Like the students who entered this competition, I started writing when I was quite young. I wrote a lot of poetry in my early teens. I wrote a novel when I was 18 and another when I was 20. Thankfully all of that was long ago put in the bin. Actually I lent the second novel to a friend â it
One thing I have done since August 1973 is keep a journal. I am told that writers like to call them âcommonplace booksâ. They arenât diaries.. Theyâre a cross between a scrapbook and a notebook, like an artistâs sketchbook. You come across something you think is worth recording and you write it down. Sometimes it might be a review of a book or a concert. You might be doing research on some topic and need a place to keep notes. And there might be just stupid things that crop up. Hereâs some examples:
A restaurant menu in Greece offers âstuffed corsettesâ. And how about this for the importance of proof reading? What a difference one letter can make! A restaurant menu in Chinatown, London, offered â Braised crap with ginger and spring onions and Chicken in spit. More seriously, a proverb in Kikamba that I noted when I lived in Kenya reads: âNyamu inynugaa kitheka ki ikomie â An animal smells of the forest in which it slept.â The man who taught me the proverb said that it would always apply to me and my memories of Kenya.
And then thereâs a section where I describe an old madman who used to hang around in the market place in the town where I lived. One day he cursed me so that I would change into a snake. Ten years later he became chapter five of my book, Mission.
When I lived in Brunei, I was invited to meet Queen Elizabeth when she made a visit there. I have saved all the documents telling me how I should address her, how to bow and how we should not worry because she was good at putting people at ease. Sir Ivan Callan introduced the woman to my right as Jan, saying, âThis is Jan. Sheâs about to set off on the Chay Blythe Round The World Yacht Raceâ. Mrs Queen immediately said, âYou must be mad!â. Sir Ivan smiled and moved on to me. âThis is Phil, who organises all the concerts for Brunei Music Societyâ. âYukâ, said Mrs Queen and moved on. Itâs all recorded in the commonplace book.
The real use of the journal is to support you when you get an idea that needs fleshing out. OK, you have the idea, but then with luck you have hundreds of snippets of information, observations and background that can be woven together to make it more interesting â and itâs all real! It takes time and itâs hard work, but the results are wonderful.
I have read all of the winning and commended entries and I do want to say a very big âWell doneâ to all of you. I thought the stories were exciting and very well written. Those of you who have a real interest in writing should try to develop it because you are all talented. I do, however, want to offer some advice on how you might develop that talent, and I think that this advice applies to just about all of the entries.
Imagine yourself in a place you donât know too well, such as someone elseâs house, a shop or a restaurant, for instance. You walk past a door that says âPRIVATEâ in big letters. Would you go in? I donât think so.
Now I can understand that most of you have been reading Harry Potter and watching Lord of the Rings and other fantasies. I read Lord of the Rings as a teenager when it was a cult book, like Harry Potter is now. So I can understand when most of you start to write you think in terms of fantasy worlds, elves, goblins, ghosts, gryphons, gorgons, gargoyles and giants. But itâs also worth remembering that you are inventing a private world. A reader comes to your work and finds a door marked PRIVATE. Sometimes, obviously, it works, but a lot of the time readers will not go through that door. Itâs private, after all.
I think that the way a really good writer works is to meet you in your own world, your own experience or your own knowledge, and then by suggestion gently takes you somewhere new, introduce you to different ideas and different ways of seeing the world. This doesnât mean that all writing has to be set in the here and now. No. for instance, from our history lessons we all know something about the First World War, though it is unlikely that any of us in the room experienced it. But as a writer you can set your work in that period because it is common knowledge. Your reader will be with you from the start. A very great English writer, for instance, called Pat Baker has set several of her novels in that period.
So if I have any advice to offer budding young writers itâs this. Try to find your own roots as a writer, as a person and as a creator. Try to relate your ideas to a time and place you know or know something about. And draw the reader into your world by starting on common ground, not in a private world.
And how do you do that? You ROT. R â O â T. Read, Observe, Think.
R is for read. Read, read, read â and when you read something, review it. And say more than just what happens in the book. A student of mine once offered me a review of a book called Ali Goes to Market. His review was, âItâs a book about Ali. He goes to marketâ. I rejected his review. So read and review and write your thoughts into your journal.
O is for observe. Thereâs a world out there. We inhabit it. Look at it, describe it. If you come across something of interest, make a note of it and how you felt or how it affected you. In our world, giants donât change into mice and lizards with red eyes donât fire laser guns. But millions of other things even more surprising, more interesting and less predictable do happen.
And T is for Think. Take time to think, to reflect on what you experience and, if you think itâs interesting, write it down.
So to conclude, make public worlds and not private ones and ROT in your commonplace book, read, observe and think, and then make your notes. As writers it is our aim to communicate and to do that in a public, not a private place.
Author of Mission, an African novel set in Kenyahttp://www.philipspires.co.uk
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