On
Thursday, a colleague at work knocked on my door and asked if I had a minute.
He sat down, and told me he had downloaded A
Light Shining for his Kindle. And he had read it.
“I
stayed awake until 4 a.m. to finish it,” he said. “I couldn’t put it down. I’m
here to make a plea for a third novel in the series.”
I
laughed. “We have to see what happens with the second one first.”
He
smiled. “When I reached the part with Sarah’s speech, I lost it. I’m sitting
there blubbering, and everyone else in the house is asleep, and I didn’t have
anyone to talk to about it. It was terrible.” And then he proceeded to outline
what Sarah had said, quoting the key phrase of the speech exactly, and the reaction
of one of the characters to her speech.
This
was the same colleague who liked Dancing
Priest so much that he bought 20 copies and gave them to 20 senior
executives from around the world. One of those executives – from India –
stopped me outside my office a few weeks ago and said he had read it and that
he had enjoyed it so much that he had become completely absorbed in the cycling
events in the 2012 Olympics in London this summer. “I didn’t know anything
about cycling until I read your book,” he said.
And
then last night, I picked my oldest son up at the airport. Right out of the
blue he says, “That part with the warehouse kids – I totally lost it on the
plane.”
“You’re
reading the book,” I said.
“I
bought it for my Kindle,” he replied, “and started reading it on the plane.
Good thing I had a row to myself, because it would have been embarrassing.”
And
then he said, “You better not kill him off.” Suffice it to say that I know
which character he’s talking about, and why. But I wouldn’t respond to his
question.
I’ve
read both of those scenes – Sarah’s speech and the warehouse kids – scores of
times. And I still get choked up when I do. It’s almost as if I forget I wrote
them. There are one or two other scenes that affect me the same way. In Dancing Priest, the scene that never
fails to bring me to tears is the British Olympic team arriving in the stadium
in Athens for the closing ceremonies.
I
ask myself what it is about these scenes, scenes I know intimately and have
lived with for close to a decade that prompts this reaction, from me as well as
readers.
I
think it has to do with our sense of the heroic, that something within us that
reaches beyond what we’re capable of doing because something must be done,
something must be said, some good and fine purpose must be achieved. One of the
readers of Dancing Priest last year
sent me an email, saying that the book should be required reading for teenage
boys because it was about a young man’s nobility of purpose – something they
get from nothing in our culture today.
I’m
not going to be able to live off the royalties from these two books – longer than
a day, anyway. But the reactions I hear from people reading them are royalties
enough.
6 comments:
You know I loved Dancing Priest. Now I can't wait for the new one to come in print (since I don't have a Kindle, et al). Looking forward to reading it Glynn.
I too have downloaded Light Shining to my Kindle on my iPad. I started reading yesterday and had to forcefully stop myself - I wanted to finish it all in one reading but had a media training workshop to prepare that I need to give today to a not for profit -- and knew I had to stop reading or I would be lost.
What you wrote here: it has to do with our sense of the heroic, that something within us that reaches beyond what we’re capable of doing because something must be done, something must be said, some good and fine purpose must be achieved.
So true. So powerful. So you.
You might remember that I had the very same reaction as your son. And the scene with the kids choked me up too. I'll add my plea for the third, Glynn :).
We do hunger for heroics - heroics that emerge from ordinary, every day people in surprising and uplifting ways. I think that's an important l part of the reason your books elicit this response in people. You created real people in these stories, Glynn. (Even with the interesting lineage of one!!) People we can relate to and think that maybe, just maybe - we might find ourselves doing something like that. I'm so happy you are getting these responses. And I wish there would be some actual CASH royalties, too. But I agree with you - hearing these kinds of things from people who know you. . . priceless. Thanks for sharing this. And yes, you already know I'd love to see a 3rd one!!
I thought I would save the book for a quiet day, but I'm not sure I can wait.
I am so thrilled for you Glynn. What joy to know your words are so powerfully affecting those who read them.
Haven't had much time lately, but I can't wait to read the new book. Hoping over the Christmas holidays to take some time then. Makes me happy just thinking about it. :)
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