As a child I was fascinated by my
parents and grandparents tales of what I called the Olden Days. I was given
eyewitness accounts of amongst other things, the 1914 Christmas Truce, the
General Strike and the Blitz. And what had made these stories lodge in my mind
was their human perspective.
At the age of eleven, for example,
I only had the vaguest understanding of the causes of World War One but I did
know that on Christmas Day, 1914, my Grandad and his mates climbed out of their
trenches and walked into No-Man’s-Land.
His stories (and those of my Nan,
my Mum and Dad) began as entertainments to while away wet afternoons in the
days before daytime T.V. Their importance as my first encounters with Story
didn't become obvious until years later when I took part in a writing project
based in Lancashire Archives. I'd assumed (before the
project began) that the archive itself would consist mainly of Birth, Marriage
and Death Certificates and other official documents. I couldn't have been more
wrong.
There were Last Wills dating back
as far as the sixteenth century, postcards sent from France during World War
One, records of the local assizes, music hall programmes, a thirteenth century
almanac, Guest Books from Theatrical Boarding Houses (Very many thanks,
sincerely Harry Houdini) and the one that grabbed my attention – the
Patients Ledger, Lancaster Asylum, 1890.
I opened it at random. There was a
full page report: a name, an age, a description of the patient’s condition on
admission – Imbecile – a record of his stay and in the top left corner,
his photograph. And because he was looking straight at the camera, he now
seemed to be looking at me. I turned the page to find a brief account of his
sudden deterioration and death the following year.
I turned over to the next page.
Above the name and condition – Melancholia - were two photographs. One
of a smiling girl wearing a straw bonnet decorated with flowers. The other of
an almost fleshless face framed by lank hair. It was mentioned in passing that
she'd been force-fed daily.
Before this I’d seen archive
material as nothing more than a research tool. The thought that it could act as
a primary stimulus had never occurred to me. I started writing. Six poems about
the patients in Lancaster Asylum came in as many days. I hadn’t written so much
in the last six months. And these were followed by another thirty on a wide
variety of subjects. They weren’t all prompted by the stories I’d heard as a
child. Just the overwhelming majority.
The archive material had not just
given me a starting point, it had reminded me of why I started writing in the
first place. It wasn’t for money or fame – though I wouldn’t turn my nose up at
either – it was because I felt passionately and wanted to express that passion
through words. It had reawakened in me a point of view that apparent cynicism
had all but totally obscured. And of course, the apparent cynicism was just my
cover story.
The simple truth was that I hadn't
written anything for over six months. The result was that I became very
depressed and convinced that the rest really was going to be silence. Now,
suddenly, the words were flowing and the poems more or less writing themselves.
I compared notes with other writers
on the course and they all told the same story. Not only were they suddenly
writing more, the quality of their work was, in many cases, better than it had
ever been. Which got me thinking.
Usually, when I need information I
google in a few key words and see what comes up. If I want to know about
conditions in nineteenth century asylums, I can access, almost instantly,
dozens of eyewitness accounts as well as extracts from official reports, annual
death rates etc. Or I can do what I actually did.
I can go to the main archives and
look at the Record Book for the year 1890. I can feel the weight of it. If I
press my face close enough to the pages I can catch a whiff, even if it’s only
imaginary, of carbolic. The same smell that would have filled the wards. I can
look into the eyes of the inmates and imagine their lives all the more vividly.
I think I'd fallen into the error
of thinking because I was now a published writer, I needed to concentrate my
attentions not on those things I wanted to write, but on the things I felt I
ought to write. I'd been deliberately suppressing anything that wasn't worth my
attention -which of course was everything in the end.
So, by all means, seek out gaps in
the market, sit down and plan out a strategy – I do both – but write your
passion, craft it, publish it, market it and hope it sells. No matter what
else, write what you love to read.
And if, like me, you find yourself
blocked, apart from the writing exercises to loosen you up, go to primary source
material (old letters, diaries, news clippings etc.) and just start reading
until something grabs your imagination. You'll know when it's happened because
nothing else you try to read after that will go in
.
Try this now: In
your search engine type ARCHON – this will then give you the location of every
archive in the UK, plus related archives in other parts of the world including
the two hundred and seventy five to be found in the United States. Find your
nearest archive and visit it.
Quick Tip: Don't
just go in and ask if you can have a browse. The material in archives is stored
and can only be initially accessed by archivists so when you go, have a
specific area you want to look into. Phone or e-mail in advance and find out
what their system is. One very good way to start is to see if they have back
copies of local newspapers. If so, pick a month and a year and start reading
through. You'll find something. I guarantee it.
Kevin's poetry collection is available now - click here for more information.