The past five days for
me have illustrated that sitting here at my desk isn’t the single monotonous
activity it may seem to be to an outsider. The ongoing background activity finds me in the early 19th
century reading about people such as Samuel Martin, a
hatter in Aberdeen
who was way ahead of the game when it came to advertising. In 1842 a competitor
advertised ‘new patent washable beaver hats’ and almost immediately Sam was
advertising his own ‘superior beaver hats which never require washing’. (That’s
from Edward Ranson’s The Mad Hatter of Aberdeen.) Sam would have been all over
Facebook and Twitter – he insisted that you should ‘never omit an opportunity
of placing your name in printed characters before the world’.
Anyway, in order to
earn some money I’ve had to switch from that to writing a DVD about how to get stuff out of the
hollow concrete legs of offshore platforms to decommission them, another on the
responsibilities of security personnel on ships' gangways and a third on the
awareness of the procedures and systems needed for gas testing where
hydrocarbons are being produced.
But there are two more
projects which are much more interesting. One is a project with a local charity, the
Aberdeen Safer Community Trust. It's aim is to make the city's streets safer,
bring crime levels down, etc.
They're organising their annual fund-raising event called CSI Aberdeen. It involves people in groups of five
combining to solve a mystery - it might be a murder or an accidental death.
They get to study documents, interview witnesses, take and compare
fingerprints, do experiments in a lab on substances and whatever else the scene
of crime team produces. They asked me if I'd be interested in helping, so I've
been creating the scenario and, in between the commercial stuff, I'm now
writing briefs for witnesses, the scenario itself, notes to help the forensic
chemists to decide what sort of experiments to devise, etc. I've never been to
one of those murder mystery dinners so it's interesting to see how the process
works from the inside. (In fact, as I write that, it strikes me that it might
be worth writing a wee blog about it and maybe asking the readers to come up
with their conclusions on the events.) The writing is different in that I have
to think very carefully about what to reveal and what to conceal. Those taking
part should really get the information they need from interviewing the
witnesses but if they don't ask the right questions, they won't - and they'll
probably feel cheated. It's a fascinating balancing act.
So I’m
piecing that together but now there’s another, quite scary event coming up soon. I’ve been asked to go to a primary school and read one of my kids’
stories then talk to them/work with them to create another story or do
something related to writing that might interest them. I’ll have 45-50 minutes
with each of the 7 classes and it’s part of what the school calls a ‘literacy
week’. I think it’s a great initiative and I’m actually looking forward to it.
I won’t even mind if a 5 year old butts in as I’m reading my masterpiece to
tell me it’s boring.
2 comments:
Bill, the Aberdeen mystery sounds fascinating. I hope you'll let us know how it went.
School visits are fun but also terrifying. I taught school for twelve years, so you'd think I'd be comfortable with it, but I'm always afraid i'll bore the little tykes. Hope it went well!
By the way, what ARE those shiny silver things in the photo?
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