I've continued working hard on Hell's Horizon
over the last couple of days -- in fact I've been putting in more hours
per day than I've done in a LONG while!!! This book started life very
unimpressively -- my original idea was to do a grisly but fun homage to
the noir films and books which I love so much, stuff like The Maltese Falcon and The Big Sleep.
The first draft was short and snappy, full of supposedly sharp
one-liners ... and it stunk!!! That just wasn't my style. But something
about the story appealed to me, so I went back and expanded it, threw
in more plot lines and characters, made it a bit more serious. But it
still didn't work. Anyone with a modicum of sense would have junked it
as a lost cause at that stage, but it gnawed away at me. I've written
lots of books in my time, and while they always occupy a lot of my
thoughts while I'm working on them, they tend to slip from them
afterwards -- except for the good ones. Some of them just don't go away
-- that's how I judge what's good and what isn't. Hell's Horizon
wasn't working, but I couldn't stop thinking about it. I believed there
was a decent book in there somewhere, that I was failing it, that it
could be better if I just figured out the right approach ...
So
I went back to it and tried again. And this time it clicked. This was
back in 1997, around the same time that I was working on the first
draft of Cirque Du Freak. I'd
finished my first book when I was a tender 17, in 1989, and had written
quite a few more over the coming years. But it wasn't really until the
mid 1990s that I felt things starting to truly come together, when I
"found my voice" and began writing books in my own style. I wrote all
different types of books, flitting from one genre to another -- horror,
fantasy, sci-fi, sex (yes, I've written a few VERY steamy and
disturbing books in my time, though none of those have yet to see
print, and probably won't any time soon, if ever!!!). But in the mid
90s I began to develop an actual style, one that shone through
regardless of the genre I was working with. It didn't mean everything I
tried came off perfectly -- but at least I could see my strengths
starting to shine through, even when a story wasn't working out quite
the way I wanted.
The draft of Hell's Horizon
that finally worked was probably one of my happiest experiences ever.
The book had thrown up a mountain of obstacles, but by plugging away at
it, I managed to overcome all of them. There was still a lot of work to
do (here I am, applying the final polishes ten years later!!), but the
most difficult part was behind me. I had written something that I KNEW
was good, something that I KNEW would work. It hadn't been easy, and it
had looked for a long time like I would fail. But pulling success from
the fires of defeat is one of the most rewarding parts of being a
writer. I don't think you can really appreciate success unless you've
stared into the abyss of defeat. I believe that just about every writer
(indeed, people in all walks of life) faces a moment in their life
(probably lots of moments) when they look into their soul and admit, "I
can't do this." Making that admission is an important part of
developing. But even more important is then taking that admission,
curling your fist around it, and walking forward to do that which you
don't think you can do. Because you CAN do it. We all have the
potential to do more than we believe we can. It's simply a case of
refusing to accept our limits, of constantly pushing to do more, to be
better, to go where we know, believe and fear we can't. In life,
ultimately, I don't believe there's any such thing as CAN'T. There are
those who DON'T. But all of us CAN.
Bloody hell -- I think I
sound like a guest on Oprah!! I'm going to stop now before I start
calling for a group hug. But you know ... the thing of it is ... all
that I just said above?
It's all true.
Posted at 08:03 pm by
Darren_Shan
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Maitlin December 27, 2007 07:24 PM PST
Ehmagawd!!!!!!!!!!!!! YOU DO SOUND LIKE A GUEST ON OPRAH! one of my... erm... aquatinces (how do you spell it?) (a guy! - scary!) watches Oprah.
<3 mAitY <3
uRoKmIsoXxOfF
loloolol |
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Name December 20, 2007 09:18 PM PST
hey darren
thoguht id comment on a blog entry from bit back. I saw the golden compass and was for me an average film. However his books are simply amazing as well as yours are :P. I think a lot of young teenagers should read his books, since they offer confusing questions for them at the time they are at. His perception on religion also got me thinking, he seems to add buddhist ideas whilst turning relgion upside down. :P Overall it offered freedom and made me feel that we all had choices to make and it shouldnt be influenced by people around us but only by us ourselves.
I think many young teenagers would agree that at that age choice is a big deal to becoming their own person and an individual in this world. |
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marion December 20, 2007 09:32 AM PST
I read Hell's Horizon a few years ago and really enjoyed it, so I will be interested to see what changes you have made in the new re edited version.
I can also remember (too) vividly a sex scene you wrote in Ayuamarca, inolving a "romp" on a stairway and frankly, it made me groan and not in a good way - so it may be a blessing to the world at large that your steamier novels have never seen the light of day!!!! |
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Rajdeep Dhadwal December 20, 2007 01:05 AM PST
Group hug T_T |
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Kathryn Winstanley December 19, 2007 11:36 PM PST
Hi Darren! :)
I have to agree with you, it is true, people shouldn't give up on what they wan't to do, even if things look like they aren't going to work, you might aswell try, you have nothing to lose!
I'm sure Hell's Horizon will be a brilliant book, good luck with finishing it, I know it will do well! :)
From your huge fan Kathryn! :) |
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