‘Where did the idea come from?’
Every author gets asked that , and it’s always a
difficult question to answer because it’s rarely simple or straightforward. Sometimes the seed of an idea gets planted in
very early life. It lies dormant for
years and years until something else waters it and the seed starts to sprout.
I was born and raised in Gravesend,
Kent, the town where Pocahontas died and
was buried in 1617. These days there’s a
shopping centre behind her statue, but when I was young she stood outlined
against the cold, grey Thames with the industrial landscape of Tilbury in the
distance. There was something about that juxtaposition
that wormed its way into my head. It troubled me when I was small. If I shut my eyes now I can still clearly
picture the scene. She looked so out of place – standing alone, hands
outstretched. Her image haunted me. Maybe
it was the idea that Pocahontas died before she’d been able to return home. Or maybe there was something about the river
that added to the power of her image.
That
image of Pocahontas was one of the many things that later contributed to the
writing of both Apache and Buffalo Soldier. In my next book – Hell and High Water - it’s the river behind her that was the trigger.
By the time the Thames reaches Gravesend it
has grown wide and powerful. The opening
chapter of Conrad’s Heart of Darkness describes it perfectly:
“The sea-reach of the Thames stretched
before us like the beginning of an interminable waterway. In the offing the sea and sky were welded
together without a joint, and in the luminous space the tanned sails of the
barges drifting up with the tide seemed to stand still in red clusters of
canvas sharply peaked…. A haze rested on the low shores that ran out to sea in
vanishing flatness. The air was dark above Gravesend, and farther back still
seemed condensed into a mournful gloom, brooding motionless over the biggest,
and the greatest, town on earth.”
At Gravesend, the waters of the Thames churn
and heave. It’s moody. Bad tempered.
Magnificent. Treacherous. I can only
have been about six or seven when the teenage son of one of my mother’s colleagues
drowned after setting out in a homemade boat.
That tragedy underlined what I already knew
in my guts: I was fascinated by the river, but the Thames was no tame stretch
of water to paddle around or swim in. It was a living, breathing, mighty force
that demanded respect.
I studied TS Eliot’s poetry for my A Level
English. When I read The Dry Salvages
I thought at first he was describing the Thames.
Is a strong brown god – sullen, untamed and
intractable,
Patient to some degree, at first recognised
as a frontier;
Useful, untrustworthy, as a conveyor of
commerce;
Then only a problem confronting the builder
of bridges.
The problem once solved, the brown god is
almost forgotten
By the dwellers in cities – ever, however,
implacable,
Keeping his seasons, and rages, destroyer,
reminder
Of what men choose to forget.”
There’s something about tidal rivers that I
find compelling. They’re moving
highways. Gateways to other worlds.
We moved to Devon when the children were
small, buying a house in Bideford. It’s
a small town on the river Torridge but in its heyday the port rivalled London.
It was from here that many groups of settlers set out for the New World,
including those from the ‘lost colony’ of Roanoke.
I suppose it’s safe to say that I have a
bit of a thing about tidal rivers.
I love the way they constantly change. I
love the force of the tides, the cry of the birds feeding on the mud flats at
low water, the way the spring tides are so high they completely flood the
marshes.
I assumed everyone felt like this until I
had a conversation with my husband. He’d grown up near Bath - beside the Avon -
where the river wasn’t tidal. He hated the way the Torridge could be brim full
one moment and nothing more than a muddy trickle the next.
That one conversation watered the seed of
an idea. When I started work on Hell and High Water our two differing opinions
found their way into the minds and hearts of the book’s two main characters.
Hell and High Water is published by Walker Books on 1st
October.
Thanks for this - and for giving me Conrad and Eliot with my coffee - such lusciously crafted words! Looking forward to Hell and High Water.
ReplyDeleteSounds fascinating! I'm very ambivalent about rivers of any kind. I love their beauty - I love to look at them - but deep water terrifies me. My dad used to have an allotment beside a canal, and there was a lock. Nothing ever happened, but there was something about that dark, deep, still water at the foot of the gates that aroused a profound fear. I wonder if Dickens had something of that feeling; he writes often about the Thames, and has some very nasty things happening at lock gates.
ReplyDeleteLooking forward to this next one....xxx
ReplyDeleteReally looking forward to October now! And I agree with you about tidal rivers.
ReplyDeleteI love that bit of the Four Quartets. And you so beautifully evoke the magic of tidal waters..
ReplyDeleteMe too, Leslie! And Tanya, my so-far-homeless magnum opus also conjures the tidal forces of the Thames. Looking forward to this new book of yours no end!
ReplyDeleteThanks for this <3
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Looking forward to this. I just read Ben Aaronovitch's Rivers of London and you might fight it interesting as he personifies the various rivers and tributaries as tricky women.
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