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LIVING WITH A WRITER
My husband was once rung up by the Daily Telegraph,
and asked what it was like to live with a novelist.
“
Like being the back end of a pantomime horse”,
he said. I have always thought this a perfect metaphor
for the absurdity of living with a writer. Your partner
is invisible, apart from maintaining the illusion the
this strange, cavorting parody of a horse has a pair
of hind legs. Yet unlike the back end, you can at least
see where you’re going. Your partner, your back
end, can push blindly but receives neither applause
nor credit.
Living with a writer must be so horrible that it is
a wonder anyone chooses to do it. For a start, I have
yet to meet even the nicest of us who is not, at heart,
a kind of monster. How but through utter selfishness,
arrogance, single-mindedness and bloody-mindedness
would a book ever be written? Graham Greene claimed
that every writer must have a chip of ice in his heart,
and this is uncomfortably close to the truth. No matter
how warm the human being, there is this necessary detachment
that does not sit easily with a happy love-life or
a well-balanced family. If, in addition, you happen
to be a novelist, producing an imaginary history from
certain observed psychological traits, you are going
to be far less tolerant of any flaws in a partner.
To a novelist, mild indolence speeds towards tragedy
brought about by sloth; attention to personal appearance
is magnified and distorted into grotesque vanity; and
every motive or action is fraught with ominous possibility.
We tend, I suspect, to see the world both more vividly,
and more garishly.
Vain, self-dramatising, self-pitying,
arrogant, callous, foolish, prying, censorious and
just plain selfish – why
does anyone put up with us? I suppose because we also
have to contain and express the opposite qualities,
too. Someone entirely made up of faults would be hopeless
at creating characters for readers to engage and sympathise
with. So novelists (and good biographers) have also
to be more selfless, brave, loving, humble, wise and
generous than might be normal, too. We are rendered
more aware of moral choice by searching for a kind
of truth. It is my belief that anyone who writes a
book, whether fiction or non-fiction, in which imaginative
sympathy is engaged, becomes a richer human by being
forced to fully inhabit the bad in themselves, and
to become more aware of their own potential for good.
What they then do with this awareness is another matter.
Certainly, when I first met the
man who became my husband, one of the things that
interested him in me
was my being a (then unpublished) novelist. His oldest
friend has always believed that he subsumed his own
creativity into mine, which is not the case, but it’s
certainly true that our passionate love of reading
is one of the great bonds between us. His support has
been largely emotional and, to a degree, financial,
but it rarely includes child-care because of his long
office hours. My admiration for partners who take up
the duties of looking after children at week-ends and
out of school while their partner is pent in a pine-clad
attic, writing, is tempered with a certain amount of
rage. The real pros are those like PD James who got
up early every morning to write, before taking her
children to school, going to work as a civil servant
and looking after a sick husband. Only amateurs have
temperaments that render them too delicate to take
their kids swimming or carry out the garbage.
In stories and films about writers,
you always get told that their debut was an instant
success and that
the worst a couple has to face after publication is
the temptation of the successful writer by the world,
the flesh and the devil. You don’t hear of the
opposite happening, which is much, much more common
and far harder on a relationship. The anguish of a
writer’s partner at a publisher’s rejection
or a bad review is as bad as that of the writer, (though
for both, time and experience modifies this). Nor do
you hear of the gruelling years of writing books that
may never get published, or which fail to sell or be
reviewed, which are even harder on a partner (who after
all wants to feel their sacrifices are justified) than
an author.
What you need in a writer’s partner is a combination
of rock-solid faith, a sense of the absurd and deep
sensitivity. You need someone who can accept, at the
end of their own day’s work, the fact that they
can come home to find one or other of the following:
a delicious dinner and a happy writer, or someone sobbing
onto the unpeeled potatoes because their new book isn’t
working. In one sense, a partnership between two writers
is doomed for this reason, for how can you know that
you won’t both be down at the same time, or madly
competitive, like Plath and Hughes? On the other hand,
who else is likely to be so helpful, so understanding?
There are authors such as Margaret Drabble and Michael
Holroyd, or Maggie O’Farrell and William Shawcross,
which appear to be mutually supportive to the highest
degree. Almost all the authors I know who are happily
married, however, have partners who aren’t writers,
and who work in solid, professional jobs of the kind
writers neither understand nor (often) respect. The
ones whose marriages have ended in acrimony are those
who inspire their partner to try their luck as writers
too. Invariably, what they produce is a pale parody
of their partner’s writing, which embitters them
and fills them with resentment and incomprehension
as to why they, too, aren’t published.
No writer should ever sleep with,
live with or God forbid, marry an aspiring writer – not
without reading what happened to JD Salinger. After
all, who
wants to see a pantomime horse with two heads?
Amanda Craig's novel, In
a Dark Wood is published by Fourth Estate, £16.99
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