Thursday 20 June 2013

Off he goes again... by Sue Purkiss


First, many thanks to Joan Lennon for letting me have her slot. I've just managed to publish a book on Kindle, and am feeling ridiculously proud of myself, so wanted to jump up and down and shout about it - just a little bit!

Admitted, I had it pretty easy really, because I still had the original Word document, which makes it much easier to create an ebook. And those nice people at Walker let me use the original cover, so I didn't have to make a new one. All in all, then, it's really pretty ridiculous that it's taken me well over a year to get round to what was actually a pretty painless and very interesting procedure.

The book concerned is called The Willow Man. It was the first 'serious' book I wrote, and it was very close to my heart. I felt unbelievably proud when I held the new book in my hand, it garnered some very nice reviews, and it was taken up by Hodder for use in a reading scheme. All of this was very satisfactory - but unfortunately, it didn't sell shed loads of copies - or even wheelbarrow loads - and so it went out of print. But now, thanks to the glories of the digital revolution (or is it the electronic revolution? Whatever!), The Willow Man is on the move again!

So what's the book about? Well, interesting you should ask. Because when I came to edit the original Word document before converting it for Kindle, I realised that it wasn't about quite what I'd thought it was.

The Willow Man, courtesy of Wikimedia Commons
The Willow Man is a real figure - that's him in the picture. A lot of those of you who live in the UK will have seen him as you've driven down to the south-west. He stands beside the M5, and was created by willow sculptor Serena de la Hey in the year 2000, to celebrate the millenium. He used to be unmissable: now not quite so much, because a massive Morrison's depot is encroaching on one side and a housing estate on the other. But he's still there, tall and proud. I used to drive past him on the way to work, and I was fascinated by him. There he stood, poised ready to stride forward: and yet he never would.

So there he was, waiting to be written about. Other ideas gathered round him. One was what had happened to my daughter some years before, when she was seven. She had a stroke. One minute she was bouncing about all over the place, the next she was paralysed on her right side and couldn't speak. Should I have written about something so close to home? Well, I'm a writer. Writers write about things that matter to them, and nothing had mattered more.

Then there was the work I had just started doing, with young offenders - not locked up, but in the community. Here were young people who were almost always out of school. Few of them could read very well - John Dougherty wrote an excellent post about prisoners and literacy a couple of days ago which will provide you with some of the figures. Most of them had an absent father, and a mother who was struggling desperately to survive. The pattern seemed always to be the same - they struggled in school, they got into trouble, they truanted and/or were excluded, they got in with older youths and began to drink, they got into fights and damaged things, they went before the courts, and then they came to us.

So the book was to be about children who were stuck in one way or another. After it was published, I went into schools and talked to lots of children about it, and it was always so rewarding to hear the boy at the back - the one with that look about him that tells you he's teetering on the brink - say that he'd enjoyed it, because Ash was like he was. Someone else would always ask, rather shyly, about my daughter: had she got better, as Sophie does in the book? (The answer was yes: she did and she's wonderful!)

Reading it through before uploading it to Kindle, I saw that it was indeed about all these things. But it was about something else, too. It was about communication - or the lack of it. At the beginning, Sophie can't speak. She has to struggle to regain her words. Her brother Tom doesn't know how to cope with his feelings about what's happened: he certainly can't express them. Ash can't tell the teachers not only that he can't read, but also that the reason he keeps being late is that he has to drop his little brother off at school so his mum can get to work on time. His mother has never told him why his father isn't around. Perhaps, Sophie thinks, the Willow Man can help - but then something terrible happens...

When I was nearing the end of writing the book, I went to see Serena de la Hey. I wanted to explain to her that I had, in a way, hi-jacked her creation, and I wanted to know more about the way she worked, in order to write the final scene. The Willow Man - her figure, not my book - has had a huge impact. His image has been used in advertising for Somerset and the County Council, and people who are interested in the arcanery  attached to willow/whicker figures used as a kind of sacrifice are drawn to him. She shrugged. She'd made him, she said. That was her job, done. What he went on to do after that wasn't up to her: he took on a life of his own.

Her figure wasn't meant to last; it was made of willow, not stone or bronze. Yet there it still is, and, thanks to Amazon Kindle, there my book still is - whatever it's about!

Incidentally, Lucy Coats wrote on this blog a month or two ago about Pinterest, and how she's begun to use it to create her characters. Emma Darwin has written elsewhere about how she's also used it to gather images to do with her books. I decided to have a play myself, and I've done a couple of boards, one about the landscapes inThe Willow Man. It's a work in progress - I haven't done Bridgwater yet - but if you'd like to take a look, it's here. The photo is taken from Brean Down, one of the key locations in the book - it's not on the board yet, but it will be!

www.suepurkiss.com

16 comments:

Lynne Garner said...

Interesting blog post - hadn't heard of the willow man (not my part of the country. .

Hope your book does well.

Joan Lennon said...

Congratulations on your book re-birthday!

Susan Price said...

Congratulations on your kindle book, Sue! - From Authors Electric! http://authorselectric.blogspot.co.uk/

Penny Dolan said...

Great! Such a great post - and so glad that all that you put into The Willow Man novel is now available again, both the what-you-thought-you-wrote and the deeper story.

I'll go and search for your Willow Man. And maybe look into Pinterest too.

Sharon Tregenza said...

Never pass the Willow Man without thinking of you, Sue. Delighted it's alive and kicking again.

Savita Kalhan said...

Congratulations, Sue. I still haven't got around to checking out how to go grom a word doc to ebook yet! Great post - I'll be looking out for the Willow Man.

Sue Purkiss said...

Honestly, it's not that complicated, Savita! If I can do it., etc etc... I just followed the instructions on KDP - the Kindle help thing - and it was pretty straightforward.

Thank you everyone else!

Anonymous said...

Have just ordered this to read - on my kindle! Sure my daughter will love it if we read it together.
Also well done for inspiring a revitalising thought in me that I will publish my own e book (I was a children's book illustrator for almost 25years until the industry ground me down!)...well done!

A Wilson said...

Inspiring and touching, Sue. Writing about something painful is brave and a wonderful gift to others who are going through similar experiences. Good luck with the e-book!

Ann Turnbull said...

Congratulations on getting this book onto Kindle, Sue. It's a lovely book - great to know it's available again.

Emma Barnes said...

Wonderful post, Sue!

Lynda Waterhouse said...

Congratulations Sue and wonderful that you can keep the original cover!

Heather Dyer said...

Congratulations Sue, you have inspired me. Loved 'writers write about what matters to them', it somehow struck home.

Kate said...

Sounds like one to read. I'll have to 'borrow' my husband's Kindle.
Can I also ask how you go about finding somewhere to volunteer for the kind of work you're talking about - helping young people with literacy?
Thanks.

Sue Purkiss said...

Thank you, everyone! Kate - my work wasn't voluntary, I was employed. But Youth Offending Teams do have volunteers - you could look up your local one on your county council website and see if they have anything that would interest you. Good luck!

Kate said...

Thanks Sue.