Lost and Found by Bronwen Griffiths
I picked up a copy of
Elena Ferrante’s book, The Lost Daughter
last week. I have no idea how close this novel is to Ferrante’s real life but that
really doesn’t matter because what resonated with me was its honesty and
candidness. That’s what we are looking for when we read a new book. Not just
something new in terms of story and plot but something which speaks to us. As a
writer – just as it is in everyday life- it’s hard to be open and honest.
Unless you are a psychopath, you are likely, just as I am, to be consumed by
anxiety, guilt, envy, and a host of other sins. None of us like to admit to
these. And we judge, don’t we? We judge other people’s appearance and behaviour
and we think we are better than others - or much worse. Often we swing between
insecurity and over-confidence and most of us harbour secrets which we are
afraid of revealing in case we are judged – or worse – abandoned by our loved
ones. This is what it means to be human.
Ferrante’s short novel is, at its heart, a story about
the complexities of motherhood. The mixed emotions we have about our children.
The way we can love them but resent them. Ferrante explores the worst and best
of our humanity. She does it without fanfare. She reveals our human frailties
and strengths, our ability to love and our ability to hate.
We can learn from Ferrante in our writing - learn
to take more risks with what we write about and how we write it. We know when
we are not being genuine – either to ourselves or others. It’s the same with
writing. If we are not being honest and open on the page, it shows. The writing
becomes dull. It lacks sparkle. This is why it’s important to get into the
heads of our characters. We need to know their deepest secrets, their strengths
and weaknesses otherwise our characters are mere words. Cardboard cut-outs. Cliches. But in
order to create characters that ‘sing’ on the page we need to go deep inside
ourselves. We must be honest about our own motivations, weaknesses, strengths, and passions.
We are also afraid of being judged. Should I write about
this or this? What if I offend someone? Do I know enough about this subject?
All this gets in the way of our writing. But equally we shouldn’t just write
for shock value because that’s not honest writing either.
I have a new book of fiction out later this month - 'flashes' of my childhood based on growing up in a village in North
Worcestershire in the 1960's. Not everything that happened in the book is ‘true’ in the sense
of absolute fact. The truth lies in the emotions, in my feelings looking back
now as an adult. My brother remembers different things about our lives
together. That doesn’t make his account untrue. My experiences are filtered
through my memories and emotions, not his. What matters is being true to my
experience on the page. This is not journalism where facts matter.
Bronwen Griffiths is the author
of two novels and a book of short stories about the war in Syria. Her new book
of flash fiction/memoir, Listen with
Mother, will be published later this month by Silverhill Press, Hastings.
Comments
I haven't read Ferrante's The Lost Daughter but I loved her first 3 Neapolitan novels. Haven't been able to bring myself to read the final one yet because I couldn't bear what the heroine did at the end of the third. Which proves your point really, about Ferrante burrowing deep into the darkest and least proud-making aspects of human nature. I will tackle Book 4 at some point (by which time I'll have forgotten who all the characters are - the cast is huge - which will be annoying, but I only have myself to blame!).
Great, thought-provoking post. Thank you.