The first full-length
novel I ever wrote was a thriller about football and it rejoiced in the title
Dead Shot. I wrote it over two years after leaving university; I couldn’t
afford to get it all typed, and I never sent it to a publisher. Probably just
as well, as I soon realised it wasn’t good enough to be published. But I
learned a lot from the experience, not least that, whatever literary talent I
might lack, I did at least have the stamina and persistence to put together a
novel of around 70,000 words. And that knowledge kept me going until I found a
publisher for All the Lonely People a
decade later.
Why a football novel?
Well, I grew up in a football-mad household ; my late father was obsessed about
the game, and spent the last ten years of his life, at times in great pain when
suffering from cancer, writing a book, A Team for All Seasons, about the club he loved – which finally got published,
just before he died. I’m prouder of his achievement, as a man who left school
at 14 and had no real formal education, than I am of any of my own books.
Over the years, I’ve
written a few short stories which feature football, including one called “Penalty”
which was a sort of tribute to my father’s team. But I’ve never written another
football novel. I keep thinking someone else will write a really good football
thriller one day, but I have to say that the soccer-based novels I have read
over the years have been more Unibond League standard than in the Dick
Francis league.
But sometimes fact goes
far beyond what is credible in fiction. And yesterday has to be one of those days,
when Manchester City – a team I started supporting out of sympathy when they
were bottom of the league, an experience they have repeated several times since
– won the Premier League in the most dramatic and extraordinary circumstances.
I’ve never been so enthralled by any sporting occasion As I think all the pundits have agreed, you
really couldn’t make it up.
I haven't followed that game closely, Martin, but from what I do know it certainly was a "miracle win," as they say. And thank for sharing your father's story - a most inspiring one.
ReplyDeleteThat's very interesting about your first novel. I didn't write a book until I was in my late forties when Mary and I began to talk about collaborating on one. But I had never written anything except short essays and stories so I did a practice novel simply to prove to myself, as you say, that I had the stamina and persistence to cover the distance. Sometimes when you are two thirds of the way through writing a book and feel you'll never get to the end it is good to know that you can finish, having done so before. Yes, I was into running then and that informed my thinking. The mystery itself involved orienteering, a sport which I was also into. The main merit of The Body in the Reentrant as a novel is that it has enough words.
ReplyDeleteNo, you couldn't! It was truly amazing anbd they are enjoying every minute.
ReplyDeleteSo true what you say about a person's unpublished novels, which are indeed a learning experience and, as you say, ensure that the stamina is there awaiting the talent coming to fruition.
Many thanks for your comments. Still pinching myself after that great match! The point about stamina is perhaps one I'll return to in a future post. I do think it counts for a lot.
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