Hello there, I hope you're well? Seeing as how it's taken me so long to start a blog in the first place, I'm absolutely determined to take it seriously and enjoy it, and it not be just another thing I do for so long then forget about! Something, I have to admit, I'm known for, unfortunately! But then again, I really don't think that'll happen in this case because I honestly haven't enjoyed anything even nearly as much as I do writing.
When I first started out I never imagined it would take hold in the way it has and that was years and years ago, which is really something unexpected for me. Everyday, since I began, I've sat down and scribbled something, most of it utter tripe, of course, but for the purposes of this particular post that's not important. And although there are times, many many times, when I find it incredibly difficult and stressful and completely beyond my limited abilities, I've never once lost interest or thought it boring or anything like that. The times when I have said to myself
enough is enough, I've more chance of knitting fog than I do writing a novel anyone in their right mind would want ever want to read, twenty minutes later I'm back to it because I know now my life wouldn't be the same without writing in it. Cheesy but absolutely true. I love it love it love! Which brings me back to my first point.
I'm a borderline insomniac, it's ridiculous and it's in those wee small hours when sleep is giving me the finger that I think about everything I'd like to do, need to, etc ... I'm sure you're with me, even if I do ramble like a maniac! And
last night I was thinking, worrying actually, about what I would post next on this blog. I couldn't think of anything, really I couldn't, it was awful but today, whilst out walking the dogs, I got chatting to a lady about, wait for it ... books and writing, surprise surprise! The main focus of the conversation, however, was why we started to read in the first place, whether it be a particular person - a family member for example or whether it was
one book that changed everything.
I have to admit that I haven't always been a reader. Since I was 4, right up until five years or so ago, my life revolved around horses. I was crazy for them and when I wasn't at school, eating and trying to sleep, I was riding, so books never featured much at all really.
Not that I hadn't discovered
the book that, in the end, would pull me back in. I had and it was Tom's Midnight Garden by Philippa Pearce. The librarian at my primary school picked it out for me and my gosh I loved it instantly. If I read it once during that first borrow, then I read it a million times. Even now, however many years on - and bare in mind I have the worlds worst memory - I could take you to the exact bookshelf where it lived, in that big old library that smelled of paint because it also doubled as the art room. Good God, I loved it!
Anyway, I digress, my point now is this. For some strange reason, despite Tom's Midnight Garden and my infinite love for it, over the next few years books took a back seat, until one night - again when I couldn't sleep - I hunted out my own copy and re-read it. Five times that night, may I add, from start to finish, and that was that. It reminded of how that book, and reading in general, made me feel when I was younger, one hundred percent absorbed in a world of my very own. Every book I read now I live in the hope of recapturing that wonderful wonderful feeling and I've come close, very close but I fear it'll never again be quite how it was during that first time reading, well, you know what book I'm referring to! And that's what keeps me going, that hope, that memory.
Before I wrap this up, because I know I have to at some point, I've also realized how much TMG has influenced what I love to read nowadays, how it's influenced the sort of book I'm trying to write and it was subconscious at first, I never made the connection until it was pointed out to me. Books about gardens, mysterious gardens, old houses that aren't quite what they seem, old reclusive ladies etc etc My love for ghost stories and magical realism and as I'm writing this, this very second I've remembered a passage from The Distant Hours by Kate Morton. If you haven't read any of Kate Morton's books you absolutely should. They're wonderful and in her latest, The Distant Hours, the main character is obsessed with books and she says that
every true reader has one book, one moment.
In order to write this properly and not misquote, I've just had another look at it and it also says something I think appropriate for this post and my own personal experience -
It's a librarian's sworn purpose to bring books together with their one true reader.
How amazing is that?
I love it and if the mood takes you, pretty please leave a comment below and tell me why
you started reading, what your favourite book is, I'd love to find out, this subject is fascinating me right now!
Thanks again for reading,
Dorothy, xxx