Reviewed on Radio NZ National this morning.
Let me say straight up that I do not normally choose to
read biographies but I couldn’t resist this one.
Michael Morpurgo
is of course an English author, poet, playwright and librettist,best known these days for his work in children's literature especially of course for War
Horse although I hasten to add that he has been shortlisted four
times for the Carnegie Medal and he won the 1993 Prix Sorcières (France): King
of the Cloud Forests and all of the following:
- 1995 Whitbread
Children's Book Award: The Wreck of the Zanzibar
- 1996 Nestlé Smarties Book Prize (Gold Award): The Butterfly Lion
- 1999 Prix
Sorcières (France): Wombat Goes Walkabout
- 2000 Red House
Children's Book Award: Kensuke's Kingdom
- 2001 Prix
Sorcières (France): Kensuke's Kingdom
- 2002 Nestlé
Smarties Book Prize (Bronze Award): The Last Wolf
- 2004 Red House
Children's Book Award: Private Peaceful
- 2005 Blue Peter
Book of the Year Award: Private Peaceful
- 2005 Hampshire Book Award: Private Peaceful
- 2008 California Young Reader Medal: Private Peaceful
- ( this list from Wikipedia)
So he has a considerable body of work in
addition to his most famous title; in fact he has written over 150 books for
children dating back to 1974,(a full list appears at the back of the book).
He was the third Children's Laureate having been very involved in setting it up in the first place, inspired by his friend the late Ted Hughes..
I guess though it is War Horse (originally published in 1982) for what he will long be remembered. The book sold modestly well but after becoming a play at the National Theatre in 2007 and then a Spielberg movie in 2011 it has sold close to two million copies and has now been translated into more than 40 languages. In a way it is appropriate that this should be the case as that book is particularly about reconciliation, remember the opposing soldiers meet in no-man’s land because he admits in this biography that reconciliation is what he “yearns for most”.
He was the third Children's Laureate having been very involved in setting it up in the first place, inspired by his friend the late Ted Hughes..
I guess though it is War Horse (originally published in 1982) for what he will long be remembered. The book sold modestly well but after becoming a play at the National Theatre in 2007 and then a Spielberg movie in 2011 it has sold close to two million copies and has now been translated into more than 40 languages. In a way it is appropriate that this should be the case as that book is particularly about reconciliation, remember the opposing soldiers meet in no-man’s land because he admits in this biography that reconciliation is what he “yearns for most”.
The
biography reveals the troubled
relationships which Morpurgo has with his children and which have yet to be
repaired.
Although
his daughter was interviewed for the book both of her brothers declined any involvement and in the biographer’s list of
acknowledgments they are conspicuous by their absence.
Although
Morpurgo has a close relationship with all six of his grandchildren,(there is a
lovely photo of them together in the book), the biography reveals that his
troubled relationship with his sons remains a source of regret which, he
says in the book, "lasts longer than any kind of pleasure that comes from
success."
The book
describes how in 1975, his children were then 12, nine and eight, Morpurgo and
his wife Clare,(who by the way is the eldest daughter of Penguin Books founder,
the late Sir Allen Lane, but that is another whole strand in the book that I could discuss at length), moved
to a 50 acre farm, Nethercott House, in Devon where they set up a charity,Farms for City Children, which provided city children with the
opportunity to experience life on a farm for a week.
Working
three seven-day weeks in a row before taking a weekend off, the couple
channelled huge energy into looking after the visiting
city kids so that they were unable to fully devote themselves to their own
family.This and being sent away to boarding schools may be
behind the subsequent difficulties between the father and sons. He also had a
rather difficult upbringing himself not getting to know his birth father until
he was almost an adult.
I should
mention that the Morpurgo’s farm experience for city kids charity has been most successful and there are now
properties in Gloucestershire and Wales with a fourth planned for Scotland.
Princess Anne is its patron. They are justly proud of it.
Biographer,
Maggie Fergusson is Director of the Royal Society of Literarure and a literary
editor. She has previously written a well-received biography of the poet George
Mackay Brown.
In
this biography she and her subject employ a technique I have not come across
before – at the end of each section of the book Michael Morpurgo responds to it
with a new piece of fiction so you get a biography and seven previously
unpublished short stories. I found it appealing although occasionally distracting.
Clearly Maggie Fergusson has got to know her subject well and seems to like him but the book is no hagiography – Morpurgo is a really complex man with many moods and outbursts recounted – “the colour of your
shirt is appalling”, he snapped at a deeply embarrassed small girl, who’s
asked him a question about where his stories come from, after a reading at a
school. I was appalled when I read this.
But the
difficulties of his nature, the strength of his feelings, the complications of
his upbringing, his charitable generosity, his wonderful and energetic work as
Children’s Laureate, along with a long and largely happy marriage, (they
celebrate 50 years next year and Michael talks of having a church wedding to
make up for the registry wedding of long ago, this because neither sets of
parents approved and Clare was pregnant), are what make him and his writing so
appealing and in particular the biography most entertaining and absorbing.
My only complaint? No index! Unforgiveable in a major non-fiction work.
My only complaint? No index! Unforgiveable in a major non-fiction work.
I really glad to read thi , Michael Moruprog my loving bookr ..
ReplyDeletemorpurgo