It is true that on a daily basis I find myself thinking of much better – that is, more productive and less harrowing – ways to spend my life.
For example, I could be a breeder of chickens: I could put this bird with that bird and then there would be eggs before chicks, which I could sell. Or I could make my own tomato sauce from home-grown tomatoes and sell it on a card-table at a town market. Sometimes I have dreamt of having a lavender farm and being in a shed with the radio on and packing dried leaves into little pillows. How good it would be to only worry about the growing of plants and the harvesting of leaves and the drying of leaves and having enough material to make the little pillows (I don’t excel at sewing but that is a minor point at this stage, isn’t it?) and packing it all into the boot of the car and setting up my little stall and selling my wares to passers-by, who would undoubtedly adore what I’d made. A writing colleague and I often talk about opening a café or, when we are feeling especially despondent and therefore less sociable, we consider running an online shop selling fancy scarves – wouldn’t we just wait for the orders to come in and then package up the goods and into the account the money would go?
But then I realise – yet again – that the constant in my utterly inconsequential existence has been reading and writing. I have moved between towns and cities, I have had a variety of jobs, I have fallen in love with rock bands and fallen out of love with rock bands, I have made friends and some friendships have dissolved. But all the while there has been reading and there has been writing.
In terms of reading, books – novels especially – have provided daily company. Books that I loved when I was younger include The Day of the Triffids by John Windham (my edition is dated 1981), One Day in the life of Ivan Denisovich by Alexander Solzhenitsyn (again my edition is 1981), The Dingo Summer by Ivy Baker (1980), The Secret Garden by Frances Hodgson Burnett (I’ve owned a number of editions, but the one currently at hand is dated 2008), The Lotus Caves by John Christopher (1978), The Merry-Go-Round in the Sea by Randolph Stow (1968), and Lord of the Flies by William Golding (1972). Those novels have been plucked from my bookshelves more or less at random, and here’s hoping that I will have copies of them nearby in my final years, as portentous as that sounds. It would be good to return to the early stories.
And writing: it seems that I have been doing it from the very beginning.
I distinctly remember being in Year Four – so we are talking 1978 – and having a double creative-writing period. I loved that time of the school day. It didn’t seem terribly difficult to fill a few pages of an exercise book with words written in my illegible hands – indeed, thinking back on it now makes my belly come alive with butterflies. No doubt they were terrible words, but that didn’t seem to be a major concern, for me at least. Towards the end of one particular class, the teacher asked for someone to read their work aloud. Up shot my hand, but the teacher chose someone else. After the boy read his story, the teacher again asked for a volunteer. Again my hand shot up. ‘Pick me! Pick me! Pick me!’ This time the teacher glared at me and said, ‘Nigel Featherstone, you’re being very rude. Put your hand down – I will not be choosing you.’ I was shattered. I had always been a well-behaved child who rarely got into trouble. All I had wanted to do was read my story aloud, and, obviously, dazzle them with my boundless literary skill.
Later, around Year Nine (or ‘Third Form’ as it was called where I went, an Anglican private school), my English teacher gave an assignment that was to be completed during the holidays: write a long short story on any theme. For days, if not weeks, I sat – and at times lay sprawled – on the couch and wrote my story. Over and over I did it, rewriting and rewriting. I know I have spoken about this detail before, but on repeat in the background would be the soundtrack to the BBC’s serialisation of Brideshead Revisited. Curiously, to this day I still sometimes write to that music.
In the early 1990s I took a job in Perth, the world’s most isolated city, and I began keeping a sketchbook-notebook-diary. It wasn’t long before my notes twisted into fiction. Perhaps it was because I didn’t know a soul in Western Australia, or I found reality rather limiting, or that it was easier to be an expert in a pack of lies. Or there was something I wanted to work out, and the best way to do that was through fiction.
And now, in 2016, I am still doing it: I dream up stories of various lengths, I write them down (by hand), I rewrite and rewrite and then edit and polish. It is probably true to say that the writing of a story becomes a fixation – it occupies my thoughts. And then it is either published or it isn’t. No doubt it is all about the lure of the imagination. The lure, yes, but also the safety of the imagination. In my imagination I can control what happens. I can make a big drama out of a careless conversation. I can resolve a life-long hurt. I can bring someone to justice. I can experience something that I would not dare experience in ‘the real world’ (whatever that is). Through writing, life becomes an object for play, something to be pulled apart and opened out. Through reading, the world becomes more coherent.
My trusty Roget’s Thesaurus (1976) provides the following phrases for ‘imagination’: ‘fine frenzy’, which is lovely; ‘thick-coming fancy’, which is quite something, all things considered; and ‘coinage of the brain’, which I like very much.
So I am not a wannabe chook breeder or lavender farmer/craftsperson or co-managing director of poshscarves.com. I am a purveyor of brain coinage.
Good to know.
11 comments
Comments feed for this article
March 4, 2016 at 9:16+00:00Mar
khulud khamis
“Coinage of the brain,” I like it. And yes, making up stories, reading and writing have also been one of the very few ‘constant’ elements in my life as well, and I hope they’ll always be there for me. I liked the way you write about writing and reading
March 4, 2016 at 9:16+00:00Mar
Nigel Featherstone
Hi khulud, lovely to hear from you and many thanks for your comments – I appreciate it. So glad reading and writing has been a constant for you too. And thanks for keeping in contact through this blog. All the very best to you. Nigel
March 5, 2016 at 9:16+00:00Mar
whisperinggums
Haha, very good Nigel, “coinage of the brain”!
Why were you being rude? And why wasn’t she going to choose you? Enquiring minds want to know.
I love this: “In my imagination I can control what happens. I can make a big drama out of a careless conversation. I can resolve a life-long hurt. I can bring someone to justice. I can experience something that I would not dare experience in ‘the real world’ (whatever that is). Through writing, life becomes an object for play, something to be pulled apart and opened out. Through reading, the world becomes more coherent.” I think you are partly right about the “through reading” bit, because I think readers also get to experience something they would not dare experience (or just not be able to experience) in the so-called real world, through someone else’s writing which fires up our (the readers’) imaginations. Don’t you think?
(PS I’m so sorry I didn’t to the Childers Forum in Feb. I was away when it came through on my Facebook page, and meant to let you know that I was committed at that time. I’ve had the busiest start to the year that I can remember for a long time.)
(PPS And I will try, try, try to read more Review of Australian Fictions! It’s such a great initiative and I’ve bought some but that’s as far as I’ve got!)
March 5, 2016 at 9:16+00:00Mar
Nigel Featherstone
Hi Sue, lovely to hear from you.
As to why the teacher didn’t choose me? Well, from memory I think we actually went on for a few rounds i.e. I kept loudly shouting for the teacher to choose me, and it’s possible that I got louder and louder until I was almost screaming. So perhaps it was my loudness and insistence that put the teacher off. Maybe if I’d been calmer/more polite, I might have had success?
And yes, I agree about readers having experiences they wouldn’t normally have. I’ve just finished reading Iris Murdoch’s ‘The Sea, The Sea’, and that certainly was an experience I wouldn’t normally have!
No worries about the Childers Forum. It was a wonderful event, but perhaps we were all slightly perplexed with the overall position of the local politicians i.e. ‘The arts? I love them, they’re essentially, fully support them. As to more money? You’re kidding yourself.’
And the Review of Australian Fiction is amazing – here’s hoping it can keep going.
Best,
– Nigel
PS I’ve been really enjoying your responses to Helen Macdonald’s ‘H is for Hawk’, I book I thoroughly enjoyed.
March 5, 2016 at 9:16+00:00Mar
whisperinggums
I might have known you’d like H is for hawk (though I don’t think hawks are very nice to chickens!). I am currently watching the tennis, and I started wondering how much money Aussie Davis Cup players are paid, versus what our creators earn. Hmm … it’s a strange world.
March 5, 2016 at 9:16+00:00Mar
Margaret Innes
Fine frenzy
The lunatic, the lover and the poet
Are of imagination all compact:
One sees more devils than vast hell can hold,
That is, the madman: the lover, all as frantic,
Sees Helen’s beauty in a brow of Egypt:
The poet’s eye, in fine frenzy rolling,
Doth glance from heaven to earth, from earth to heaven;
And as imagination bodies forth
The forms of things unknown, the poet’s pen
Turns them to shapes and gives to airy nothing
A local habitation and a name.
A Midsummer night’s Dream.
Sometimes our imaginations control us. In writing fiction, writers usually (so I believe) sit on the right side of the equation, do good. Imagination is one of the most powerful forces on earth.
March 5, 2016 at 9:16+00:00Mar
Nigel Featherstone
Hi Margaret, thanks very much for your thoughts – I really appreciate them. As to ‘the poet’s pen/Turns them to shapes and gives to airy nothing/A local habitation and a name’? Thanks for the reminder. I do love that sense of ‘local habitation’. I agree that imagination is a powerful force. At least, it can be when the creative environment is amenable. Here’s hoping you’re writing very well. Best, Nigel
March 5, 2016 at 9:16+00:00Mar
Michele Seminara
You certainly are, my friend, and a very fine one. I love lavender pillows, but I love your stories more. They make my heart swell and flutter strangely inside my chest. Surely a sign of success!
March 5, 2016 at 9:16+00:00Mar
Nigel Featherstone
Hi Michele, you are just too kind. But I might have to make you a lavender pillow regardless. When I’ve grown some lavender. And know how to make the little pillows x
March 5, 2016 at 9:16+00:00Mar
robyncadwallader
Hi Nigel, I’m right with you on all of this, except for — and with all respect to Messieurs Featherstone and Roget — ‘coinage of the brain’. I suppose there is some kind of ‘trading in ideas’ in writing, but ‘coinage of the brain’ feels too much like a commercial transaction (and we all knows it’s anything but that!). But I admit, I’m probably being too literal about it all — I see gold coins in sweaty palms. And when I think about imagination, I don’t even think of the brain, though I know it must come from there somehow. I prefer Shakespeare giving ‘shapes to airy nothing’. I love the idea of the lavender farm, too — perhaps a novel about a lavender farm, with lots of research. Thanks for the lovely ruminations in this piece x
March 7, 2016 at 9:16+00:00Mar
Nigel Featherstone
Hi Robyn, as always, thanks so very much for your thoughtful comments. Indeed, ‘brain coinage’ does give the impression of the imagination leading to or involving a financial transaction, like, say, something that might happen after a therapy session. Though perhaps in my rather fiscally strained environment (that’s code for dirt poor, obviously), the inclusion of ‘brain coinage’ in the above post is a plea for some kind of financial compensation for this crazy thing we do? And how right is Shakespeare: giving ‘shapes to airy nothing’. And maybe I will one day write the Lavender Farm novel, though I wonder if I’d be able to bring to it sufficient conflict and drama – I’d just want it to be so very peaceful and nurturing! x