Archive for category HTTK

Injecting reality into fantasy.

            I first began to write the story of Heirs to the kingdom, as a made up addition to blend the folklore stories I told my daughter as a young child, and bring them into a more up to date setting. I had no idea at the time how the tale would expand, and allow me the pleasure of seeing its effect on the many who have began to read it as published work. Back then I jotted down notes so that I could keep the story consistent, more as a means of ensuring my daughter did not spot my inability to remember parts that for her had become special.

            By the time my daughter had grown up, and I actually had the time to sit and think about some of the stories I wanted to write, HTTK had become an elaborate catalogue of notes, filed in some disarray, but none the less a very comprehensive and detailed guide to the first outline of the series. Writing the first draft was not that difficult, as I had told the story thousands of times to my daughter aged four, and it flowed off the printer, a relatively painless experience. At this point I must confess that this has been a story I have worked on off and on for over 15 years, as it held a special place in my heart, and although it was at first somewhat of a child’s tale, it had in parts evolved into a more adult story over time. 

            The very first draft was well received by the few I allowed to read it, but I felt it lacked a great deal, and did not feel real enough to live on the pages. Looking back now I know that the time was not quite right, and the story needed a deeply thought out injection of reality, and it was in the following months as I struggled to hold my shop against the local council who wanted to demolish it, that the reality of HTTK was to become very apparent.

            In the later parts of 2007, I finally lost my shop to the all powerful force of the local council, who under a great deal of pressure finally accepted some of my terms, it was not the best deal on earth, but for the sake of my health, and to end the pressure’s and stress of over a year of living hell, I found a compromise that gave me a chance to end on my own terms. The Christmas and New Year that followed over the next fortnight saw me retire to my home and lock all the doors, as the pressure and exhaustion took its toll. I had reached a crossroads in my life, and in an exhausted state I collapsed into bed and slept, dreamed, and considered my bleak options for the future.

            To be quite blunt, I was indeed very ill, the stress had pushed me to breaking point, I lost everything in the fight to save my shop, and all I had left, was the ability to sit and look back on my life at the ups and downs to try to find some new direction to move onwards. I was escaping from reality by sealing myself in the house and refusing to open the doors, I was ill, alone and needed to hide from the world for a while in order to recover and begin again. My mind whirled with the reflection of the struggle and pain of the last twelve months, as I struggled to come to terms with the injustice I had faced, so I used writing as a daily focus to occupy my mind while it rested from my actual life.

            The time was finally right to put the jigsaw of HTTK together, and filled with reflection from 40 years of life and understanding what I wanted for my own future, I sat with a stack of cigarettes, a full kettle, and a huge pile of cheese and pickle sandwiches and I began to write the story again. With my mind filled with every happy moment, and all those moments of despair from my own life, I began to weave everything I had every felt or experienced into the characters of my story, filling them with a life lived in reality, but set in a world of make believe and fantasy.

            What had began its life as a children’s tale about two young 11 year old children, evolved into the life of two late teenagers, who shared a similar destiny together, in a world that was hard and unfair, and filled with the challenges that day to day life can throw your way unexpectedly. I used all my own thoughts and feelings of my own teenage times, as well as many that I observed from those around me, and wove them into the storyline. The end result was not a true autobiographical account of my life, but it was emotionally accurate. I did reflect on my early life, and the sense of community that surrounded me at that time, and it became an important source to add to the background of the village life, set around the two lead characters. I spent hours looking into the situations of each character to imagine myself in their shoes, and try to understand how I would react before writing in the pages of text, and I also added my hopes and dreams for the future.

           The end result, which will only really be fully understood, when the reader has read the whole series of books, is I hope, a richly filled and accurate account of the life of my two central characters and their adventures as they seek to fulfil, their destiny. I would hope that it does indeed jump into life as the pages are turned, and the reader is drawn deeper into the story, and I can only hope when the last page of the last book is finally closed, that the reader will feel a little sadness as they realise that their time in the realm is over, and like all good holiday, although it was wonderful, it is now time to leave and head back to normal life.  For myself, I think it was a very important learning curve in the process of writing. It felt very personal, and if I thought a certain chapter did not leave me feeling like I was actually there besides the lead characters, I scrapped it, and looked deeper into the personalities of them, before writing it again. 

            The irony of the story is that the journey I undertook in writing HTTK (Which is still ongoing as I write) and bringing it to life, is that it has indeed helped me to understand myself better, and has very much shaped my life. For you the reader as I write this, there are just two books of the series in print as I prepare the third for publication, but for myself I am obviously much further on as I have written this series back to back since New Year 2007. The story, which does contain much of the emotional journeys of my own life, has very much played a role in the shaping of my future. Like all good stories there are hopes and dreams that motivate the characters to continue, and although this is a fantasy adventure story, a little of that hope has passed across into my own life.

             Book two reveals a small character of a child, who plays a more important role in the future of the series named Iona Violet. At the time of writing, I described the sort of child I had always hoped for as a sister to my first daughter, for myself it was just a dream, as I had reached a point in my own life where it was a dream I had given up on. Ironically today as I write this for the blog site, I will celebrate the first birthday of my second daughter, who is in many ways almost the double of the child I wrote about back in 2007. I gave my story the essence of my life, and as a result I have been blessed with a meeting through the books with a person who has turned my whole life around and given that which I thought was never possible. When my partner suggested we name her Iona Jade, I was delighted, and for just a moment, like my characters I did wonder, if destiny was playing itself out in reality. The story and my life now seem to be bound up in a circle, and the story that began with the questions and happiness bound to the early life of my first daughter, have come full circle in the creation of my second daughter, who will begin her life in a similar way, hearing the tales of HTTK.

In conclusion, I now see how what was the worst and most heartbreaking time of my life, has indeed been a source of deep inspiration to my creative work. I must confess, I felt I was in a darkness that could not possibly provide any light, and yet today I see that even from a ruined foundation, there is the hope of building something new and more wonderful than before.

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Life alongside the Characters.

LIVING WITH THE CHARACTERS CONT…

I have been surprised at the response I have had to the blog I wrote, ‘Living with the Characters.’ I have had several comments and also a few emails asking for more insight to the way in which the characters were constructed and written. In response to such wonderful comments and requests I will offer the following.

As I have already stated, I did invest a great deal of time and effort into creating profiles of each of the characters that wandered through the book, For myself it was important that I could relate to them as real people, (I know it sounds odd, but hey, it works?) from my point of view it is easier to write about someone you know, I could have taken the easy route and based them all on friends, which would have given me a living example to copy. I chose to create the illusion of a person, which I think gave me the chance to allow each person within the book to develop into a very specific pattern. It is without doubt labour intensive as it means a great deal of note taking as I actually write the books, but I soon realised that as I got into book two they were developing more rounded characteristics as I wrote their interactions with the other characters of the book.

In the early days as I wrote and planned the fist books release, I also had the pleasure of being able to sit and talk with my partner and also illustrator Louis M Slater. It was important to me that Louis especially understood each of the characters, as he would have the task of creating them in the artwork we used on the books jacket, we literally took each character apart and discussed every aspect of who they were as people and how they would react to different situations. It was a series of discussions that actually allowed me for the first time to see and understand how others actually perceived each of the characters, something I am not sure many writers have the chance to do. The resulting conversations made me very aware of how real, others could and hopefully will perceive them.

It was during that time I began to look at how to normalise the living situations around each of the characters, and it was here that i began to see that although I had only added small sounds bites of village life for the characters, it was very important in the placing of each of the characters in what I refer to as a ‘Normal context.’  It does sound odd at times, but just the addition of a little gossip around the village seemed to put another dimension into the lives of the characters. Alice and Ann Kirk, revealing their thoughts and whispered comments to Agatha did help show another perception of each of the main characters and made them feel more human and real. I suppose it was the replication of real life in the situations of the characters that did indeed allow every reader to identify with each of the characters.

Looking now at the books I have written and not yet published, I can see how much of a learning curve I have been on. I have never really considered myself as a serious writer, but the facts are I am a published Author now involved with a large project. I often sense that my development as a writer has been on a parallel to my characters as they face challenges and had to deal with, well so have I. That process of learning and moving forward that all of us embark on in life is now yet again a very real feature of my own life as well as those of my characters. As the books progress the characters will be confronted with tests and trials of which they will have no other choice than to face and overcome, like ourselves they too will wander down the road of life and I am sure i will have much more debate and spend many more hours with my notes as the characters evolve.

I have taken a great deal of joy out of the process and I find that as I continue to write and get more comments and feed back, my feelings of insecurity lessen and I take more time to enjoy the whole process. These books still have the test of time to face, but to those of you to date who have had a little of the enjoyment I have had in the writing I am thankful. May Rune and the others grow ever within my pages, and I hope that all of these wonderful people created somewhere in the darkness of my mind will feel as much like family to you, as they do me.

Thank you for your comments and your support, it has been a thrill for me as a writer to see that there is some appreciation of my work….

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Living with the characters.

I have been asked several times recently about the characters that I have written in the book. I have had some very lovely comments about how real they feel, and how most people have been able to identify with them. The obvious question is also asked many times. “Are they real living people that they have all been based on?”

I find it quite a difficult question to answer, a straight forward “No” does not really answer the question truthfully, but no one character is based on any one person. So in a bid to explain my method here I am writing a new instalment of the Blog.

I cannot speak for other writers, as the few that I know work in ways I do not understand, I can only give my own view on the subject as my own method does not appear to make a lot of sense to other writers either. In the first instance I knew the basic outline of the story so I had a list of important ingredients that would be essential to the story. I listed the ages and sex and obvious moods and characteristics, I knew their working environments so then I had an idea of dress. In many cases I felt the level of education of each character, and also the subjects they may have encountered would be important. This story was to be set in the future after the end of what we call the modern world. It made sense that apart from a quick brushing over, much of modern life today would be forgotten or not taught, after all the way of life of the characters in most cases within the confines of Book One, would be in a survival from the land situation. From my own point of view, it would be pointless teaching in any detail the fundamentals of Cars,planes and so forth. In that kind of environment it would be a quick lesson of, that’s a horse and that’s a cart, you can ride the horse, but if you want to move stuff, hitch the cart on, lesson over.

With each parameter defined I then applied what I call the subtle detail, and its here that some of my fellow writers thought I was mad to create so much extra work. I formatted a basic sheet on the computer that I could print off with relevant personal details. I listed date of birth, name, height, build, eye and hair colour, and hair length, I then added a few extras like style of clothing and accents, I put on the jewellery and maybe the weapons they would carry, and added other random stuff and a small biography of their attitudes and like and dislikes. I suppose it became similar to how I would write a composite of someone I already know quite well.

It was a long task, but the end result was a neatly typed sheet, slid into the obligatory plastic sleeve and filed in the family groups to sit neatly on the desk at the side of my PC. Once again maybe I am a little bit of a perfectionist, I have no idea, I just know it worked for me. It was actually the best bit of kit I could use, as once I began I could refer to it and have a consistent guide at all times. The best example of how it worked, I think would be if, Robbie and Rune were walking with lets say Maggs. (For those of you who have no idea who these people are, Shame on you, read the book.) I knew instantly that Robbie was the tallest and would look right down at Maggs the shortest by some considerable inches, yet his eyes would just move down to talk to Rune who was over his shoulder height but not as tall as him. complex I know but it works for me and allowed the descriptive writing to feel more real, well it did to me.

Once the writing began I had a perfect image guide so at least the writing was consistent, something I felt was important. I had an idea of the characters as people, and from that I could guess what in the real world, such and such a friend of mine may have done in that situation, and so I began to throw together a mix of people I had known, people I still knew, and also being the author, and without realising, large chunks of who I am as a person blended together into each of my main characters. It felt very organic and as the writing progressed the characters for me took on a life of their own and began to evolve into those we all meet in the first book.

I now have reached a point where the individual characters have taken on a life of their own, and as strange as it might sound, (Please don’t call the doctor yet) I can imagine each character as a person and see them in my mind as I write. Its like my subconscious has drawn the pictures for me as more and more detail has been added, so when I look at the screen and wander off into whatever hypnotic state I go to as I concentrate, there in my mind are the pictures running almost like film and playing me the scenario of the book. I have got it so down to a tee, that I can now just write what I see.

I bet you wish you had never asked now. Hey look on the bright side I am never lonely, I have a book full of characters all talking at once. (Gives giggle) I think the important thing about this, is it is an aid that has helped me, and I think it has worked because when I do talk to those who have read the book, it is one of the first things they have mentioned, apart from Harry of course, and that is still a stranger thing still.

Harry for those of you have not read the book yet can only be described as Harryish. He is a character I added to create a little humor and to break the tension at times so that I could then strike without warning and surprise the reader who had let down their guard as they giggled or smiled at Harry. He was never meant to survive book one, but very quickly I realised as I let a few people read the first drafts, that Harry had become an element of focus for most of those reading. I have to confess, that even I am amazed at how well loved he has become, I honestly never saw it coming. I will not spoil it for those who have yet to meet good old Uncle Harry, but it is a surprising reaction for even myself to comprehend, and in a way I am delighted that the efforts I put in in the early days have created a very recognisable character.   

Today I continue to write the series and my characters have increased and they are all still growing as real people would, I can only hope that you will all feel so involved with them, that you would wish to follow their development and walk besides them for a while longer. I will leave you all to ponder my sanity, and think about my methods with a very simple but for myself a wonderful compliment written by my youngest brother in a revue he put on my Facebook page without my knowledge. I will add I seldom see him, which made this a greater compliment, he wrote. “You didn’t read what was happening, you lived what was happening.”

I think he used better words than I to describe it, so I thank him for the very wonderful compliment, all writers want what is read to feel very much alive, for him it did and that is enough for me.

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A New World.

As a child I was always facinated with those books and films that spelled disaster and the end for all of us. There was something about just a few survivors banding together and starting all over again in a new world. I remember reading the Day of the triffids for the first time and revelling in it, today it is still one of my all time favorite books. There are many films today that again repeat the stories of 30 years ago, but they do not seem to hold that wonderful sense of realisum that John Wyndham created, somehow the Day of the triffids felt like it could actually happen, a big tribute I think to the authors writing skills.

I knew in my book I wanted to create a new world, but it had to contain remnants from the past of what is today, but in my book I refer to as “The old ways of modern man.” It was something I spent a great deal of time debating with myself. I knew that the world had to return to a green world filled with plant life, and so as my thoughts progressed through the long list of options that I had short listed, I turned to the one thing that I knew was a possibility, I turned to plant life. I have seen in my life growing up besides a disused railway, how quickly nature takes hold and claws back the land left by man. The railway I played besides as a child had been closed, and actually gave me more enjoyment as it had become a thick lush corridor of green life in as little as ten years. The time frame I was going to work with was twenty six years, as I wrote the end of man as we know him in the year of 2012, and then picked up the story in the year of 2038, a good sixteen years of extra plant growth later. I had at least worked out the recovery of the country, now I just needed to wipe out most of the population.

One of the things about living today, that is highlighted so often in the press, and especially over the last ten years, is the fear of invisible illness. Several times now we have all sat at home watching the TV as things grind to a halt with illness spreading round the country. I watched the smoke rise into the air, and I might add lost a lot of business during the BSE epidemic as the country closed and the fates that provided my income closed with it. I remember well the rows of cold trucks parked up behind the local hospitals when the NHS crashed during the winter flu epidemic and the morgues were filled to capacity. It was not long before I looked to a virus based in the simplest of diseases to wipe us all out, of course the flu is the one illness that we all suffer with as there really is no cure. It is a basic thing we all know and suffer from, and I turned it into the Red Death, a variation that had severe consequences. Its odd now as I wrote the red death several years ago, and yet today as I write we all live in fear of Bird Flu or as recent days have shown, Swine Flu.

Removing a large majority of the population in an uncontrolled pandemic would create havoc and chaos, it was easy to see how the country would be gripped in panic and lets face it with overwhelming deaths the country would soon fall apart as survival kicked in. We all know of the power inside to live at all costs, it does not take much to realise there are those who would turn on everyone in their bid to survive, we have seen it before and we will again. With the breakdown of law and government, there would be those who took things into their own hands and whipped up a frenzy in the name of survival, fire and looting and destruction always follow. Without an organised effort of prevention, which with this scale of death there wouldn’t be any, towns and cities would burn, and soon the world around that was made by man, would ultimately be destroyed by man, crumble and decay would do the rest, and in would step nature to clean it all back to green and bury the last remnants of mankind below.

I gave it three years, and threw in a few tricks of my own, as later books will show, but for now you have the idea, modern man falls down and the few that remain, which would still be numbered in a few hundred thousand would begin again and start to breed a new race of survivors. This is where it got interesting for me as a writer, as I was able to sit and think about what I would do if I was the figure of Old Jake Loxley. I had already worked out that my enemy would be the brutal bands of the Cutters, and I gave them the task of stealing the crops and metals from the surviving settlements. hence the term Cutter. Life in this case would have to return to a resemblance of the past, there is still enough knowledge in the world to see we could survive using skills of the past, just walk round any village fate in the summer, the craft stalls are full of it. As my world recovered old skills came back to the fore as the older members of the community revived the skills we thought were lost. Isolated country villages became the centres of knowledge for survival, even if those in the know were not as able and fit to do the work as they once were, enter the fleeing city folk, able and strong but lacking in skills, and here we see the perfect recipe to recovery, those with the knowledge and those who have the energy and stamina for the harder way of life to come, it all made perfect sense. Once I had twenty six years of recovery, I had my new world and I lined up the paper and switched on the computer and began my first line. Loxley is a town set deep in the wild moor…….. and book one began.

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