a personal gripe. Sorry. Where was I? Yes, this woman on the TV made me
think about whether we should write from where people are (or where we think
they are) or from where we would like them to be.
Aspirational, that’s the word. Is it wrong? The woman of TV mentioned Grange Hill as more appropriate to the needs of modern kids. Well, I’ve been there; spent two long terms in a local secondary school trying to
interest and enthuse 14-year-olds in writing stories for younger children,
while they surreptitiously played on mobile phones and plugged their ears in to
MP3 players or similar. The teachers couldn’t hope to control it all. So, no, I
didn’t start from where they were. I vetoed stories about Michael Jackson for a
start – and anything else from that kind of pernicious, sexualised culture. Am
I showing my age? I expect so. The stories they were working on were aimed at 5-year-olds, after
all.
In the end, 95% of the kids produced gorgeous, colourful , age-appropriate books and produced them with great thoughtfulness and care. We used a chunk of the budget to have the books colour-printed and bound and had an exhibition of them in the library. It was the hardest work I have ever done and by the end of each day I was so tired that I lost my way home twice (the school is about half a mile away from my house!). BUT what I hope and believe is that, for that one day each week, those teenagers were encouraged to come out of their cocoons and fly. Grow. Shine. Be proud. If this all sounds too, too middle-class, well, I didn’t start from there and I won’t apologise for wanting the same chances that I was given, for those kids, so there.
In the end, 95% of the kids produced gorgeous, colourful , age-appropriate books and produced them with great thoughtfulness and care. We used a chunk of the budget to have the books colour-printed and bound and had an exhibition of them in the library. It was the hardest work I have ever done and by the end of each day I was so tired that I lost my way home twice (the school is about half a mile away from my house!). BUT what I hope and believe is that, for that one day each week, those teenagers were encouraged to come out of their cocoons and fly. Grow. Shine. Be proud. If this all sounds too, too middle-class, well, I didn’t start from there and I won’t apologise for wanting the same chances that I was given, for those kids, so there.
Now I’m going to write what I’d planned before the TV
programme started me off on a rant. It’s not quite the same issue, but not
entirely different either. Many, many moons ago, I wrote the first The Hob and
Miss Minkin stories, set in and around my fictionalised home in darkest Sussex
(dubbed Cold Comfort Farm by my husband). Someone in my writing group objected
to the hearthstone where the cat and Hob meet each night, as ‘children in tower
blocks will never have seen one or know what they are.’
Similarly, when I wrote
the very first version of Rainbow! The response from a publisher was ‘children
won’t know what a weatherhouse is’. I’m
not sure where or when I first saw one of those quaint little houses with two
doors which were supposed to predict the weather depending on whether the man
or the woman came outside. I do remember being enchanted by them. We were once
given a ghastly version with a plaster ‘Red Indian’ wearing an apron bearing
the inscription ‘Apron blue, sky is too. Apron pink, weather stink.’ Yuk.
In the end, in my stories, the hearthstone stayed and the
weatherhouse is there by implication in Samuel Sunshine and Rosina Raindrop’s
world. DIY publishing – love it!
My latest WIP is about a silver cruet set in the form of a
ship with a Phoenix figurehead. No, I’ve never seen one either.
Children won’t know about X or Y or Z? They will after
reading about them. Isn’t that what
stories are for?
Lifting us from where we are to a new and different place –
isn’t that what stories are for?
Comments
Balance, as in all things.
How would anybody ever learn anything if they were only allowed to know about what they already know?
If children don't know what a weather-house or a hearthstone is, they can ask somebody. A parent, a teacher, a grandparent, whoever. Then, as the old tales say, 'Their evening will be wiser than their morning.'
As a child I constantly badgered my parents with questions about what I was reading: what does this word mean? What's a panther? What's a vortex? How do you build a rude hut of branches? If they knew, they told me. (Or showed me.) If they didn't, we looked it up.
This is called Learning. The idea of only telling children about what they already know is stultifying.