In a thoroughly enjoyable year of interviews, which have given us three different takes on King Arthur by Celtic expert and author John Matthews, fellow storyteller Andy Harrop Smith and acclaimed poet, translator and children's writer Kevin Crossley Holland, I have also enjoyed my interview swap with my friend and fellow writer Sharon Tregenza and a fascinating chat with Marty Stewart, whose first two books are Riverkeep and The Sacrifice Box. But we end the year with a real treat, a wide-ranging chat with four time Tir Na nOg winning writer and fellow resident of glorious Mid Wales, Frances Thomas.
Now Frances is someone who my old editor Viv suggested that I should get in touch with several years ago and now I'm delighted to have finally done so. Recently it led us to a book swap where I got by far the better end of the deal in that I was able to enjoy over a weekend her first trilogy about the Welsh bard and mythic figure, Taliesin, one of my own great heroes. Among the many things i enjoyed was the way she brought together the two very contrasting versions of Taliesin and it was that which really prompted this chat.
So, Frances, first many thanks for agreeing to this chat and for responding so enthusiastically to my questions.
Thanks for asking me, Steve. I've really enjoyed doing it.
Now Frances is someone who my old editor Viv suggested that I should get in touch with several years ago and now I'm delighted to have finally done so. Recently it led us to a book swap where I got by far the better end of the deal in that I was able to enjoy over a weekend her first trilogy about the Welsh bard and mythic figure, Taliesin, one of my own great heroes. Among the many things i enjoyed was the way she brought together the two very contrasting versions of Taliesin and it was that which really prompted this chat.
So, Frances, first many thanks for agreeing to this chat and for responding so enthusiastically to my questions.
Thanks for asking me, Steve. I've really enjoyed doing it.
1.
I’ve always been fascinated by the origins of someone’s art. It’s
that first workbook and the glimmers of the ideas within that
intrigue me. Recently I’ve read your Taliesin trilogy from the
90’s, which you very kindly provided in a rather uneven swap. After
telling you how much I enjoyed it and ripped through the whole thing
over a weekend, you told me it was all so long ago that you could
hardly remember it. But do you remember its genesis and what
intrigued you so much about the figure of Taliesin?
How
it all started; well, I really can't remember. Except that I've
always been fascinated by Welsh mythology, and when I first decided
that I was going to try and finish a book (rather than making the
endless false starts I'd done until them) I'd look for a Welsh
theme. And Taliesin seemed an interesting subject - not so
over-written as Arthur- there was a good deal of scope for me to make
up my own story, combined with the scraps of legends; a
known yet unknown figure if you like.
2.
Now
I’ve been fascinated by the figure of Taliesin for twenty years or
so, but for me it’s always been more the Taliesin that wrote the
mythological poems - multi-layered and full of meaning - and was said to
be King Arthur’s bard – the one if you like who was present in
The Spoils of Annwn or in the company of the Singing Head. You, on the
other hand, in the second and third books in your trilogy in particular, chose to
concentrate far more on the less mythic figure, the Taliesin
who was court bard to Owain of Rheged and indeed Owain features
significantly in your series. Why did you choose that version?
Although
I love myth and magic, I find that when I'm writing, I want to write
about people and their relationships and their connections with the
world about them. And I want to find reality in the magical/mythical
elements.
3.
Taking
a massive leap forward to the past few years, you’ve been
concentrating your attentions on Greek Myth with your Troy books.
What do you think are the main differences in the mythology of your
native land and that of classical mythology?
Our versions of Greek mythology have been much cleaned up and sanitised by countless retellings. And when you first read the Mabinogion, the stories can feel strange and rambling; you look hard into them to find the connections and structures you expect from modern tale-telling. (Probably the stories as we now know them have been worked on by their Christian scribes, so we don't find out too much about the pre-Christian deities who were there originally, which also adds to the strangeness). You need to find your own way of reading them, and then they are suddenly full of real people -loves, betrayals, friendships, cruelties, quests and disappointments, revenges and triumphs.
4.
What
is it, do you think, that myth has to offer not just the
growing child, but the questing adult, and how well equipped
are we as a society to provide that kind of nurturing?
Myths
have an especial richness, in that they've been worked on over
centuries by people trying to find answers to the basic questions
of life - why are we here, what are we supposed to be
doing, how is it that things go wrong, how can we do the right
things, how do we relate to other people, why are some feelings -
love, hate, revenge, excitement - so strong and so universal?
When we read them, we tread in all of those thousands and thousands
of footsteps that have gone down that road before us. So for both
adults and children there is a feeling both of strangeness and
familiarity; we benefit from being exposed to them in so many ways.
(This in spite of the publisher who rejected my 'Helen's Daughter'
with 'These sorts of things don't sell' - well, I think they do, if
children have the chance to see them)
5.
Would
you say there have been distinct periods of writing in your career.
Has happiness necessarily coincided with success?
I
don't think I've ever been very successful - there have been periods
when things seem to be going quite well, but then they're followed by
disasters. Publishers are never very easy to work with, and most
writers can't rely on the expectation of success. I found that out
the hard way at the very start of my career when the second and third
books in my Taliesin trilogy were turned down by the publisher of the
first one.
But
happiness comes from writing - when I'm writing, I'm perfectly
absorbed in my writing world and perfectly happy. That's what a
writer should look for and enjoy rather than 'success' which is
transient and unreliable.
6.
How
important is the home and the landscape you live in, do you think, to the life of a
writer? I’m thinking particularly of that fascinating
and almost indefinable Welsh word hiraeth, that I’ve mentioned in a
previous blog. Is that longing a part of what you write or what makes
you write?
I love living in mid-Wales, which as you know, is one of the most beautiful places in the world. I love being able to look out of my window every morning and see the light and the colours, different and gorgeous every day. I'm less mobile than I was, for various reasons, so the joys of sight are especially blessed. But I'm also - and this might sound paradoxical - a Londoner at heart, since I lived there for more years than I have lived in Wales- and I feel 'hiraeth' for London when I'm in Wales.
But
looking back over my stories, I don't think I write about either; I
try to bring to life the landscapes of the places I write about,
even if I don't know them well. I remember when I was a child
I always believed that Rosemary Sutcliff must have been a great
traveller, as she wrote about places so vividly; and I found out
later that she was so disabled, she must have travelled very little
and with great difficulty. It's imagination that does the trick.
7.
And
apart from skills, in this day and age its tolerance and
understanding that seem increasingly to be going. On one of your
blogs, you wonder what Donald Trump’s favourite poem might be, and
the actual answer turns out to be fascinating. Can you tell us about
that.
I
don't suppose the Donald has ever really read a poem in his life, but
he quotes as his 'favourite poem' the words of a song called 'Snake'
originally sung by black soul singer Al Wilson in 1968. It's about
a woman who out of compassion takes home and nurtures a wounded
snake, which, when healed, turns round and bites her. Before she
dies, the snake sneers 'You knew I was a snake when you found me.'
For snake, of course, read Mexicans, Muslims, immigrants
generally. In spite of objections by Wilson's family,
Trump continues to quote it.
8.
Now
poetry is important to you – not just your own, but clearly other people’s. This has led to you publishing two rather extraordinary
books of poetry. Can you tell us the thinking behind that?
I
love reading poetry and I try to write it, though I don't think I'm
very good. My two 'poetry' books, A Bracelet of Bright Hair,
and Dancing In The Chequered Shade, are basically journals in which I
about the events of my day, and try to match a poem to it. Some of
the poems are by me, but mostly they're by real poets. Readers have
told me that they've found the books helpful and inspiring.
Certainly they were very enjoyable to write.
9.Two years or so ago I did a wonderful six week course on Mental Health in Literature with
Future Learn and co-tutored by Doctor Jonathan Bate and Professor
Paula Byrne, (now Lord and Lady Bate). Among the many wonderful
things covered was the therapeutic nature of poetry and I was able to
give first hand experience of how wonderfully it worked for Rosie, who was quite ill at the time, on
one of my blogs. I also learned how very different an experience it
was to read a poem out loud when Jonathan gave us the task of doing
this with On Westminster Bridge – admittedly after we’d heard Sir
Ian McKellen have a stab at it! Do you think there’s any particular
way of approaching poetry that’s more effective for you?
10,
I
think good poetry can make you a better person if you give it your
full attention. I don't think it would work on Trump though. Remember
Auden's marvellous poem on the death of a tyrant; 'the poetry he wrote
was easy to understand...' I don't think there's a better or
worse way of approaching poetry; just give it your full attention and
then watch out for those poems that suddenly grab you by the throat.
I remember how Donne's love poems did this for me when I first read
them as a teenager.
11.
Let’s
move back to the present and your Girls of Troy series. How did that
fascination with classical mythology finally bear fruit and what made
you tackle it in this way?
I
realized that there were also figures half-hidden on the margins of
the well-known Greek legends just asking to be let out, and these
figures were mostly women and girls; and I suddenly found them
clamoring to tell me their stories. When I found that Helen of
Troy had a daughter, Hermione, I knew I had to find out her story.
Then I discovered that Achilles had a son, Pyrrhus, and that Hermione
and Pyrrhus had a relationship. How could I resist such a beginning?
This became 'Helen's Daughter' the first volume in the trilogy. Then
I knew I had to write about the actual battle for Troy, so I give
this story to a slave girl who witnesses it all, in The Burning
Towers.. Finally, the story has to be finished off by writing about
the murder of Agamemnon and the subsequent revenge taken by his
children Electra and Orestes. For a long while I tried to find ways
of telling this using a voice other than Electra's; but finally I
realized that she had to tell her story herself. This became the
final volume, The Silver Handled Knife.
12.
Rosie and I are currently listening to Anton Lesser narrating The
Iliad on Audible. It’s a long and confusing narrative with so many
lists of names that it makes the Welsh story of Culwch and Olwen seem
positively half-hearted in comparison. How do you de-bug something
like that and make is more accessible – the same I suppose with the
ancient Welsh books and the poems of Taliesin. Or do we just have to
accept them as they are as much as we do Shakespeare’s plays and
not soften or reduce them?
Anton
Lesser must be great to listen to - what a voice. We have Derek
Jacobi doing the same thing, and it's great to listen to in the car. I
think that in their raw form, the stories can be a bit indigestible
especially for children. But they can be retold in such a way that
you concentrate on the universal and exciting elements of the tales,
and children can 'get' them. When I was young, my father bought me a
copy of the Odyssey in Barbara Leonie Picard's adaptation
and read it to me at night. I loved it, and Odysseus has always been
one of my heroes. (yes, there are gruesome bits in the story, but
somehow I absorbed those).
13. This seems a nice point to ask you about the pictures, Frances. I asked you to select several which had some kind of meaning for you. Could you tell us about them and what led to your choices?
Apart from a little bit of self-advertising for my Greek books, there the Lion Gate in Mycenae, which we first visited a few years ago, after longing for years to go there. Seeing it inspired me to write about Mycenae, and Agamemnon and his family. There's also a little Greek Athene owl, which I bought in Greece, and sat on my windowsill while I was writing the trilogy,, and I hope , gave me inspiration from the goddess! Lastly two pictures taken from our house, just showing how beautiful Wales is, and how lovely it is to be able to wake up every morning and see such beauty for free - it's different every day and I never take it for granted. I don't have any pictures for the first trilogy, but certainly the beauty of the countryside inspired me to write about it.
13. This seems a nice point to ask you about the pictures, Frances. I asked you to select several which had some kind of meaning for you. Could you tell us about them and what led to your choices?
Apart from a little bit of self-advertising for my Greek books, there the Lion Gate in Mycenae, which we first visited a few years ago, after longing for years to go there. Seeing it inspired me to write about Mycenae, and Agamemnon and his family. There's also a little Greek Athene owl, which I bought in Greece, and sat on my windowsill while I was writing the trilogy,, and I hope , gave me inspiration from the goddess! Lastly two pictures taken from our house, just showing how beautiful Wales is, and how lovely it is to be able to wake up every morning and see such beauty for free - it's different every day and I never take it for granted. I don't have any pictures for the first trilogy, but certainly the beauty of the countryside inspired me to write about it.
14. The second picture looks very like a place I walk in regularly. That's Mid-Wales for you. But finally,
Frances, are there still remaining characters, themes and ideas you
want to work with and why?
I
have a story that I wrote some years ago, set in the seventeenth
century and the era of tulip fever. My agent wouldn't send it out, so
it's still sitting there. It's probably a bit 'quiet' for today's
market, but I'd like to work on it a bit, and bring it out
myself. I don't have many indulgences any more, so self-publishing
is one I can allow myself, I think.
Well I hope your tulips get to flourish at some time in the future, Frances,Thank you so much for chatting to me and everyone who reads this blog.
Steve, it's been a pleasure.
And I, everyone, will see you next in January so I'll look forward to that.
Steve Gladwin
Author of 'The Seven' and 'The Raven's Call.'
Writer and Screenwriter
imagepoet7@gmail.com
Steve, it's been a pleasure.
And I, everyone, will see you next in January so I'll look forward to that.
Steve Gladwin
Author of 'The Seven' and 'The Raven's Call.'
Writer and Screenwriter
imagepoet7@gmail.com
2 comments:
Apologies to everyone who reads this - and especially Frances - that the full moon gremlins got in and played 'spot the font', especially at the end. Didn't show up on blogger of course!
Fascinating stuff, Steve and Frances!
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