'There must be a story in that!' by Sandra Horn
At the beginning of January, we were in Turin for a few
days. On the first evening, through the (closed) hotel window and the traffic
noise, I heard someone singing. It sounded awful. ‘There’s someone out there
murdering ‘La Vie En Rose’, I said.
We came across the singer the next night. An African woman, crouched on the ground with a paper dish for contributions in front of her. Without the previous evening’s distortions, she sounded wonderful. A powerful voice with a Piaf-style raw edge to it. She was still singing the same song, and after she ended with ‘Alors je sens dans moi mon coeur qui bat, la la la la la la,’ she began all over again. We stopped to chat and make an ‘offering’. She spoke only French, no Italian, and we talked about Piaf and how much we had enjoyed the song. We parted with lots of blown kisses from her and ‘Je vous bennisse.’
We heard her the next night too, but didn’t see her. She was still singing La Vie En Rose, over and over again without pausing. I wanted to ask her how she came to be there; why she was singing outside in the cold, with such a great voice. We didn’t see her again, but on our last evening, I heard her through the hotel window – still the same song, three times over, and then suddenly something else. Impossible to tell what, but it sounded like a wild chant. I’m haunted by her, but PLEASE, everybody, anybody, DON’T tell me that ‘there must be a story there’!
We came across the singer the next night. An African woman, crouched on the ground with a paper dish for contributions in front of her. Without the previous evening’s distortions, she sounded wonderful. A powerful voice with a Piaf-style raw edge to it. She was still singing the same song, and after she ended with ‘Alors je sens dans moi mon coeur qui bat, la la la la la la,’ she began all over again. We stopped to chat and make an ‘offering’. She spoke only French, no Italian, and we talked about Piaf and how much we had enjoyed the song. We parted with lots of blown kisses from her and ‘Je vous bennisse.’
We heard her the next night too, but didn’t see her. She was still singing La Vie En Rose, over and over again without pausing. I wanted to ask her how she came to be there; why she was singing outside in the cold, with such a great voice. We didn’t see her again, but on our last evening, I heard her through the hotel window – still the same song, three times over, and then suddenly something else. Impossible to tell what, but it sounded like a wild chant. I’m haunted by her, but PLEASE, everybody, anybody, DON’T tell me that ‘there must be a story there’!
Turin Christmas lights!
Here’s the thing: a friend sent me a link to a video recently,
titled ‘Cat helps pregnant goat with contractions’. She had added ‘there must be a story in
that!’ How often do writers hear that from
kind folk wanting to help with igniting a creative flame? The trouble is, and I
could wish it were otherwise (sometimes), it doesn’t work like that, or at
least, it doesn’t for me.
Scenario: I’m day-dreaming my way through, say, a field/forest/riverside walk/W.H.Y., perhaps with a story half-forming in my head, and along comes a dog with a wellington boot in its mouth. ‘Oh, look!’ says my companion, hopefully, ‘there must be a story in that!’ Nope. And the story I was musing on dies in that very moment. Lost and gone as I’m jerked back into the here-and-now. ‘You write it, then!’ I’m tempted to yell, but of course I don’t, because it was an offering, a gift, meant to help me, blast it! ‘Mmm,’ I say. I smile, make a non-commital chuckling noise, hope I look grateful, grind my teeth. Why, though? I don’t understand the deadening effect of these remarks. I don’t understand the creative process!
Scenario: I’m day-dreaming my way through, say, a field/forest/riverside walk/W.H.Y., perhaps with a story half-forming in my head, and along comes a dog with a wellington boot in its mouth. ‘Oh, look!’ says my companion, hopefully, ‘there must be a story in that!’ Nope. And the story I was musing on dies in that very moment. Lost and gone as I’m jerked back into the here-and-now. ‘You write it, then!’ I’m tempted to yell, but of course I don’t, because it was an offering, a gift, meant to help me, blast it! ‘Mmm,’ I say. I smile, make a non-commital chuckling noise, hope I look grateful, grind my teeth. Why, though? I don’t understand the deadening effect of these remarks. I don’t understand the creative process!
I don’t think it’s arrogance on my part. I hope not! It’s
not as though most ideas are brand-new anyway – and I’ve rewritten old legends before,
recasting them according to my liking, so what’s the problem with being
presented with an idea by someone else? Why does it make me feel affronted –
because the truth is, it does.
The Silkie, my version of the Selkie/Silkie legend
Once or twice I’ve managed to say, ‘It doesn’t
work like that,’ if the offerer persists, wanting me to spin the tale right
there and then, but I’d be at a loss to explain how it DOES work. Stories come
unbidden. They well up from somewhere at the back, underneath, round the
corner, I DON’T KNOW! I only know they
don’t come by command or by wanting. How much easier it would be if they did!
‘Oh, I think I’ll just sit down and write a family saga, a prize-winning
picture book, a haunting epic of love and loss, a screamingly funny adventure
story, an odyssey...
Ha!
Oddly, I can write poetry to call-outs. Not always, because
the topic isn’t always engaging, but often enough. I suppose it’s because the
invitations are fairly general – nature in mythology, ageing, animals, comedy –
they allow plenty of wriggle-room, space to play. I’ve also written to
commission with very tight requirements, though, so that’s not entirely it.
Being commissioned implies some initial interest, I suppose, and willingness to
work within the parameters agreed. There’s
time to think, ‘is this what I want to do?’ Perhaps it’s the suddenness, the
breaking into one’s thoughts, that stifles the offerings of story ideas from
kindly friends. I wish I knew!
Comments
The first time it was '... a threat to an offshore platform'. He then gave me details of how platforms can be sabotaged. As a consequence I wrote Unsafe Acts.
The second suggestion was '... a figurehead carver'. He'd no idea why he'd thought of that, but I liked the idea and it resulted in The Figurehead and a sequel The Likeness.
With him, I know that, if I were stuck for a topic, I could ring, ask for an idea, and he'd come up with something I'd probably never have considered. It's strange but, so far, it's worked.
Jan, I was just going to do that! You've ruined it now.