Benedicte Page guardian.co.uk, Friday 11 February 2011
Martin Amis: 'The idea of being conscious of who you're directing the story to is anathema to me'. Photograph: Suki Dhanda
Remarks about children's books made by Martin Amis on the BBC's new book programme Faulks on Fiction, broadcast this week, have caused anger and offence among children's writers.
"People ask me if I ever thought of writing a children's book," Amis said, in a sideways excursion from a chat about John Self, the antihero of his 1984 novel Money. "I say, 'If I had a serious brain injury I might well write a children's book', but otherwise the idea of being conscious of who you're directing the story to is anathema to me, because, in my view, fiction is freedom and any restraints on that are intolerable."
"I would never write about someone that forced me to write at a lower register than what I can write," he added.
But in an angry blog response on her website, author Lucy Coats, whose books include the Greek Beasts and Heroes series and novel Hootcat Hill, called Amis's remark "arrogant twaddle" with an "implicit insult to those of us who do write children's books".
And writer Jane Stemp, whose book The Secret Songs was shortlisted for the 1998 Guardian children's fiction award, and who has cerebral palsy, said: "I have brain damage ... So Amis couldn't have insulted me harder if he'd sat down and thought about it for a year. Superglueing him to a wheelchair and piping children's fiction into his auditory canal suddenly seems like a good idea."
Coats said that as a children's writer she certainly did not "write down" to her young readership. "Children are astute observers of tone – they loathe adults who patronise them with a passion, adults who somehow assume they are not sentient beings because they are children," she said. "When I write fiction, I research and plan just as (I assume) Amis does. Then I sit down and let what comes, come. The story generally tells itself without any inner voice saying, 'Oh, but you're writing for children – you mustn't say this, or – oh goodness, certainly not that!'"
Every writer is the amanuensis to their characters, often using language they never consciously would, she added. "It's not a feat of the writer's art exclusive to highbrow literary fiction. When I write, I think about language, the richness and complexity and wonder of it, and I use it to hook the reader into my story, to ensnare them in my net of words, to take them so far that they forget that what they are seeing is only print on a page of a dead tree. I say the reader – and that means whoever is reading my book regardless of age."
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Makes me think of the poem 'The Book of My Enemy has Been Remaindered' by Clive James
ReplyDeletecheers
A children's author
He might be bright and clever and a noted author but what a truly awful man he is.
ReplyDeleteI agree, has he ever in his life said anything kind or decent or even agreeable? I doubt it. A literary snob of the very worst kind and a nasty man to boot.
ReplyDelete"Sure, it's simple, writing for kids. Just as simple as bringing them up."
ReplyDelete- Ursula Le Guin
Of course he already writes for children - manchildren......
ReplyDeleteI saw this on another blog but couldn't refrain from posting my responce here too... To think that writing for kids is stupid is one of the dumbest thoughts I've ever heard ;)... Any good book for children contains much more widom and sanity than soap opreas for example... Remember the good, even incredible quotes we could find in good stories for kids? Like: "It is our choices that show what we truly are, far more than our abilities." - J. K. Rowling's Harry Potter,
ReplyDeleteThere are many kinds of joy, but they all lead to one: the joy to be loved. Never-ending Story
One can fight money only with money. my Tale Of The Rock Pieces.
To die will be an awfully big adventure. Peter Pan.
You cannot hold open the jaws of a great white shark with your bare hands, that is job for your brain! my Kids' Funny Business.
Do you still think writing for kids is stupid? writitng a good story for kids is just another evidence of an author's wisdom, good writing skills, not of his/her stupidity!