There was a great public library down the road, and, like some kind of ravenous termite, I burrowed through titles as fast as I could: first, E. Nesbitt, Biggles, the Jennings books, Just William, the Famous Five, the Secret Seven, Swallows and Amazons, Robert Louis Stevenson and Peter Pan.
Adults hated this. |
Firstly, I'm almost ashamed to admit it now, but I bought the whole set of Enid Blyton's Mystery Of... paperbacks, featuring the Five Find-Outers. These were 2/6d each (12.5p nowadays - nothing. But given that I had 6d a week pocket money that was quite a big deal!).
These books epitomise everything that is completely wrong, from an adult's point of view, about Enid Blyton, being badly written, with sterotyped characters, and containing a character called Fatty. None of that mattered to me of course.
Apart from being page-turning whodunnits, there were three important other elements that made them attractive to this 8 or 9-year old: the children knew best, they solved mysteries without adult help, and the authority figure - usually a policeman - was completely stupid. I suspect the latter reason is particularly why adults frowned upon Blyton. But you can't knock the fact that she published a staggering 752 books in her life. That must be some kind of record. Even if they did have names like Noddy Loses His Clothes.
Matilda - probably the best model reader in the world. |
Then, I'd buy the Beano. Like thousands of other kids. You won't be surprised if I tell you that Leo Baxendale, whom I've had the pleasure to meet a few times, and who came up with the Bash Street Kids and Minnie the Minx, is an out and out anarchist and has been all his life. That's anarchist in the traditional British sense, going all the way back to the Levellers and Robin Hood.
Leo Baxendale's Bash Street Kids: anarcho-punks in the making. |
And I bought Marvel comics, whether imported or reprinted in the pages of comics Wham!, Smash!, Pow!, Fantastic! or Terrific! - hundreds of them, because they blew my mind with their sheer imagination. But in retrospect, I reflect that there was something else, something very special that made superheroes attractive to me - and to all kids who love them:
They have secret identities.
Pure magic. My name is Thorpe. I WAS Thor! |
But all of these were secrets known only to themselves - and to me, the reader.
Stan Lee wrote all of these. He is a genius. Like Dahl, Blyton and Baxendale he knew how to create the equivalent of crystal meth on paper. Addictive or what?
These writers are not equal by the way. Today, I can't recall a single Blyton plotline. (And was she the first kids' writer to trademark her name as an instantly-recognisable signature? Is that part of her success - and should we all do this?) By contrast, very many of Stan the Man's stories and characters are burned into my brain. I'd say he was the most prolific of all these writers, and his inventions are the most successful (whether in terms of readership, sales or influence.)
Back to the subject of secret identities. It's not just that every kid longs to have special powers that could help them defeat their enemies (flying, super-strength, invisibility), it's that children have secret lives as well. For many grown-ups these secret lives are forgotten as they get older.
As a child I remember wondering why it was that adults seemed no longer to remember what it was like to be a child themselves, and vowed that I would do my best not to let the memory fade. I don't know whether I do - very well - but I certainly recall that feeling with great intensity.
The powerful idea that you have a secret self, with a special life known only to you, in which you accomplish remarkable deeds, heroic feats - and nobody else (adult) understands, nobody must even know about this - is surely experienced by all children!
They are all, almost perpetually, engaged in one quest or another, one struggle, one battle, or one tumultuous adventure, whether it is emotional, adventurous, imaginative or intellectual. This is what's going on inside children's minds. All the time.
And this is what the best games, books, TV, films and so on both feed on, and feed into, in the fertile forming minds of children.
Always have. Always will.
7 comments:
I'm with you there, with Blyton. Interesting about remembering the plotlines - I can't remember them exactly either - but then, think of the books we've read as adults, it's often just moments that you remember clearly, and scenes. Blyton was a great storyteller, despite her dated views, and she really wrote from a child's perspective. A girl once said of The Faraway Tree: 'I loved this book so much I'm always searching for another'. That has to be the best accolade ever!
:-)
Hi Heather - yes. As writers we should be in that secret life.
Loved this piece, David. I never read many comics, but I certainly had my Blyton phase, and think one of my favourite of her books, The Secret Island, definitely fits your argument: the children ran away from their stupid and callous relatives, and lived on their own, completely autonomous, on a hidden island! What wish fulfillment! As Heather says, she was a terrific storyteller.
It's one of the challenges of writing for children, to recall that inner life...
Thank you for writing about this.
I wondered if any of you think there's a definite advantage in following Blyton in having a trademarked, branding 'signature'?
I still have my very battered copy of The Secret Island! There was another with children who ran away from more stupid and callous relatives to live in the trunk of a tree.
I also remember vowing never to forget what it felt like to be a child and to do something about it when I was an adult. It was the sense of powerlessness that I felt most strongly and it occurs to me looking back that much of what I read featured very competent children who could manage their own lives - sailing, swimming, riding. I didn't yearn for magical powers but practical ones that brought independence.
Thank you for reminding me of secret lives and secret identities.
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