Magic, demons and the 7 Deadly Sins by Griselda Heppel
In my wildest dreams I
never thought I'd get a Double First. (I'd happily settle for a Single First
but that's not going to happen either.)
So I'm enjoying the pleasing double ring in the fact that today, First
November, I'm posting my First Ever blog for Authors Electric.
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A Faustian tale for Halloween |
It comes the day
after a somewhat strenuous school visit, in which my aim was to persuade 40
Halloween-fixated Years 7 and 8 that stories of pacts with demons, crystal
balls, charms, spells and alchemy, all dating back hundreds of years, are at
least as exciting as pointy hats, plastic orange pumpkins and wriggly worms.
I'm pretty sure I succeeded. Mostly.
More exciting than a pumpkin |
Even more important - and this is why I love
school visits - is the chance to enthuse children with the sheer magic of books
themselves. Some will be keen readers already. Others, not yet, but give them a
glimpse into other worlds and you never know when they may follow it up. My
favourite books as a child were either retellings of great myths and legends - T
H White's The Once and Future King, Roger Lancelyn Green's The Tale of Troy - or stories that
recreated a classical world of monsters and magical creatures, such as C S
Lewis's The Narnia Chronicles. These
were all terrific stories in their own right: I didn't need to know anything
about Malory or Homer or Ovid to enjoy them. Only much later, encountering
those authors at university, the feeling of coming home I experienced filled me
with an even stronger appreciation of the writers I'd loved as a child. They
really, really knew their stuff. More, they were determined that children
should have the chance to know it too.
So when, at the end of my talk (sometimes
during, which can be distracting but hats off for enthusiasm), somebody asks,
'What made you become a writer?', the answer is easy. I had to. Because while
you'll find hundreds of books by excellent children's authors based on King
Arthur and the Greek and Roman gods and heroes, some of the world's greatest
literary works have been ignored in this respect.

Why did no one do it before? My guess is
that people assume that Dante, a 14th century Italian poet studied by
theologians and academics, must be too difficult for children. In my experience
young people are often underestimated in the kind of ideas they can grasp and
enjoy. In my school visits, I sketch in a few details about Dante and the
purpose of the Divine Comedy. I
invariably find the audience fascinated by the idea of a Hell based on myths of
the underworld (some of which they know), arranged into individual circles for
different kinds of wrongdoing. Many of them want to read Ante's Inferno as a result (hurrah!) but more importantly, they've
been given a taste of the great wealth of literature and legend that's out
there.
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The 7 Deadly Sins - popular with children |
Which brings me to the topic occupying my
current school visits. Not Greek legend and the Seven Deadly Sins - also very
popular with children, incidentally - but Elizabethan magic and devilish bargains. Perhaps you can guess the inspiration behind
my latest book, The Tragickall History of Henry Fowst, in which a 13 year-old boy, finding himself in a spot of
bother at school, hits on the brilliant idea of summoning supernatural aid.
Unfortunately, entering into a pact with a
helpful fellow called Mephistopheles lands Henry in rather more trouble than
he’d bargained for….
Comments
And, by the way, welcome to AE.