Back in the late-80s, early 90s, I became engrossed in the campaign
to free the Beirut hostages. The campaign, particularly the one to free John
McCarthy, was designed to get people involved – a girlfriend (Jill Morrell)
desperate for her partner to return, trendy events and eye-catching media
forays all combined to make this a human story. Briefly, I joined the Friends
of John McCarthy, who was promptly freed a week later, and I ambled over to
Amnesty instead. I didn’t stay a campaigner in any sense, but the story still
resonated with me – so much so that I bought and devoured their joint book, Some Other Rainbow.
When I was working in a bookshop, McCarthy and his fellow
hostage, Brian Keenan, Belfast-born and held despite carrying an Irish
passpost, came for a signing session. They were a pleasure to watch engaging
with each other. They had been held together, mostly isolated from the other hostages,
for the best part of 5 years and had become very close. Their banter was great,
and it was a fun day. But I never read Keenan’s account of his incarceration, An Evil Cradling, thinking it might be
very high-brow for me.
A few weeks ago, I was browsing the charity bookshelves
(hey, with a reading habit like mine and a love for paper books I need to cut
the odd corner to keep up. Just ask my local library.) I came across Keenan’s
book and decided to risk all of 50p on it.
I read it from cover to cover in a few days. Literary, but
raw and powerful, it was an incredible account that dealt with the psychology
of being held, a determination not to be nameless and faceless combined with a
ferocious courage. It could not have been more different than McCarthy’s
account, which I immediately dug out from the back of the bookcase (it has
survived many book culls) and began again.
Both men remember the same instances as far as the events
go. But both put a different meaning on the events. One part of the tale, where
Keenan receives a ferocious beating, didn’t impact me in McCarthy’s telling –
but in Keenan’s it was raw and personal and unforgettable. So, too, the other
way round – McCarthy’s telling of being transported, mummified, is much more
horrific than Keenan’s, despite the two men being together throughout.
All very interesting, I hear you say, but what has it to do
with a writing blog?
A few years ago, I was introduced (by a very clever lady who
I shall refer to under her moniker The Judge) to the concept that everyone is a
protagonist in their own story. I think, when writing, it’s easy to forget
that. We have our protagonist, the story revolves around him/her and it’s an
easy habit to fall into that our secondary characters support that storyline.
But that story is not theirs.
In Some other Rainbow,
Morrell describes receiving a poem about waiting* and how it impacted on
her. Many years later, when I was writing Abendau’s Heir (and Legacy) that poem
came back to me when I was writing Sonly’s storyline. Her role was to wait –
not passively, just as Morrell did not – but, nonetheless, to wait. No news. No
hope. Nothing to cling to but the waiting itself. That becomes Sonly’s history.
Not Kare’s. Not Lichio’s. Just hers. And in becoming the one who waits she is
the protagonist in that story; the point of view revolves around her.
Too often I read a story and feel that any of the characters
could be placed in any role and the outcome would not change - but that is not
the way life runs. Sure, neither McCarthy nor Keenan could free themselves, but
they impacted on their guards in separate ways, and on each other. They changed
the course of their own story, and those around them. And, in the end, once the
outcome is delivered (and anyone who has read Abendau or, indeed, Inish Carraig
will know this is a central core to my writing) each character is different in
terms of how events impact on them. That
difference is created through values and beliefs and personal choice. It’s not
something that can be predicted nor will any two people ever react in the same
way to the same event.
McCarthy and Keenan moved me equally – but on different
levels. McCarthy in how human he was facing such horror, how he was the person
any of us might be facing the extraordinary. In his story, each day is faced
and endured and made as light of as he can. Fears are recognised and frailties
exposed. Keenan, on the other hand, applies an intelligence to every encounter
and remorselessly explores what it says about him and the others impacted. They
may both be telling much the same story for many hundreds of pages, but they
are telling a different story, about themselves.
So, too, should your characters. I think, when writing, it’s
important to delve deep within them. It’s important to know them well enough to
know that, faced with the events of my story, this character would do this and
they would do it because of who they are. The story may not be focused on them,
the events may not surround them, but they’re still the protagonist in their
own part of the story. If they’re not, they’ll never really come to life.
I suppose what I wanted to say was to take whatever story
you want to tell, and let it be told meaningfully and with thought. Just as you
would tell your own story.
*
The poem is Wait For Me by Konstantin Simonov, and it
begins:
Wait for me, and I'll
come back!
Wait with all you've got!
Wait, when dreary yellow rains
Tell you, you should not.
Wait with all you've got!
Wait, when dreary yellow rains
Tell you, you should not.
I
highly recommend you look it up and read it. It’s incredibly moving.
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