A place where I'll post up some thoughts and ideas - especially on literature in education, children's literature in general, poetry, reading, writing, teaching and thoughts on current affairs.
Thursday, 23 August 2018
Details
A man read my book about me and wrote
‘Sometimes there’s too much detail in this
book and sometimes there isn’t enough’ and
I thought about the things in my life that are
very detailed, which I had mentioned like the
fact that I liked the sound of a blues harmonica,
being played over an electric guitar, so
maybe that was too detailed for him, or was it
the fact that a man called Jimmy looked out
at the lights in Hatch End station when he was
talking to me? That was also very detailed. And
then I thought about things where it wasn’t
detailed. Would that have been that I hadn’t
mentioned the colour of my brother’s hair? Or
was it that I didn’t describe the windows in my
secondary school? The more I thought about
these things, the more confused and worried
I got, thinking of the man reading my book,
saying as each page went by, ‘Too detalied!’
and ‘Not detailed enough!’ and I imagined him
with a lover and the lover saying, ‘Really? Oh
dear. How annoying. That is poor’ because
lovers can be very supportive like that, particularly
when you’re reading a book, though if you had
just had a row, you can imagine that a lover
might just act contrary and whenever he said,
‘Oh god, not enough detail’ the lover said, ‘Well
isn’t that you? Never satisfied with what you’ve
got. What do you want him to tell you, where he
was on the night of April 3rd 1954?’
And he would say, ‘Why don’t you respect my
judgement on things? Whenever I express an
opinion you jump down my throat like I don’t
know what I’m talking about...’ and it could all
get quite nasty very quickly.