GUEST POST Beryl Kingston

Welcome to the first guest I have hosted on my blog, distinguished novelist  Beryl Kingston, whose Easter Empire trilogy (inspired by the fact that a woman founded WH Smith) was a favourite, long before I met her, let alone enjoyed the privilege of her friendship.  

Like me, she has been tagged to contribute to the Writing Process blog roll, in her case by lovely Mary Stewart-inspired author, Jan Jones.  Over to Beryl 

My Writing Process

What am I working on?

This is going to sound like showing off but at the moment, after three and a half years when I couldn’t write at all, I’m polishing off a collection of poems, a play about William Blake’s trial and a novella about a conceited cat, all of which are taking me in different directions.

How do my stories differ from others in my genre?

I suppose the honest answer is that I don’t know. My first agent, the renowned Darley Anderson wanted me to be classed as ‘a romantic writer’. I never thought I was.

Why do I write?

I started writing when I was seven because I knew I wasn’t allowed to tell anybody about what was happening to me and I had to tell someone so I wrote it all down in a diary, which was private. Now it is because I enjoy it and there are always tales to tell.

How does my writing process work?

I used to assume that my writing method was more or less what other writers did, if I thought about it at all, but then I got to know other writers and discovered I was odd. There is a pattern to it though and a method, of sorts, and it works for me.

I spend about three months getting to know my main characters, what they think and why, how they talk to a variety of people, what and who have made them what they are. I do it until I can live in their skin. It’s rather like method acting. At the same time I visit the settings for my story. (I used to love doing that when Roy was alive. It was like a holiday.) I try to find a different setting for each new book and make several visits in the course of a year so as to see the place in all four seasons and different kinds of weathers. I fill notebooks with as much detail as I can get. Then when I’m living under the skin of my protagonists, and the plot has begun to form out of all the things that are going to happen to them, I start to write.

I don’t begin at the beginning of the book and plough on doggedly until ‘The End’. I’m much too self-indulgent for that. I start with the scene that’s singing to me most strongly. In my first book it was the moment my hero sees the woman he’s going to marry, in another it was the Battle of Trafalgar, in another it was when my heroine meets up with anti-road protesters and sees her first demonstration. Then I move on to other scenes I fancy. When I’ve got what I call a run, a series of scenes that ought to run in sequence, I stitch them together. It’s rather like making a patchwork quilt and it’s a very useful part of the process because, if I’m reading something and it’s boring me because I want to get on to the next ‘good bit’, I simply cut it out, and if I see moments that have – or will have – ‘echoes’ I can work on them too. Eventually so many runs are stitched together that I have a book. It’s a very satisfactory way to write – at least for me – although it does look a muddle.

6 Responses to “GUEST POST Beryl Kingston”

  • This is so good. I love Beryl’s writing too – and I had never heard of the patchwork quilt method! I like it!

  • Lovely post, Beryl. I often have scenes in mind, but I don’t usually write them until I actually get there. They are the carrot-on-a-stick I need to keep going!

  • Excellent, Beryl, and thank you, Jenny for posting. I have to go chronologically or I’d get lost, but I admire those who can do quilting! What was the pivotal scene in Gemma’s Journey?

    • I’d forgotten that that one was almost at the beginning. It was the train crash of course. Then I went to the rehab centre in Crystal Palace and watched them at work and wrote the scene where she gets her prosthesis.

  • Henriette Gyland:

    Fabulous post, Beryl – interesting to hear how you work. I have a few of your sagas on my book shelf (this includes the electronic book shelf), and they’re always enjoyable. I also loved a contemporary one of yours, featuring a woman who has a train accident (might have been “Gemma’s Journey”) which Lesley mentioned above.
    Hx

  • I have never heard of quilting before in terms of writing. I’m sure I would get completely lost. Fascinating to hear how you work.

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