|
Teething
problems
A
childhood
interest in
vampires set
Darren
O'Shaughnessy on
the path to
bestsellers.
Frances Atkinson
reports.
Darren
O'Shaughnessy's
main character,
Darren Shan, has
dark hair, pale
skin and a
wicked grin. So
does
O'Shaughnessy.
Shan is a young
boy; look into
the eyes of the
32-year-old
Irish author and
a much younger
self stares
back. The two
are close. So
close that
O'Shaughnessy
uses his
character's name
as his pen name.
His first
novel, Cirque
du Freak,
tells the story
of Shan, a
12-year-old with
a loving family
and an
unrestrained
imagination.
When he and his
best friend
Steve discover a
tattered flyer
advertising the
Cirque du Freak,
they'll do
anything to get
a ticket. After
the show,
however, they'd
do anything
never to have
laid eyes on a
ticket.
The Cirque is
made up of
performers such
as Wolfman,
Snake-boy and a
vampire called
Larten Crepsley
and his
performing
spider, Madam
Octa. An
arachnid
enthusiast, Shan
sneaks backstage
and steals the
spider. He gets
caught, turned
into a half
vampire and is
forced to travel
with the Cirque
as Crepsley's
assistant.
O'Shaughnessy
does seem to
have a few
things in common
with vampires:
he admits to
being a bit of a
recluse; he
frequently stays
at home in the
dark, watching
horror movies;
doesn't look his
age; and he's
made his own
lucrative pact -
with publisher
HarperCollins.
O'Shaughnessy
was born in
London but moved
to Limerick in
Ireland where
his sense of the
macabre
developed early.
He recalls
living in a
council block.
"Behind that was
a rubbish dump,
my dad was
cleaning the car
and I went off
exploring the
dump and I found
a dead cat -
which I found
interesting." He
also remembers
"seeing" Star
Wars at his
local cinema. "I
don't actually
remember the
film," he says,
"just running up
and down the
isles with my
friends,
throwing
popcorn."
O'Shaughnessy
admits he was
"quite a
handful". His
interest in
vampires started
young - "I think
I was the only
six year old who
had a poster of
Christopher Lee
on my bedroom
wall."
"The books
were
successful,
I was making
money, but
because I'm
quite a shy
person, I
hadn't
really moved
on, I was
still
sitting in
the same
room,
basically
cut off."
Early in
Cirque du Freak,
Shan calls real
life nasty.
"It's cruel. It
doesn't care
about heroes and
happy endings
and the way
things should
be. In real
life, bad things
happen." But for
O'Shaughnessy
life could
hardly get much
better: the film
rights for the
first two books
in the series
have been
optioned by
Warner Brothers
and
O'Shaughnessy
has plans for
several more
books.
On the cover
of Cirque du
Freak is an
endorsement by
J.K. Rowling who
calls the book,
among other
things,
"fast-paced and
compelling".
The Saga of
Darren Shan
series is a huge
hit in Japan, UK
and Ireland,
where readers
from 10 to 30
are snapping up
his books.
O'Shaughnessy
suspects the
fans enjoy the
relationships
explored in the
books; after
all, if you
remove the
blood, gore,
fangs and
freaks, what you
have is a
classic story
about growing up
and fitting in.
"Basically
they deal with
relationships
and Darren's
struggle as he
moves further
away from his
human side," he
says. The
vampiric
backdrop just
makes puberty
all the more
difficult,
especially when
it comes to
meeting girls.
Now that Shan is
half vampire, he
ages one year
for every five -
a bonus if
you're over 20,
a disaster when
all you want to
do it grow up.
Now up to
book 10,
O'Shaughnessy
has planned
another nine
books "in my
head". But for
now, at least,
he's taking a
three-month
break from
writing. He says
he's "much more
sociable" these
days. In the
past, he felt
too isolated.
"The books
were successful,
I was making
money, but
because I'm
quite a shy
person, I hadn't
really moved on,
I was still
sitting in the
same room,
basically cut
off."
While the
routine was
conducive to
writing, it
wasn't
necessarily
healthy for the
author. He moved
back to London,
met his
girlfriend Helen
and spent more
time in the
daylight. Until
that point,
O'Shaughnessy
was a dedicated
journal writer
but he stopped
because he was
so busy living
life, he didn't
have the time to
write about it.
He bought his
first typewriter
when he was 14
and says he
always knew he
wanted to be a
writer. Apart
from working at
a TV cable
company for a
couple of years,
writing remained
a priority. "I
never wanted a
back-up
profession. I
always thought
that if I put my
energies into
any other job,
it'd hold me
back."
O'Shaughnessy
says he had
"loads of stuff"
rejected but
thinks many
would-be writers
give up too
early. "If they
just kept going,
I think 99 per
cent of people
would get
published.
There's no magic
here, it's all
hard work and
everytime you
write something,
you learn." He
agrees, though,
that it's
difficult for
most people to
rise above
constant
rejection. "It
can be very
difficult
because writing
is often very
personal and you
can't help but
feel connected
to it."
He thinks
most writers are
shy and it took
him a while to
get used to
discussing his
work with the
media. It's a
different story
when he's
talking to his
fans, either
online or in
person. "I'm
completely
animated, I
really come
alive. It's a
buzz."
O'Shaughnessy
says he'd been
thinking about
writing a book
about vampires
years before he
actually did. He
also wanted to
write the kind
of book he would
have enjoyed
when he was a
kid. "I didn't
plan a series at
that time, but I
suppose in the
back of my mind
I thought there
might be room
for a few more
books."
The
difficulty was
coming up with a
fresh way to
write about
vampires that
was pacy and
"involved the
reader". The
books are a
blend of horror,
sci-fi and
fantasy, a mix
that
O'Shaughnessy
says keeps
things
interesting for
him as a writer.
"When I was
growing up,
there wasn't any
horror stories
written for
younger readers.
When I was 11, I
was reading
Stephen King,
then James
Herbert. Things
have changed
quite a bit
now."
Halfway
through the
Saga of Darren
Shan series,
his main
character will
be more adult
than child, but
O'Shaughnessy
says he won't be
writing anything
too risque. "My
British
publishers
wouldn't have
it. If I started
putting sex in
books, or
anything close
to it, they'd
come down on me
like a ton of
bricks - which
to me is
ridiculous, but
parents,
teachers and
librarians
object too."
Celluloid or
text,
O'Shaugnessy
knows his
vampires: Bella
Lugosi, Count
Dracula, even
the slayer,
Buffy, but the
vampire he
partly chose to
model his
creatures of the
night on was the
main figure in
F.W. Murnau's
1922 German
expressionist
film,
Nosferatu
because "I
didn't want good
looking
vampires".
Right now,
O'Shaughnessy is
as far away from
the plots of his
own books that
he can be.
According to his
website, he's
already been
sunburnt on the
Whitsunday's and
managed to visit
the Undara Lava
Caves to see -
what else? -
bats.
Darren
O'Shaughnessy's
most recent
book, Killers
of the Dawn,
is published by
HarperCollins at
$12.95.
http://www.theage.com.au/articles/2003/12/03/1070351640885.html?from=storyrhs |