Came over to London on Thursday with a few of my young cousins, mainly
to catch a couple of Tottenham Hotspur games. We were playing a UEFA
Cup match on Thursday night. We were awful in the first half, as bad as
I've seen us play for quite a long while, and went two goals down --
but then we turned things around completely and won 3-2!!!! It was
bizarre but beautiful! On Friday I took the bosy around some shops,
then we went to see "Spamalot". I'd seen it before, on Broadway, with
its original cast. I have to say I didn't think it was great second
time round. Funny, yes, with some good, jokey songs -- but a bit long,
and not so funny that I burst out laughing too often. It's by no means
a bad play, but I think it's only done as well as it has beecause of
the love people have for Monty Python.
On Saturday I took the boys ice skating (I just watched -- I have a
terrible
sense of balance!!!) and then, after a nice walk along the river and
quick pop into the Tate Modern, to see "Avenue Q". Now THAT is
funny!!!! This is the third time I've seen it, and I still think it's
brilliant and laugh all the time! What's so great about it is that, OK,
it's a rude show about puppets who swear and have sex and do all sorts
of bad things -- but at the same time it's a light, warm-hearted,
uplifting show, and you leave with a big smile on your face and a
feeling that the world isn't such a bad place. There are a few shows in
London which I class as must-sees, and have been to on 3 or more
occasions. "Phantom of the Opera", "Les Miserables" and "Blood
Brothers" are my top 3 pics out of them -- but "Avenue Q" is right up
there with them too!!!!
On Sunday, after a game of bowling in
County Hall and brunch, we went to see Spurs play Birmingham. We played
much better this time ... in fact very well indeed ... but somehow we
lost 3-2!!!!! Football -- it's a mug's game!!!

Oh,
and while I remember, about my books "not maturing with their readers"
... This was a comment from someone on my message boards. It was a
rather rambling comment overall, with much that I swiftly ignored (heh
heh), but that one part of it made me want to reply. The person was
18ish and complaining that my books weren't giving them the same buzz
that they did when s/he was younger. S/he wanted me go further with the
books, to appeal to those readers who've been with me for a number of
years and now want MORE. S/he even accused me of "betraying my original
fans". (I suppose to should react hotly to ludicrous, over the top
comments like that, but I've made plenty of ludicrous, OTT comments
myself on many occasions, so I'm not one to cast stones!!)
Well,
the simple answer, as one fan pointed out in reply to the message, is
that (hold the front page!! world exclusive revelation on the way!!!!)
...well ... they're
children's books.
Um. I think that pretty much gives the game away. To put it another way
-- They're. books. written. for. children. Heh heh -- I know how
sarcastic that sounds, but, honestly, it's not meant to me. I remember
writing an angry letter to the people who make the comic
2000AD.
I became a huge fan when I was 12 or 13 and collected it without
missing an issue for several years. But then I started to read
Watchmen, Killing Joke, Love & Rockets and others, and they went much further than
2000AD ever did. They worked on all sorts of darker, more adult levels, and I wanted
2000AD
to do the same, to go on a journey with them, to appeal to the more
developed teenager that I had become. "By heavens," I wrote (and I'm
paraphrasing here!!), "this reads like a comic written for 12-14 year
olds!!!" The good folks of
2000AD
never wrote back to me, but if they had, their answer probably would
have been (and should have been), "Well, you presumptuous idiot, it
is!!!!!"
Look, I appreciate each and ever one of you guys. That
should be clear from the amount of time I spend on my blog, updating my
site, replying to your letters, etc. I know there are hundreds of other
writers you could be reading, or films or TV shows you could be
watching, or computer games you could be playing, instead of reading my
books. But it's impossible to cater to the changing demands of each and
every one of you. I do my best on each book. I try to evolve and do
different things with story structures and plot line and characters. I
go to some very dark places and sometimes push at the boundaries of
what is acceptable in a children's book. But at the end of the day,
when all's said and done, they ARE for children. Older children, to be
sure, but children nevertheless. I've been called Stephen King For Kids
in the past, and have said in numerous interviews that I like to see
myself as a kind of bridge to adult horror and fantasy, that I hope my
fans go on to read the likes of King, Clive Barker, Raymond E Feist,
etc.
But "go on" are the key words there. Most of you reading
this WILL "go on" to other writers, or will just stop reading so much
at some stage. Most of you WILL grow up and leave my books behind and
look for more challenging, darker , sophisticated material. Some of you
reading that might very well go, "No! It isn't so! I'm your fan for
life, and maybe even beyond!!!" Trust me -- many have said the same
thing before you over the last 8 years, and with just a very few
exceptions, virtually all of those have moved on from my little world
now. I'm not sad about it. I don't feel upset or aggrieved when a fan
decides (consciously or otherwise) that they've had enough of my books.
That's life. It's something we all go through. We all hold flames close
to our hearts for certain periods of our lives, then let them grow cold
and cast them aside. I did it with
2000AD,
with David Eddings, with TV soap opers, and loads more besides. I'm
sure that I'll do it again with certain writers and shows that I love
now. We're constantly changing in life, becoming new people, developing
new tastes and desires. That's not a bad thing -- indeed, I think it's
the very core of being human, and the thing that drives us on to be the
species we are.
I try and do a lot with my Darren Shan books,
and I like to think I do. I've gone places other children's writers
never went (and maybe won't go again!). No matter how simply they're
written, there's an air of sophistication and complexity to the books
(count the number of characters in
The Saga, or the number of themes covered, or genres played with; study the structure of
The Demonata
as it becomes clearer (and, as an aside, although lots of you love to
tell me how you see every twist I write coming in advance, nobody has
yet written to me to say they've spotted what that structure is --
six-tenths of the way through, and I've managed to keep the shape of
the series a mystery from all of you!! though not for much longer
methinks ...)). I think long and hard about these, spend at least two
years working on every novel, and do the very best I can with them.
But
they're still children's books, and always will be. I know I have lots
of adult fans, and I hope to keep some of you entertained for a while
longer if you're willing to go along with my on my somewhat restricted
journeys. But I don't write for you guys, just as I don't write for
the 6 and 7 year olds who read my books (and, yes, there are a few!!).
I write for those between, those torn between the worlds of childhood
and adulthood, those who go to school but are moving towards the adult
world beyond, those who are ready to ask questions of the world, of
life, of themselves, of the universe, who want to have fun but who also
want to be made think. My books DO mature (
The Saga developed a lot between
Cirque Du Freak and
Sons of Destiny), and
The Demonata
is maturing too, as the characters grow older and learn more. But I'm
not interested in letting those characters grow beyond a certain point,
because that would make the series a rough ride for the fans who
started out with the earlier books. We're all on journeys through life
-- but what you have to realise is that you're going to journey with
very many people along the way, and very few (probably none) of those
are going to be with you all the time. For me, writers and stories are
all interconnected. It's irrelevant if, coming of a certain age, you
decide to cast my children's books aside and move on to someone else.
There are places I can't go with you, areas I can't explore with you
... at least, not as Darren Shan.
As
D B Shan,
however (to finish on a nice self-promoting note!!!), I can go as far
as you like,and probably a hell of a lot further than you'd wish!!! So
all you older Shansters and adults out there, make sure you watch out
for
Procession of the Dead in March 2008!!!!!!!!