Summer was never my favourite season when I was a kid. That was winter, with its Christmas celebrations, trips to the theatre and long baking sessions with my grandma. I also liked spring, the perfect time of year for nature rambles when I'd fill entire notebooks with notes about the local flora and fauna.
But summer? In the med? For three endless months? Nope, not for me the blinding sunshine, the intense heat that melted the tarmac on the roads and, worst of all, the trauma of being forced to expose my wobbly tummy on the beach.
The only good thing about summer as far as I was concerned was the time I could spend reading. I had no access to a public library, so I begged, borrowed and, yes, stole books whenever I got the chance. The house next door to us was rented to British servicemen with large families. They always moved on to Cyprus or Hong Kong and their kids introduced me to British authors I might never had have discovered otherwise: Malcom Saville, Arthur Ransome, John Aiken, Ursula LeGuin. The list is endless.
There were some books I returned to every year and some of those have shaped the writer I became. Some of those stories I still treasure to this very day. Here' my top three.
TREASURE ISLAND, by R.L. Stevenson was the perfect summer story. It featured pirates and ships. It told of the sea but not as a benign entity lapping gently against a sandy beach packed with idle holiday makers. In Stevenson's story it was a path to dangerous adventure, a link to an outside world I always dreamt of exploring. I fell in love with Long John Silver, who I much preferred to the pompous Dr. Livesey who reminded me of all the respectable men in our village. (PS. I didn't beg, steal or borrow my copy of this book. It was an end of year prize in Year 4.)
4 comments:
I'd love to get hold of the Conways book. Sounds very good.
I heard Time and the Conways on the radio and have never forgotten it! Such a brilliant manipulation of time. Thank you for this post, Saviour.
Stevenson! I love h im and was influenced by him too -- although not Treasure Island, which was ruined for me by being made to read it at school. But Kidnapped, Dr Jekyll, the Bottle Imp, Maaster of Ballentrae -- he was a wonderful writer.
Thanks for your comments, Mystica, Lynne and Susan. I wonder if the radio version of Time and the Conways is available online, Lynne. It would be the sort of thing the BBC would do. Susan, I love the Master of Ballantrae.
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