My Long, Bumpy Career: Thirty Years as a Professional Children’s Writer - Susan Gates
They say, over here in England, that you
know you’re getting older when policemen start looking younger. For writers
like me (I am 63 this year) that now applies to editors. I am often surprised
to realize that, with some of my editors, I’m old enough to be their mother.
Soon it will be their Grandma. Of course, often in these days of e
communication (the days of being invited down to London for lavish lunches with
your publishers are long gone!) I never see my editors’ faces, often have no
idea how old, or young they are. That cuts both ways. They have no idea how old
I am. Until they ask for an author photo.
Other things in children’s writing have
changed out of all recognition. When I started, back in the eighties with
Oxford University Press, children’s writing was a niche activity, rather looked
down on by literary critics.
Just a brief diversion about OUP – I
recall my Big Chance, when OUP (greatly respected publishers then and now)
invited me from the North of England to discuss a proposal. I recall the
journey down with my new born baby wailing and my two older kids fighting in
the back of my car, the baby sick on my blouse, the formidable, blue-stocking –
but as I later learned, quite wonderful – editor who greeted me. It was all
rather overwhelming. Even their Oxford HQ was daunting – an imposing Grecian temple
with columns which you had to pluck up courage to enter!
Oxford University Press (who published my
first book, a ghost story) allowed me to write long, rather scholarly novels
for teenagers. I believe I would never have that indulgence now, when every
publisher’s brief, especially Middle Grade, includes things like, “pacey, page
turning, action-packed, suspense-filled.” Indeed over the years I’ve totally
changed my style (which may be a good thing!). I’ve tightened everything up,
plot and prose, become much more economic, introduced nothing irrelevant that
might hold up the action, avoided descriptions (both character and setting) of
more than a couple of sentences, cut out adverbs. It’s actually an excellent technical
challenge for a writer, being so self-disciplined. When you can’t have long
descriptions of what’s happening inside a character’s head, for example, you
have to show it purely through what they say and do. If you don’t use adverbs,
you have to choose more descriptive verbs. Not being able to waffle wonderfully clarifies your thinking!
And
that (short, pacey etc.) seems mostly what the market demands - especially the
educational market. I’m told it’s partly because children have much shorter
attention spans. And certainly the fear of “boring” children, even for a
second, looms very large these days. I was recently asked to cut down a
thriller for teenagers from 65,000 words to under 35, 000 because “research has
shown” that 35,000 words is the optimum length teenagers can stand. ( I already hear the cries of, “What about
Harry Potter?” Harry Potter was a publishing phenomenon – of which more below)
It
was down to the Harry Potter series that the interest in children’s literature
exploded. Thanks J.K! It gave a real
vibrancy to the children’s book scene. Big celebrities wanted to be part of it.
I recall going down to Puffin in London for a question and answer session on
comic books for children at the same time as Madonna’s book launch for “The
English Roses”. I was quietly thrilled about the six thousand pound advance for
my latest book, by far the biggest I had ever been offered. Until I learned
that Madonna was (reputedly!) getting 2 million. But it was all brilliant
publicity for children’s literature – it raised its profile sky high. The only
downside, for a jobbing writer like me, was that, with the increased interest,
there was a lot - and I mean a lot - more competition. Suddenly, children’s
writing was cool.
Now, over here at least, austerity
bites. It’s still hard to get published by traditional routes, but for
different reasons. Some publishers are slashing the number of books they
publish each year, they have more rigid briefs, they can’t afford to take
risks, But, despite that, these are hugely exciting and empowering times for
young writers. (When I started, it was a chicken and egg situation – you,
mostly, couldn’t get published until you’d got an agent and most agents
wouldn’t take you on until you were published. Those gatekeepers to getting
your book in print seemed as hard to get past as Cerberus!)
But now aspiring writers can do it
themselves. Publish their books as e-books, do their own publicity, set up blogs.
Rather than writing being largely a solitary profession, it has become social,
convivial, with people sharing ideas and experiences. I’m all for it, that’s
good for everyone, not least a writer’s mental health. And, as I get older, I
positively welcome input from editors or fellow writers with younger, sharper
brains than mine.
For instance, I’ve always been especially
interested in writing funny books for children. Funny books over here are
sometimes seen as ”less worthy”, not “serious literature”. Which is strange when you think of how
important, for all sorts of reasons, laughter is in children’s lives. And, personally speaking, I find comic prose
much more challenging and trickier to pull off than the “serious” books I
write.
So, in conclusion, does anyone out there feel
the same and have any tips to share on writing successful comic prose for
children? I’d be really interested to know (and, of course, to steal your
tips!)
Susan Gates
Thanks for stopping by Smack Dab, Susan...and congrats on such a long career!
Wow, Susan, you have been very successful at publishing. Congratulations. I also would like some tips on writing humor for kids. I put in a little humor in my books, but find it hard to create humor throughout my manuscripts. I enjoyed the interview.
ReplyDeleteHi Janet!
DeleteThanks for your kind comments. Something I learned over the years with comic writing (don't know if others agree!) is that less is more. When you write something funny you begin to agonize, "Will kids get it?" then, just in case they don't, you start to spin it out a little and explain it - and that kills it stone dead. I've learned to trust kids to get it (provided it's funny of course!). After all, their sense of humour is probably much more highly developed than mine. I read somewhere that kids, on average, laugh 150 times a day, whereas, for adults, it's only about 25. Can that be true?
Kind regards,
Sue Gates
This was a truly inspirational piece to read. Thank you for sharing your experience!
ReplyDeleteHi Megan,
DeleteThanks so much for your kind response. Best of luck with your writing!
Cheers!
Sue Gates
Terrific post, I really enjoyed it. I've been writing since the 80s but didn't start to publish more than magazine pieces until the 2000s when finally my MG novels started to hit. Congratulations to you, Susan!
ReplyDeleteHi Kimberley!
DeleteCongratulations for sticking at it and not giving up! When I left teaching I sometimes felt the need to apologize for being a writer, as if it was somehow a soft option, not a proper job. But I've since learned to respect the strength and determination of writers. It needs mental resilience to bounce back from the disappointments and rejection letters, to carry on and not go away and cry in a cupboard. (I have sometimes felt like doing that when critics sharpen their knives!)
Hats off to all us writers is what I say! We're a tough bunch!
Kind regards,
Sue Gates
Susan, thank you for sharing your reflections with us. Your career is so impressive! Good humor is so difficult to write. I think if it makes you laugh, your readers will laugh with you.
ReplyDeleteHi Deborah!Thanks for your kind remarks. It's certainly what I hope - that if it makes you laugh your readers will laugh with you. I've sometimes sat giggling helplessly about something I've written for children. But I suspect I've got an infantile sense of humour. I don't mean that in a self deprecating way. I just think that, like kids, I find a lot of things in adult life laughably absurb and crazy. And so do kids. They laugh a lot at our adult world, the things we do. And, frankly, often, who can blame them!
DeleteKind regards.
Sue Gates