The dangers of describing a work you haven’t even started by Bill Kirton
On the surface, this will seem to be blatant marketing, but it isn’t.
Honest. As I’ve probably said before, my marketing skills are as finely developed
as my belly-dancing (which I’ve never tried). No, this has been triggered by
the discovery of some notes I made (intended for a blog) before beginning to
write The Likeness. The latter now exists,
has been well reviewed and won a couple of awards, but when I wrote what follows
it was a dull gleam in my eye. The notes, (suitably tarted up to make them easier to read), ran as follows:
‘I’ve been researching various aspects of life in 1841-2 to fill
in details of the lives my characters lived. The cogitations have so far
produced four main threads to the narrative. Since it’s a sequel to The Figurehead, it’ll naturally be
concerned with the making of ships and all the carvings that involves, so the
setting for the action is Aberdeen harbour and the business that goes on there.
‘The first thread is part of that business, too, because the
central female character (Helen) is strong-willed and refuses to fit her mid-Victorian
stereotype. Her father is a highly successful ship-owning merchant and, as his
only child, she wants to learn more and to help him with his transatlantic trade.
First, though, she has to persuade him that her involvement is a good idea.
‘The second thread is one which will contrast very strongly with
these commercial pursuits and with the fairly settled life of the tradesmen who
build and fit out the vessels which make Aberdeen such a thriving place. It
involves a troupe of actors presenting some plays at the Theatre Royal,
Aberdeen. Acting in the middle of the 19th century was a larger than
life business – all colour, exaggeration, artificiality and passion. The most
popular form (aside from Shakespeare) was melodrama and, from about 1830,
nautical melodramas were all the rage. That seems too good an opportunity to
miss. I can put people who, every night, strut about pretending they’re
involved in the hazards and drama of shipboard adventures in front of an
audience of people who know what it is to sail to the whaling grounds in winter
and thrash to and fro across the Atlantic. Also, if I throw into this staid,
provincial society some beautiful actors (male and female) who have access to
great chat-up lines stolen from plays, heads may be turned, jealousies may
ferment and mayhem could ensue.
‘The third thread also involves Helen. It’s the love story which
began to grow in (and tried to take over) The
Figurehead and it needs to be properly resolved now. (As an aside, and in apparent contradiction of my promise not to do any blatant marketing', the book has now been published and reviewed, and one reviewer suggested that " Bill Kirton has shaped one of the finest
character portraits of a woman that this reader has read"). (Thank you, sir or madame.)
‘All that remains is to fill in details of the fourth thread
which, because I’m supposed to write crime novels, has to be a murder (or
several if need be). But the strange thing here is that, while I can envisage
some of the exchanges that’ll take place between the characters and some of the
conflicts and stresses they’ll feel, I don’t yet have an idea of the nature of
the crime, its victim or its perpetrator. I know the type of person who’ll
commit it but as yet he/she doesn’t exist as an individual.
‘I’ve never entertained thoughts such as this about any of my
previous novels and I’m not sure whether they evolved in the same way at all.
This time, though, I’m trying to write the thing and, at the same time, observe
the processes involved in doing so. It’s probably just a good displacement
activity.’
And that’s it. It was an unfamiliar way of approaching a novel for
me and it’s interesting to read because I now know how the various threads did
or didn’t work out. But I don’t think I’ll ever try it again because it tends
to commit me to a course of action which may lead nowhere or to a very
different story. It also fails to allow for something which occurred to me very
strongly when I eventually started the writing (and which I already knew, of
course), i.e. that when you set characters in motion, they have their own ideas
about the game and your best-laid plans gang aft agley.
Comments
Even when I'm writing a short story my characters take me off in a different direction to what I had planned for them. I hate to imagine where they'd lead me in a full length novel.