Back in
January I decided to go to my local children’s bookshop to see if they had my
new book in stock. Maybe I could sign their copies? Luckily I managed to park
just a few yards from their door.
But as soon
as I got out of the car I was in agony. My knee was a mass of shrieking nerves.
I could hardly walk the few steps to the shop door. I had to hold onto the
windows of the neighbouring shops and hop (so determined was I to see my book
on the shelves that I didn’t consider giving up).
Once in the shop I was in so much pain that
the kind staff had to get me a chair, and, once I’d signed their stock and
bought a copy for my uncle, the owner insisted on accompanying me back to my
car, which I could drive, fortunately, because it was my left knee and it is an
automatic car.
Just under
four months later, I am recovering from an operation on a badly torn cartilage.
I am suffering less pain every day, doing my physiotherapy exercises, and
looking forward to being able to walk for more than 15 minutes at a time.
I wouldn’t
say it’s been an entirely negative experience though. The enforced rest which
comes after surgery or illness is an unusual experience in today’s busy world.
It gave me a chance to reflect on my lifestyle, and how little time I spend
away from computer or car. As I read,
watched Masterchef and Game of Thrones, listened to music, or just snoozed, I
found ideas for my current book blossomed in a way that doesn’t happen when
I’m actively trying to focus.
Convalescence
and illness are at the heart of some of my favourite children’s books. The long road to recovery
for Katy after she fell off a swing in What Katy Did. The scary rocks with eyes
in Catherine Storr’s Marianne Dreams. Harriet’s wobbly legs which need building
up through ice-skating in Noel Streatfeild’s White Boots, Colin's mysterious illness in The Secret Garden. As a writer I get
impatient when I have to nurse a character through an illness or injury,
because it slows the book down – I can completely understand why Sally Green
plumped for self-healing as a magical gift in her debut Half Bad. But as a
reader, as a child, I loved these stories of rest and recovery.
Nowadays some of our most successful children's books are about illness, disability, mental illness and accidents requiring intensive care. Books such as John Green's The Fault in Our Stars and R J Palacio's Wonder have won prizes and become best sellers.
Am I right to think that today's medical dramas are more dramatic than the tales of slow healing from the past? They are more likely to be about death and prejudice, than fresh air and gentle exercise. Are there modern books about overcoming the tedium of not being able to do very much for a while?
My dodgy knee has made me rethink my plans for a study in my house. I have decided to do without a desk and laptop in the room earmarked for me. I have other
places where I can go to write - cafes, tables, other people’s houses. The internet is constantly entertaining and informative, and endlessly distracting. What I
need is a room with no screens. A place for reading and listening to music. A space to
shut out the busy-ness of work and family, to let ideas and characters develop. Somewhere for dreaming, resting, creative thinking. A place to slow down and think.
At the
moment this room is full of boxes, and needs redecorating thanks to a leaking
roof. But when it’s complete, I promise to report back and tell you if it works
for me as I hope.
5 comments:
A study with no desk - what a brilliant idea! It's inspired! Do you mind if I steal your idea? I have to empty my study to have the house rewired, so maybe I won't put the desk back in (I have a downstairs desk anyway) but put a sofa in there instead.
An interesting post, too! I wonder if it's because convalescence is no longer a common childhood experience? Now we don't have polio or diphtheria or whooping cough - or even measles - the common ailments are all over quickly.
Ow - I've torn a cartilage and it's really not fun. It will be a while till it's mended and longer still till you trust it. But you'll get there - and in the meanwhile you are being creative (in many senses) so all is not lost!
Do steal it, Stroppy, then I won't feel it's such a mad idea! And yes, I think the nature of illness has changed...unless you get glandular fever which means weeks of sitting around, pale and wan. Thanks for the encouraging words, Jo! I am being patient.
Agreed, sometimes a rest is just what you need to start thinking. I once spent a week in bed with flu; after the initial temperature and other nastiness was over, I sat in bed and wrote 20,000 words! By hand, BTW - no computer in those days and I couldn't very well take the typewriter in!
Another time, I was propped up in the lounge with a sprained ankle and Jane Austen on the box - amazing what it did for my mental health!
I write a lot in the lounge room, but a study without my gorgeous desk would be unthinkable! Sorry!
Coming to this post a little late but just wanted to say how much my son (and I) enjoyed Salvage! Another page-turner, terrific tense ending, but full of (realistic) optimism, and I specially liked Cass's dad - who turned out to be better than I expected!
I loved Marianne Dreams - the rocks scare me to this day - and I suspect that part of the convalescence in books like that comes from the fact that in those days, being ill meant really being confined to bed. As Stroppy Author says, many childhood illnesses have gone altogether, but our children also expect to recover out of bed, usually on the sofa with the TV! I spent a long time trying to work out what illness Marianne actually had.
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