Sunday 31 December 2017

Novelists can be whistleblowers




Show, Don’t tell is the constant admonition from creative writing tutors. Fair enough. No one wants to read a ranting polemic about the author’s pet gripe, no matter how cathartic it is to let it all out.
   But no one is better placed – and, even better, protected - to be a whistleblower than a fiction writer.  A wise physician much involved in community child abuse cases, once said: ‘It takes an eccentric, potentially alienated personality style to over-ride the shared reassurances of more comfortably socialized peers’ and speak out. In real life, such whistleblowers are easy to pick off, trash and destroy.
 
 Novelists most often share that sense of being outsiders, as they sit huddled over their laptop in preference to being out glad-handing their fellow humans. The occasional foray onto the party scene, finds them standing in corners to observe, analyse and record mental images of their more extraverted friends, all useful fodder for the next story. Feeling all the while, they don’t quite fit.
   Not being one of the merry gang, has its benefits. In order to maintain social glue, insiders have to suppress unpleasant truths. ‘I can’t say that or I’ll be excluded, so I won’t even think it.’ Whereas the writer spots the dissonances and evasions of normal living all too clearly and doesn’t care about inclusion.  Also fiction is slippery, well-designed to duck the attacks that assault the few who put their head above the parapet in real life to point the finger at wrongdoing. [I just looked up whistleblower on thesaurus. In my book, all power to them. Thes.com clearly loathes them – big mouth, busybody, scandal monger, snitch, troublemaker.] 

  And that would include Charles Dickens, would it on Britain’s social ills? Margaret Atwood in the Handmaid’s Tale? Etc, etc. To a degree all fiction is whistleblowing, casting a light on what others don’t want to see. The fantasy version is a digestible way of dramatizing truths which have yet to be absorbed into public consciousness.  A step along the way. Some like the 1960s TV drama Cathy Go Home on homelessness and poverty made an immediate impact. Others went big on industry corruption, racism and other ignored injustices adding to the critical mass which will, one day, lead to progress.

  Two stray examples come to mind of novels that focused me on subjects I had never been much bothered about. Henry Porter’s 2010 thriller Bell Ringers, about government surveillance in a top-secret data-mining system, made me reconsider my former view that if anyone wanted to bore themselves silly reading my emails they were welcome. ‘Anti-government’ has a broad interpretation that can extend into almost any activism that doesn’t suit the leaders of the day.  


Marc Elsberg’s extensively-researched Blackout paints a frightening scenario of what happens when the interlinked power grids across Europe are hacked. Living as I do in the country, an electricity blackout even for several days isn’t a total disaster – wood fires, candles, gas bottles for cooking and blessed quiet from temporary cessation of all internet, music and TV. For cities and for major industries especially in food and farming, it is a cataclysm. No petrol so no transport, food supplies run out, factory-housed dairy cows die since they can’t be milked with automated systems down.  Elsberg has been in constant demand since publication in Germany to advise industry specialists. Not much the public can do but he’s making a difference. 

 Fiction can lead the way. 

Read my other blogs: on Fictional characters who live on; Memory; Books better comforters than parents; Choosing character names; How to cook up a successful novel - joke.  Subscribe above for regular updates on my blog.


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Sunday 24 December 2017

Fictional characters who live on



As a voracious devourer of novels I can get through two or three a week, in my end-of-the-day, mandatory wind-down two hours reading by the fire. Crime, spy and historical mainly.
  Since it’s that time of year I thought I’d look at the ones which  have stuck in mind over the years. I adore Robert Harris, Mick Herron, John Le Carre, Charles Cummings, Abir Mukerjee, Mark Billingham, Philip Kerr, Lee Child, Sarah Dunant and buy every new one which appears. 

   But of the ones I can’t get out of my head, top of the list has to be Abraham Verghese’s Cutting for Stone. It is set in Ethiopia about English-Italian twin brothers cast adrift when their mother dies in childbirth and their surgeon father abandons them. One brother studies medicine in the States, the other stays to help women suffering internal damage from forced early pregnancies and female mutilation. It’s a poignant story about exile, the search for a missing father and forgiveness between brothers, conjoined at birth but separated by the chaos of a civil war. Lyrically descriptive, it left me with indelible images of place and people.

Adam Johnson’s The Orphan Master’s Son, which eventually won the 2013 Pulitzer, I approached with caution. 450 pages on the hell of North Korea wasn’t that enticing but it was well reviewed, so I started and couldn’t stop. It is Orwellian-noir about the brutality of a beyond-Stalinesque regime, but, bizarrely, also funny and heart-rending about love, life and death in the Dear Leader’s gulag. 

  Kashuo Ishiguro’s Never Let Me Go was another surprise since I tend to avoid horror and science-fiction. But it didn’t read as dystopian, more an allegory on the loss of innocence in childhood, a search for connection and meaning in a manipulated world. The haunting characters facing impossible dilemmas out of their control linger on.


   As you can tell, I’m not big on reading straight comedy, though Mick Herron is laugh-out-loud, as is Abir Mukerjee. John Niven, a fellow-Scot, however, made it over that hurdle with his scabrously funny Kill My Friends, about a hedonistic A&R man in the music business. It did go on a bit and the humour may well be too Glaswegian for some tastes. His The Second Coming didn’t quite work though has some treasured one-liners. His Straight, White Male about a Kingsley-Amis-ish novelist/screenplay writer was the best of them.

  And who wouldn’t adore The Rosie Project by Graeme Simsion about a high IQ academic crafting a theoretical strategy for finding the perfect wife? Blissfully witty.

   Character, character, character is what leaves the deepest impression. A gripping plot helps but without the human element it lacks glue. 


   Read more on my blog about Memory versus the Truth; Books Better Comforters than Parents; and How to Cook up a Successful Novel - joke. 


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